
Think tween TikTok and you’ll probably picture fun dance trends, lip syncs and iced pink drinks.
Though there is a much less innocuous channel which could currently be making its way onto their feeds: Bop House. The account run from a girls-only Florida mansion turned influencer factory, founded by OnlyFans members.
Critics have slammed the Bop House for actively targeting audiences under 18. In the past two months, trying out for the Bop House has become a TikTok challenge in itself, with hundreds of teenage girls mimicking the Bops members’ dance routines in hopes of getting noticed.
YouTube commentators have called out the trend as harmful, arguing it pulls underage users into OnlyFans culture before they’re old enough to understand what it entails. With 13 and 14-year-olds making up a chunk of TikTok’s user base.
On the surface, Bop House looks like any other influencer hangout such as Sway House and Hype House: the girls wear satin PJs, the kitchens are decked out with marble counters, and the stars have casual chats about last month’s “earnings” that sound straight out of a millionaire’s playbook.
The members all have a similar aesthetic: pretty faces, long hair, slim waists, big boobs, hips, and butts. But it’s the same girls’ subscription content on OnlyFans which is the real money-maker.
So what’s going on behind the scenes at Bop House and is it a cause for concern?
A pipeline to OnlyFans?

Launched in 2024, the Bop House is a $75,000-a-month rented mansion shared by OnlyFans content creators, including the wealthiest OnlyFans model, Sophie Rain, 20, who has a baby face, curvy body and says she is a virgin. She’s joined by Aishah Sofey, 22, and a roster of other creators.
Together, they live, film, and build their brands, meanwhile making content for OnlyFans as well as the TikTok channel.
The word “Bop” can be Gen Z slang for a woman with multiple sexual partners — a name which seems to blur lines given the girls' young fanbase on TikTok.
The Bop House has a significant presence on the platform, having gained over 3.5M Followers and 65M Likes in a short period. The girls, with a combined following of 90 million, use the platform to promote their content and engage with their audience. Though some argue they use the platform to convert fans to subscribers on OnlyFans.
Who is Sophie Rain?
Sophie Rain boasts over seven million Instagram followers and claimed she made $43 million in 2024 alone. Fans pay $4.99 monthly for her content on OnlyFans and more for daily photos and messages.
She’s said she’s spent some of that huge sum to pay off her parents’ mortgage, gift her brother a BMW and support her previously impoverished family.
What makes Bop House stand out on TikTok?
At first glance, the content on Bop House is like much of the teen-friendly content on the platform — makeup tutorials, dance challenges, morning routines. But the lifestyle it promotes is arguably another story.
The girls look young, often styled even younger, presenting an adult world. They post videos of themselves in the house, often wearing revealing outfits in pretty, kid-friendly pastel colours, or tight onesies with teddy bear prints. Or appear in their underwear and bikinis in some videos, while doing popular dances and skits.
They also laugh about six-figure a week incomes from their subscribers, flaunt designer hauls with captions like “self-made at 20,” and broadcast a life where success equals looks and likes.
What effect is Bop House having on its young fans?
Australian activist Melinda Tankard Reist recently shared TikToks in which she speaks to middle school girls there who describe how Bop House content shifts expectations for girls and boys alike.
One girl says boys now expect girls to look like these creators. “Because the Bop House is showing what they’re doing, boys are expecting us girls to do it as well,” one girl says.
Another said boys will see girls as "ugly" if they don’t fit in with the aesthetic they see on Bop House.
@collective.shout.org Audio taken from @Melinda Tankard Reist - thanks for protecting our girls 🫶 #womensrights #womensupportingwomen #feminism #womenempowerment #socialjustice
♬ original sound - Melinda Tankard Reist
“As we grow, they expect us to look like the Bop House girls, and it makes us feel unsafe wherever we go,” said one girl.
As Dr. Emma Carlisle, a youth psychologist specialising in the impact of social media points out: “Content like this creates unrealistic beauty ideals and links self-worth to sexualisation, which is incredibly damaging during formative years.
“Young people are being taught that their value depends on how closely they can match these digitally perfected images.”
So what is Bop House teaching girls about the future?
There's no denying that part of the Bop House’s allure is the cash flex. The Bop girls claim they collectively earned $250 million last year. In one viral video, Rain asks her housemates how much they made last month. One casually says, “Six million.” Another shrugs and says “Underwhelming.”
Comments then pour in from teens, such as: “Even the lowest amount is more than I’ll ever see.”
They fly on private jets to basketball games, own Porsches and Lamborghinis and rack up thousands of dollars on a night out.
Studies show a growing number of teens believe OnlyFans is a strong career option, and these kind of statements from the creators pay lip service to this.
Research also shows that some teens are even considering cosmetic surgery to copy the surgically enhanced, hyper-perfect bodies they see online.
Dr. Carlisle says: “This kind of environment can seriously impact mental health, body image, and long-term self-esteem. Parents should be aware and keep conversations open rather than shy away from them.”
Meanwhile, child psychiatrist and Yale School of Medicine Professor Yann Poncin told USA Today: “I do think it creates an unrealistic sense of reality."“This just really presents as an exciting lifestyle. These girls seem to have it together. They have things, they have money, they have the shining objects.”

Where is Sophie Rain now?
Rain, the Bop House’s biggest star, has now stepped away. She’s quit the house, citing a fallout with fellow creator Camilla Araujo. “I’m done with the behind-the-scenes drama,” she said.
“The Bop House will always be a huge part of my life, but lately, I’ve felt like I was losing my own voice inside of it,” Rain told Us Weekly earlier this month.
“What started as an empowering space began to feel controlling, with certain members wanting to dictate how I should act, post, and live.”
Who is Sophie Rain’s competition on OnlyFans?
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In a digital age where social media influencers and content creators, such as British porn star Bonnie Blue, have become known for their large earnings, Sophie Rain still stands out. The 20-year-old OnlyFans sensation has reportedly raked in $43 million (£35m) in the last year alone.
She has surpassed the site’s other top-earning, big name stars, including Rebecca Goodwin who earns around $130,000 (£100,000) monthly and Lucy Banks, who left her corporate job for OnlyFans, and now makes approximately $78,000 (£60,000) a month.
Another notable earner that Rain has eclipsed is Bella Thorne who made $1 million within her first 24 hours on the platform, according to Statista, and former Glamour model Katie Price is reportedly making up to £2.2million a year from the X-rated site, which she confirmed after slamming claims she only earned £150 in a year.
Rain’s “reign” looks to be solidified this year when she estimates she’ll rake in a staggering $60 million (£49m) from allegedly only posing and dancing in her knickers and bikinis, now that she has even more fans and subscriptions thanks to her higher profile.