Amazon Wishlist for OnlyFans: Add One and Hide Your Address
How to set up an Amazon wishlist for OnlyFans, keep your shipping address private, and turn fan gifts into real income, plus safer wishlist alternatives.
Build income streams like a top creator
The creators who earn the most stack several small income streams on top of subscriptions: tips, pay-per-view, customs, and gifts. OnlyFinds lists more than 180,000 OnlyFans creators. Search your niche to see how established creators present their pages and link their wishlists.
An Amazon wishlist for OnlyFans is a public list of items your fans can buy you as gifts, and it works as a low-friction tip stream: a fan who would never send $50 in cash will happily buy you a $20 item they picked out themselves. You can absolutely add one to OnlyFans by dropping the link in your bio or pinned post. The one thing you have to get right is your shipping address, because the way Amazon handles addresses changed in 2025. This guide covers how to set the wishlist up, how to keep your home address private, the safer alternatives, what to add, how to promote it, and how the gifts are taxed.
What is an Amazon wishlist on OnlyFans?
An Amazon wishlist on OnlyFans is a curated list of products you would like to receive, shared with your subscribers so they can buy you gifts directly. The fan pays Amazon, Amazon ships the item, and you get the gift. It is popular because it turns a vague "send me a tip" into a specific, fun action: fans get to choose something personal, and they often spend more than they would on a plain tip because they can see exactly what they are buying.
Think of it as one more income stream alongside subscriptions, tips, and pay-per-view. It costs nothing to set up, it gives fans a reason to engage, and the items themselves (a ring light, a new outfit, props) often pay for the content you make next. It pairs naturally with a clear OnlyFans tip menu so fans always have a way to spend money on you.
Can you add a wishlist to OnlyFans?
Yes. OnlyFans lets you add external links, so you can place your wishlist link in your bio, in a pinned post, or in welcome and mass messages. OnlyFans does not host the wishlist itself; you create it on Amazon (or a gifting platform) and link out to it. Many creators keep the link in a link-in-bio tool alongside their other links so it sits next to their socials and promo pages.
Put real thought into where the link lives. A wishlist buried three taps deep gets ignored. The two spots that convert best are your profile bio and a friendly pinned post that explains what the list is for. For more on writing a bio that sells, see our OnlyFans bio ideas.
How to set up an Amazon wishlist for OnlyFans
Setting one up takes about ten minutes. Follow these steps in order so privacy is handled before you ever share the link.
- Use a separate Amazon account. Create an Amazon account with an email you only use for your creator work. This keeps your wishlist activity separate from your personal orders and reduces the chance of your real name leaking.
- Create the list. Go to Account & Lists, choose Your Lists, then Create a List. Give it a clean name like "Gifts" rather than your legal name.
- Set the list to public. Open More, then Manage List, and set it to Public so fans can view and shop it. A private list cannot be shared.
- Lock down the address first. In the list settings, set the recipient and shipping address carefully (covered in the next section) before you publish the link anywhere.
- Add items with a range of prices. Mix cheap impulse buys with a few aspirational items so every fan can find something in budget.
- Copy the link and share it. Grab the share link, shorten it with a tool like Bitly if you want a tidy URL, and add it to your bio, pinned post, and DMs.
How to hide your address on an Amazon wishlist
Keep your home address off your wishlist entirely; use a PO box or another non-residential address instead. When a fan buys a gift through your list, Amazon ships it and does not show your full address to that buyer, so the basic setup is private. The problem is third-party sellers: starting in 2025, Amazon began sharing buyers' shipping addresses with the marketplace sellers who fulfill some orders, and Amazon itself advises wishlist users to switch to a post office box or a non-residential delivery address to keep their home address private.
So the safe approach is simple. Get a PO box or a parcel locker, set that as the shipping address on your list, and confirm the "don't spoil my surprises" option is on so item details stay hidden until they arrive. Never use your real home address on a public wishlist, even with the privacy settings on. Address safety is part of the bigger picture of protecting your identity as a creator, which we cover in is OnlyFans safe.
Safer alternatives: Throne and Fanwish
If privacy is your top concern, a creator gifting platform hides your address better than Amazon does. Throne and Fanwish are wishlist apps built for creators: the platform sits between you and the fan, so neither side ever sees the other's real name or address, and the platform handles the shipping logistics. That means your location is never exposed to the person sending the gift, which removes the third-party-seller risk entirely.
