When Lil Tay turned 18 on July 29, she promised to “drop the link.”
On TikTok, she told her 2.3 million followers that she had already "filmed OnlyFans content and planned to release it the next day".
She bragged about turning down $30–40 million offers from adult agencies, saying she didn’t need “petty” money because she was “the bag.”
When critics warned it could ruin her life, she replied, “$50 million isn’t going to ruin my life.”
Then her brother barged in mid-stream and shut it down: “This is a Chinese household. You’re not fucking dropping no fucking links.”
Social media exploded. Hashtags like #LilTay and #DropTheLink trended as fans waited for the link. It never came. Some praised her boldness, others slammed it as attention-seeking. Many began to suspect the tease was marketing — not for an OnlyFans, but for a new single.
Lil Tay dropped vague clues, referenced artists like Sabrina Carpenter and Sydney Sweeney, and linked to countdown timers and Discord invites — but no song or OF page ever materialized. Some fans were convinced it was a clout stunt, others called it genius branding.
This wouldn’t be her first controversy-for-clicks moment. She resurfaced in 2023 after a viral death hoax and has leaned into viral antics ever since. As of early August 2025, there’s still no OnlyFans, no track titled “OnlyFans,” and no clear payoff — just mystery, speculation, and more headlines.
Whether it was real or just brilliant trolling, Lil Tay got what she wanted: everyone talking.
Only time will tell what it really was. One thing is for sure: she's known for faking her entire existence, so no one would be surprised if it’s all just a marketing stunt to get back into the limelight.
On TikTok, she told her 2.3 million followers that she had already "filmed OnlyFans content and planned to release it the next day".
She bragged about turning down $30–40 million offers from adult agencies, saying she didn’t need “petty” money because she was “the bag.”
When critics warned it could ruin her life, she replied, “$50 million isn’t going to ruin my life.”
Then her brother barged in mid-stream and shut it down: “This is a Chinese household. You’re not fucking dropping no fucking links.”
Social media exploded. Hashtags like #LilTay and #DropTheLink trended as fans waited for the link. It never came. Some praised her boldness, others slammed it as attention-seeking. Many began to suspect the tease was marketing — not for an OnlyFans, but for a new single.
Lil Tay dropped vague clues, referenced artists like Sabrina Carpenter and Sydney Sweeney, and linked to countdown timers and Discord invites — but no song or OF page ever materialized. Some fans were convinced it was a clout stunt, others called it genius branding.
This wouldn’t be her first controversy-for-clicks moment. She resurfaced in 2023 after a viral death hoax and has leaned into viral antics ever since. As of early August 2025, there’s still no OnlyFans, no track titled “OnlyFans,” and no clear payoff — just mystery, speculation, and more headlines.
Whether it was real or just brilliant trolling, Lil Tay got what she wanted: everyone talking.
Only time will tell what it really was. One thing is for sure: she's known for faking her entire existence, so no one would be surprised if it’s all just a marketing stunt to get back into the limelight.
