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The owner of OnlyFans, Leonid Radvinsky, died at the age of 43, his company announced on Monday.
OnlyFans is a subscription-based platform that primarily has content creators sharing pornographic content.
In recent years, the company has been valued at over $8 billion.
The New York Post reported more on Radvinsky’s death:
OnlyFans owner Leonid Radvinsky has died at age 43 after a secret battle with cancer, the porn streaming platform has announced.
“We are deeply saddened to announce the death of Leo Radvinsky. Leo passed away peacefully after a long battle with cancer,” the company said in a statement.
“His family have requested privacy at this difficult time.”
The Ukrainian-American entrepreneur acquired Fenix International, the company that owns and operates OnlyFans, in 2018, and remained a director and the majority shareholder at the company.
His cancer battle was largely unknown to the public, and Radvinsky kept a famously low profile despite his status as a billionaire.
Leonid Radvinsky, owner of OnlyFans, has died at the age of 43. pic.twitter.com/CKZhCqCXdd
— Pop Base (@PopBase) March 23, 2026
BREAKING: OnlyFans owner and close ally of Ukraine + Israel, Leonid Radvinsky has “died” at 43 after quietly cashing out $1.8B in dividends pic.twitter.com/jnSLONbLPm
— Financelot (@FinanceLancelot) March 23, 2026
People shared further background on Radvinsky:
Radvinsky was born in the Ukraine, but grew up in Chicago, earning his bachelor’s degree in economics from Northwestern University.
Radvinsky’s early career began in computer programming. In 2004, he first entered the adult content industry when he launched MyFreeCams, an adult webcam service.
In 2018, Radvinsky acquired Fenix International Limited — the company that owns and operates OnlyFans —from father and son founders Tim and Guy Stokely, becoming the director and majority shareholder of the company.
OnlyFans first launched in 2016. Though it wasn’t initially intended as a place to share adult content, due to the limited restrictions on what content can be posted, it quickly became a hub for adult content.
Radvinsky also ran Leo, a venture capital fund that he founded in 2009, which largely focused on investments in tech companies, including the social networking and microblogging service, Pleroma, and the Elixir programming language.
In January, Reuters reported that OnlyFans had been exploring the sale of a majority stake to investment firm Architect Capital, in a deal that valued the company at over five billion dollars.