The trade-off is reach. Amazon is familiar and frictionless, so casual fans buy without thinking. Dedicated gifting platforms add a small step but give you stronger privacy and a catalog built around creators. A common move is to run a privacy-first platform as your main list and keep an Amazon list as a backup for fans who only want to shop where they already have an account.
What to put on your OnlyFans wishlist
Curate, do not dump. A focused list of 15 to 30 items converts better than a wall of 200. Include a spread of price points so no fan feels priced out, and lean toward items that connect to your content so gifting feels personal.
- Affordable impulse items ($10 to $30): lingerie, accessories, beauty products, small props. These get bought the most.
- Content gear: a ring light, tripod, backdrop, or memory card. Fans like funding things that lead to more content.
- Outfits and costumes: tie these to a niche or a requested theme so fans can "unlock" a shoot they want to see.
- A few premium items: one or two aspirational pieces give your biggest spenders a way to stand out.
How to promote your wishlist without being pushy
A wishlist only earns if fans know it exists, but constant begging kills the vibe. Mention it naturally and tie it to a reward. Post an intro that explains the list and what a gift gets them, pin it, and add the link to your bio and welcome message. When someone gifts you, thank them publicly and show off the item in a post or story; that social proof nudges other fans to do the same. Offer a small perk for gifters, like a shoutout or a custom clip, and rotate the list so it feels fresh. For a full plan on driving fans to your offers, see our OnlyFans promotion guide and OnlyFans marketing tips.
Do you pay taxes on wishlist gifts?
Yes, in most cases wishlist gifts are taxable income, not tax-free presents. When fans send you items because of your content, the IRS treats them like any other creator compensation: their fair market value counts as self-employment income, the same way tips and subscriptions do. A true gift from a family member is different, but items from fans tied to your work are income, and creators are generally expected to report anything valued around $100 or more.
The practical fix is to track each gift's value as you receive it. Save the Amazon order confirmation or receipt for every item, and log its value with the rest of your earnings. A tool that turns those receipts into a clean spreadsheet keeps the record audit-ready, and the same habit makes the rest of your books painless: pull your card and bank activity into a sheet with a bank statement to Excel converter so income and expenses live in one place. For the full picture, read our guides on OnlyFans taxes and bookkeeping for OnlyFans.
Amazon Wishlist for OnlyFans: FAQ
Can you have a wishlist on OnlyFans?
Yes. OnlyFans allows external links, so you can add a wishlist by putting the link in your bio, a pinned post, or your messages. You build the list on Amazon or a creator gifting platform and link out to it; OnlyFans does not host the list itself.
How do you add an Amazon wishlist to OnlyFans?
Create a public list on Amazon, set a safe shipping address, then copy the share link and paste it into your OnlyFans bio or a pinned post. Shorten the URL with a tool like Bitly if you want it to look clean, and mention it in your welcome message so new subscribers see it right away.
Can people see your address on your Amazon wishlist?
Buyers who order through your list normally cannot see your full address, because Amazon ships the item. The risk is third-party sellers, who since 2025 may receive the shipping address. To stay safe, use a PO box or a non-residential address on the list rather than your home address.
Is it safe to have an Amazon wishlist for OnlyFans?
It is safe if you protect your address. Use a separate Amazon account, ship to a PO box or parcel locker, and keep item surprises hidden. For complete privacy, a creator gifting platform like Throne or Fanwish hides both the fan's and the creator's details and handles shipping for you.
What should I put on my OnlyFans wishlist?
Add a curated mix of price points: cheap impulse items like lingerie and accessories, content gear like a ring light or tripod, themed outfits tied to your niche, and one or two premium pieces for big spenders. A focused list of 15 to 30 items converts better than a huge one.
Is Throne better than an Amazon wishlist?
Throne is better for privacy because it hides your address and name completely, while Amazon can expose your address to third-party sellers. Amazon is better for reach, since most fans already have an account and buy without friction. Many creators use a privacy-first platform as their main list and keep Amazon as a backup.
A wishlist is one piece of a bigger monetization mix. See how thousands of creators present and promote their pages in the OnlyFans creator directory, and study the content ideas that keep fans spending.
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