The short answer
Rulta is an Estonia-based DMCA takedown service used mostly by OnlyFans and other subscription creators. It combines AI crawling, image and face matching, and human agents to find leaks and file notices, priced per username. It suits creators who want a hands-off service and will confirm the plan covers their handles and platforms.
What Rulta is
Rulta is a content-protection and DMCA takedown service aimed at creators, with the majority of its customers being adult and subscription-based creators. The company is based in Estonia and lists its service at rulta.com. Rulta says more than 20,000 creators use it, which is its own published figure rather than something a buyer can independently audit.
The pitch is straightforward. You hand over the usernames and stage names you want protected, Rulta's system and its agents hunt for unauthorized copies, and takedown notices go out on your behalf. It is built to run mostly without you once it's set up.
How it works (from public info)
Based on Rulta's site and help center, the service works like this:
- Continuous crawling plus human review. Rulta describes AI that scans thousands of sites, search engines, forums, social platforms, piracy sites, and file hosts around the clock, backed by trained agents who issue the notices.
- Image and face matching. Rulta says it uses image and video fingerprinting and face recognition, so it can flag copies even when a pirate crops, resizes, re-encodes, or filters the original. This is meant to catch leaks posted without your name attached.
- Reporting window. Rulta states that requests are reported within 24 hours.
- Whitelisting. You can mark your real accounts and domains so they're never filed against by mistake, managed from your dashboard.
- Dashboard submissions. You can submit specific links or channels for takedown from the dashboard, in addition to what the crawler finds.
Confirm the current behavior on Rulta's own pages, since features move between tiers over time.
Pricing (public, verify before you buy)
Rulta uses a per-username model, which is the single most important thing to understand before signing up. As of June 2026, Rulta's pricing page and help article list:
| Plan | Price (June 2026) | What's included |
|---|---|---|
| Pro | $109/mo | 1 username, 1 stage name, Google search + image removal, 10 takedown requests/day, whitelisting; extra usernames about +$75/mo each |
| Premier | $144/mo | 2 usernames, 2 stage names, adds social media search + removal, 20 manual requests/day, AI search |
| Legend | $324/mo | 4 usernames, 4 stage names, adds unlimited requests, copyright registration, and Telegram takedown |
Two caveats. Rulta has publicly signposted pricing changes, so the numbers above are current as of June 2026 and worth checking against the live page. And because pricing is per username and stage name, your real monthly cost depends on how many handles you protect, not just the headline plan price. Each extra username runs about $75/mo on top of your plan.
Pros
From Rulta's public reviews on Trustpilot, where it carries roughly 4.3 out of 5 across about 133 reviews at the time of writing, the recurring positives are:
- Fast first action. Reviewers mention quick turnarounds, in line with the 24-hour reporting claim.
- Catches re-uploads. The image and face matching is cited as finding copies posted without a username attached.
- Daily reports and communication. Several reviewers praise the daily reporting and customer service.
- Established track record. It's a known name with a real review history, which matters when you're handing over personal content.
Cons and things to verify
None of these are us calling Rulta bad. They're the specific things we'd confirm before paying, drawn from public reviews and Rulta's own tier structure.
- Per-username pricing adds up. Rulta charges per protected username, and each extra username runs about $75/mo on top of your plan. If you use several stage names, price the real total, not the entry plan.
- Telegram is Legend-only and link-driven. Rulta puts Telegram takedown on its top Legend plan ($324/mo). Per Rulta's own Telegram page, the flow is that you find the channel, scan your username in the Telegram app, and submit the link from your dashboard, rather than a proactive Telegram crawl. Rulta also states reported channels typically come down within about 25 days. If your leaks live in invite-only channels, confirm that flow fits before relying on it.
- Daily request caps on lower plans. Pro caps manual takedown requests at 10 a day and Premier at 20; only Legend is unlimited. If your leaks spike, confirm the cap fits your volume.
- Social media protection drew mixed notes. Some public reviews express dissatisfaction with social-media removals specifically. Test it on your own accounts before relying on it.
- Removal stats are self-reported, and outside numbers run lower. Rulta publishes running totals of content found and removed, which come from its own system. For an independent figure, Ceartas's content-protection comparison puts Rulta's Google Transparency Report removal rate at about 77.8%. Treat both as starting points and check Google's public Transparency Report for Rulta yourself.
