Most adult creators cobble together tools that weren’t designed for their business.
They use Stripe until it bans them, Linktree until they realise it’s costing them conversions, a free email tool until it flags their account, and a host that terminates their site without warning. Every one of those failures was predictable. The tools weren’t built for adult content businesses — and the adult creator found out the hard way.
A purpose-built tech stack removes those failure points before they become crises. Here’s what that stack looks like in 2026.
This stack guide is part of the Adult Creator-Owned Infrastructure Guide — the complete resource for building independent creator infrastructure.
The Core Principle: Control Your Infrastructure Layer
Before looking at specific tools, understand the organising principle.
Every tool in your stack should sit on infrastructure you control. That means your website lives on your own domain, your email list is in a system that exports cleanly, your content is stored somewhere you can retrieve it, and your payment processing isn’t a single point of failure.
The more of your business that runs on platforms you control rather than platforms you depend on, the more resilient your income is when any individual tool fails, changes its policies, or shuts down.
With that principle in place, here’s the stack.
Your Website
What you need: A self-hosted WordPress site on a domain you own, hosted on an adult-content-friendly provider.
Your website is the foundation of everything. It’s where fans purchase, where your content lives behind a paywall, where your SEO builds, and where you send all traffic from every other channel. It must be on a domain you own outright — not a subdomain of someone else’s platform.
Domain registrar: Namecheap or Cloudflare Registrar. Both are adult-content tolerant and offer solid privacy protection options. Avoid GoDaddy — their terms and enforcement history with adult content are inconsistent.
Hosting: Use a host with a clearly stated adult content policy. Hostinger, Kinsta, and WP Engine all accommodate adult creator sites when compliance documents (2257 records, terms of service) are in place. Avoid shared hosting for anything beyond a starter site — dedicated or managed WordPress hosting gives you the performance and control a serious creator business needs.
Membership and paywall: WooCommerce with a membership plugin (MemberPress or Paid Memberships Pro) is the most flexible setup for selling content directly. This gives you full control over pricing, tiers, and content access without a platform taking a percentage of every transaction.
Payment Processing
What you need: An adult-content-approved processor connected directly to your website.
This is the most critical and most misunderstood part of the stack. Stripe, PayPal, Square, and Cash App do not work for adult businesses. Using them is not a grey area — it is a violation of their terms, and account termination is a matter of when, not if.
Adult-approved processors: CCBill, Epoch, and Segpay are the established options with long track records in the adult industry. NMI and Verotel are also worth evaluating depending on your business model and volume. Each has a different application process, fee structure, and feature set.
Backup processor: Never rely on a single payment processor. Adult businesses are high-risk by classification, meaning accounts can be reviewed, restricted, or closed with limited notice. Running two processors simultaneously means if one fails, revenue continues through the second while you resolve the issue.
For a full breakdown of how to choose and onboard a payment processor, see our payment processor setup guide for adult creators.
Email Marketing
What you need: An email platform that permits adult content marketing (SFW sends that reference adult businesses).
Most mainstream email platforms (Mailchimp, Klaviyo, ActiveCampaign) prohibit adult content businesses entirely, even for SFW sends. Using them is another account termination waiting to happen.
Adult-tolerant options: Sendlane, GetResponse, and Mailer Lite have adult content policies worth reviewing for your specific use case. Horizon Pulse includes email as part of its distribution platform and is built specifically for adult creator email workflows.
Whichever platform you use, your email list should be exportable at any time. A list you cannot export is a list you don’t control.
Content Distribution
What you need: A scheduling and cross-posting tool that connects your website feed, email, Telegram, Discord, and other channels.
Managing distribution manually across five channels for every piece of content is unsustainable. A distribution platform lets you schedule everything from one place and keeps all your channels consistently active without daily manual effort.
Horizon Pulse is built for adult creator distribution — connecting your website feed, email, Telegram, and Discord so your content reaches fans across every channel on schedule.
Content Storage and Backup
What you need: Redundant storage that you control, separate from your website host.
Your content library is your most valuable business asset. It should never live in only one place.
Cloud storage: Backblaze B2 or Wasabi are cost-effective, privacy-respecting cloud storage options with no content restrictions for legal adult material. Use one of these as your primary content archive, separate from your website host.
Local backup: Keep a local hard drive backup of your full content library updated at least monthly. External SSDs are inexpensive relative to the cost of losing your archive.
Website backup: Your WordPress site should be backed up daily using a plugin like UpdraftPlus or BlogVault. Store backups offsite — not just on the same server as your site.
Scheduling and Booking (if applicable)
What you need: A booking tool designed for adult creators that is compliant with FOSTA-SESTA requirements.
If you take custom bookings, sessions, or appointments, mainstream booking tools (Calendly, Acuity) are not designed for adult services and may terminate accounts. Use a booking system built with FOSTA-SESTA compliance in mind. Automate Horizon’s booking add-on is designed specifically for this purpose.
Analytics
What you need: A compliant analytics tool that doesn’t expose fan data or create VPPA liability.
Google Analytics creates legal exposure for adult content sites that host video — the VPPA (Video Privacy Protection Act) has been used in lawsuits against adult sites using Google Analytics with video content. Use a privacy-first analytics tool instead.
Alternatives: Plausible Analytics and Fathom Analytics are both GDPR-compliant, privacy-first, and do not use cookies or track personal data. Both are adult-content tolerant and eliminate the VPPA risk.
The Complete Stack at a Glance
| Layer | Tool |
|---|---|
| Website | Self-hosted WordPress, adult-friendly host, owned domain |
| Paywall / Membership | WooCommerce + MemberPress or Paid Memberships Pro |
| Payment processing | CCBill, Epoch, or Segpay (two processors minimum) |
| Email marketing | Sendlane, GetResponse, or Horizon Pulse |
| Content distribution | Horizon Pulse |
| Content storage | Backblaze B2 or Wasabi + local hard drive |
| Website backup | UpdraftPlus or BlogVault (offsite storage) |
| Booking | Automate Horizon booking add-on |
| Analytics | Plausible or Fathom |
Building the Stack
You don’t need to build everything at once. Start with the foundation — owned domain, self-hosted WordPress site, adult-approved payment processor — and add layers as your business grows.
The goal is a stack where no single platform failure takes down your income. Every layer should be replaceable without catastrophic disruption.
If you want help building this infrastructure specifically for your business, Automate Horizon designs and builds compliant adult creator websites with the full technology stack in place from day one.
Related Creator Infrastructure Guides
This article is part of the Adult Creator-Owned Infrastructure Guide. Other guides in this category:
- Domain and Hosting Strategy for Adult Creators — registrar selection, hosting requirements, SSL, and CDN
- Backup and Disaster Recovery for Adult Creator Websites — protecting your site, content files, and fan data
- How to Move Off OnlyFans or Fansly — the complete migration checklist for independent creators
- Custom Adult Website vs Creator Platforms — which infrastructure model is right for your business
