What Is a Tip Menu and Why Faceless Creators Need One
A tip menu is a pinned post or message that lists your available services and their corresponding tip amounts. Subscribers send tips matching the listed amounts to request specific content or interactions. For faceless creators, the tip menu solves a critical problem: it tells subscribers what you will do, which is often more important than what you look like. When your face is not part of the equation, subscribers need other signals to understand what they are paying for. A clear, well-priced tip menu provides those signals.
Without a tip menu, your DMs fill with open-ended questions like "what do you offer?" or "how much for a video?" Each of those conversations takes time, and many of them never convert into a sale because the back-and-forth creates friction. With a menu, the subscriber sees the options, picks what they want, and tips the amount. The process takes seconds instead of minutes. That efficiency matters when you are managing dozens or hundreds of subscribers, and it matters even more if you are using a chatting strategy that prioritises speed and personalisation.
Tip Menu Items That Work for Faceless Creators
Content-Based Items
These are the backbone of any faceless tip menu. Content items include photo sets (usually three to ten photos per set), short video clips (30 seconds to three minutes), longer video content (five to ten minutes), voice notes or audio clips, and themed content tied to specific outfits, scenarios, or aesthetics. Each item should have a clear description so the subscriber knows exactly what they are getting. Avoid vague descriptions like "special video" and instead write something specific like "three-minute themed video in [category], faceless, shot in [style]."
Interaction-Based Items
Interaction items are services rather than content. These include rating requests (where the subscriber sends a photo and you send back a voice note or text rating), name usage (saying or writing the subscriber's name in content), and priority DM responses. For faceless creators, voice-based interactions like personalised audio messages or voice note replies tend to sell well because they offer intimacy without visual identity. These interaction items typically have the highest margins because they require minimal production time compared to photo or video content.
Engagement and Access Items
These are premium offerings that create a sense of exclusivity. Examples include access to a private Snapchat or secondary platform, early access to new content before it hits the main feed, behind-the-scenes content from your production process, or a monthly "subscriber spotlight" where you create a personalised piece of content. Faceless creators can also offer "choice" items where the subscriber picks the outfit, theme, or scenario for an upcoming post. This gives subscribers a sense of ownership over the content without requiring you to show your face.
How to Price Your Tip Menu
Pricing is where most creators either leave money on the table or price themselves out of sales. Based on what we have seen across hundreds of managed accounts at Undefined Talent Management, the sweet spots for faceless tip menu items fall into three ranges.
The entry-level tier sits at $5 to $15 and covers low-effort, quick-delivery items: single photos, short voice notes, simple text-based interactions, or small add-ons to existing content. This tier exists to create buying momentum. Once a subscriber makes their first small purchase, they are statistically much more likely to make a second, larger one.
The mid-tier range is $15 to $40 and covers most standard content requests: photo sets, short to medium video clips, personalised audio messages, and most custom interactions. This is where the bulk of your tip menu revenue will come from. Price items in this range carefully, because a $5 difference in either direction can significantly impact conversion rates.
The premium tier sits at $40 to $100 or more and covers high-production or highly personalised content: longer videos, multi-part custom sets, exclusive themed content, and anything that requires significant time investment. For a detailed approach to pricing premium content, our faceless OnlyFans pricing guide breaks down the psychology behind setting rates that feel fair to subscribers while reflecting the actual value of your work.
Formatting and Pinning Your Tip Menu
A tip menu that subscribers cannot find is useless. Pin your tip menu to the top of your page so it is the first thing every new subscriber sees. Format it clearly with each item on its own line, the price in a consistent position (either at the start or end of each line), and a brief description of what the item includes. Avoid walls of text; use spacing and simple formatting to make the menu scannable in under ten seconds.
Update your tip menu at least once a month. Remove items that never sell, adjust prices based on what the data tells you, and add seasonal or trending items to keep the menu fresh. A stale menu signals an inactive page, and that is the fastest way to lose subscriber interest. Pair your tip menu with a strong bio and profile so that everything a new subscriber encounters in their first 30 seconds on your page works together to convert them from a browser into a buyer.
Promoting Your Tip Menu to Drive Tips
Having a tip menu is step one. Getting subscribers to actually use it is step two. Reference your tip menu in your regular posts with phrases like "check the pinned post for my full menu" or "tip $X for [specific item] from the menu." Mention specific menu items in your DM conversations when a subscriber shows interest in a particular type of content. You can also run limited-time promotions where certain menu items are discounted for a day or a weekend, creating urgency and driving tip volume during slow periods.
Your promotion strategy should tie into your broader posting routine. If you post daily wall content, reference a related menu item in the caption at least two to three times per week. This gentle, consistent promotion keeps the menu in subscribers' minds without feeling pushy. The creators who mention their menu organically as part of their regular content flow consistently generate more tips than those who only reference it when they need money.