Who Rulta is best for
Rulta is a reasonable fit for a creator who protects one or two handles, wants a hands-off service with daily reports, and whose leaks mostly live on tube sites, search, and mainstream social rather than buried in Telegram. If you run many stage names, or if Telegram is where your content actually spreads, price the higher tiers carefully and test coverage before committing.
How we'd evaluate any service like this
This is the rubric we'd use on Rulta, on us, or on anyone else. Score each the same way instead of trusting testimonials.
- Telegram coverage. Does it scan Telegram itself, public and invite-only, or only act on links you submit?
- Escalation past the first notice. What happens when content reappears or a host ignores the notice? Look for host, registrar, payment processor, and search de-listing steps, plus manual removal.
- Verifiable results. Can you confirm the removal rate outside the vendor's own dashboard?
- Privacy. Is the notice filed under the service's name so your real identity stays off public records?
- Free scan and price scaling. Can you see real leaks before paying, and how does the price move as you add usernames or seats?
A fairer comparison: Fanlock
We built Fanlock because the gap we kept hitting was Telegram and what happens after the first notice. For a lot of adult creators, most leaks live in Telegram channels, not on Google or tube sites.
Here's where we land on the same rubric, using only what we can stand behind. Fanlock scans Telegram itself, public and invite-only channels, not just links you hand us. We escalate across four tiers, from automated notices to host, registrar, and payment processor, to search de-listing, to white-glove manual removal, and we re-file when content reappears. Notices are filed under Fanlock's name, so your real identity isn't exposed. Plans start at $49/mo with unlimited usernames and stage names tied to one creator, and the first scan is free with no card and no selfie until after you see results. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, which you can confirm yourself in Google's public Transparency Report rather than taking from a dashboard. Telegram leaks come down in about 7 days in most cases.
The honest test is the same one we'd give for any vendor. Run the same username through both free scans and compare what each one actually finds.
FAQ
Is Rulta legit?
Yes, Rulta is a real, established DMCA takedown service based in Estonia with a public review history. On Trustpilot it holds roughly 4.3 out of 5 across about 133 reviews at the time of writing. "Legit" and "right for you" are different questions, so use the rubric above and a free scan before you decide.
Is Rulta worth it for OnlyFans creators?
It can be, especially if you protect one or two handles and your leaks live on search, tube sites, and mainstream social. The main thing to price out is the per-username model and which features sit on which tier. Confirm Telegram and social coverage match where your content actually spreads.
How much does Rulta cost?
As of June 2026, Rulta lists Pro at $109/mo, Premier at $144/mo, and Legend at $324/mo, with extra usernames about $75/mo each. Rulta has signposted pricing changes, so check the live pricing page for current numbers.
Does Rulta remove leaks from Telegram?
Telegram takedown sits on Rulta's top Legend plan ($324/mo). Per Rulta's own Telegram page, you find the channel and submit the link from your dashboard, so it's a link-driven flow rather than a proactive Telegram crawl, and Rulta says reported channels typically come down within about 25 days. For invite-only channels, confirm that flow fits your situation before relying on it.
What's a good alternative to Rulta?
There are several creator-focused services at different price points. Fanlock starts at $49/mo, scans Telegram directly, files under its own name for privacy, and offers a free first scan with no card. The fair way to choose is to run the same username through each service's free scan and compare the leak counts.
Switch to Fanlock
If you're weighing Rulta, weigh us too. Sign up and Fanlock removes your content from leak sites, search, social, and Telegram automatically, files every notice under our name so your identity stays private, and re-files when leaks return. Our Pirate-Intent Search mirrors how a leak gets discovered in the first place, querying Google for the terms a leak-hunter would use and catching fresh posts as they surface across millions of leak sites. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, verifiable in Google's public Transparency Report.
Don't take a review's word for it, run a scan
The fastest way to judge any leak-removal service, Rulta or us, is to see what it finds for your name. Start with a free scan. No card, no ID until you've seen the leaks.
About Zander Small
co-founder of Fanlock
Zander Small is a co-founder of Fanlock and the engineer who built its detection and takedown system. He's a creator himself, with a following of around 2 million, and started Fanlock after seeing how hard it is for creators to get stolen content removed and keep it down. He writes about how DMCA enforcement actually works in practice, across search, social, Telegram, and piracy sites. More about the Fanlock team →
