The short answer
To remove your content from Fapello, send a DMCA notice by email listing the exact URLs and your copyright. Fapello sometimes acts within a few days, but it runs several sibling domains under one operator, so a copy usually survives on another. File on every domain, escalate to the host or Cloudflare, de-list from Google and Bing, and re-file when it scrapes the content back.
What Fapello is
Fapello is a leak-aggregator and tube-style site that scrapes paywalled creator content from OnlyFans, Fansly, MYM, and similar platforms, then republishes it without consent. A lot of it is pulled automatically, which means the same content can reappear shortly after you remove it. The bigger problem is structural. Fapello operates across multiple domains, including fapello.com and fapello.su, under what reporting describes as the same operator, so deleting a page on one address often leaves an identical copy live on another.
Step-by-step: removing your content from Fapello
- List every URL, on every domain. Note the exact pages showing your content, and check the known sibling domains (fapello.com, fapello.su, and any active variants). Run a WHOIS/host lookup to confirm which domains are live right now, because the operator rotates them. Each URL is filed separately.
- Use the DMCA email route. Fapello has historically taken takedown requests by email rather than a working web form. Look for a DMCA or contact address on the current domain and send your notice there. Response times are inconsistent, so do not wait on it before moving to the next step.
- Go over the site's head. fapello.su has resolved on Cloudflare nameservers, which means Cloudflare is likely sitting in front of the real host. File with Cloudflare's abuse process to surface the origin host, then send the host its own notice. Verify the current setup with a lookup rather than trusting an old guide, since this changes.
- Send a § 512-compliant notice. Include your copyrighted work, the infringing URLs, a good-faith statement, the under-penalty-of-perjury statement, your contact, and a signature. This can become a public record, so file under a name you are willing to have on file, or have a service file under its name to keep your real identity off the paperwork.
- De-list from search in parallel. Submit the URLs to Google's and Bing's copyright removal forms so the pages stop showing in search even while Fapello is slow. For many creators, getting it out of Google matters as much as deleting the file.
- Re-file when it scrapes it back. Fapello re-uploads fast and across domains. Keep watching every active address and re-send. By hand, this is the part that never really ends.
Why Fapello is hard to remove from
The email DMCA route can work, but it is unreliable, and one clean takedown rarely sticks. Fapello's value to its operator is the network of sibling domains and the automated scraping, so a copy you kill on fapello.com can stay live on fapello.su minutes later, then get re-scraped after you clear it. Add Cloudflare in front of the origin and you are chasing a moving target across several addresses at once. It is doable, but it is a grind that repeats.
Let Fanlock handle Fapello for you
We identify the real host behind Fapello and file under Fanlock's name, so your identity never lands in a public takedown record. We file across every active sibling domain, not just the one you found, and we escalate past the email route to the host, the registrar, and Cloudflare when the site stalls. We de-list the pages from Google, Bing, and Yahoo so they stop surfacing in search, and we re-file automatically when the scraper pulls your content back. The Telegram channels that feed sites like Fapello are exactly what we watch. The reason we spot a fresh copy first is Pirate-Intent Search, our own method that queries Google with the exact terms leak-hunters type to find you, so a new Fapello page shows up to us as soon as it goes live. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, which you can confirm yourself in Google's public Transparency Report.
FAQ
Is it legal to remove my content from Fapello?
Yes. You own the copyright to your content the moment you create it, which gives you the right to demand removal of unauthorized copies under the DMCA. You do not need a registered copyright to file a notice.
Does Fapello respond to DMCA requests?
Sometimes. Fapello has acted on emailed notices within a few days for some creators, while others wait weeks or hear nothing. Because the response is inconsistent and copies live across multiple domains, the reliable move is to file with the host and Cloudflare and to de-list from search at the same time.
Why does my content come back on Fapello after I remove it?
Fapello scrapes content automatically and runs several domains under one operator, so a deleted page often has a twin still live, and the scraper can re-upload after you clear it. Removal only holds if you cover every active domain and keep monitoring for re-uploads.
Do I have to file on fapello.com and fapello.su separately?
Usually yes. Reporting links these domains to the same operator, but they are technically separate addresses, so a notice against one does not automatically clear the other. Confirm which domains are live with a WHOIS lookup and file against each.
Will my real name be exposed if I file myself?
It can be, because DMCA notices can become public records. Filing under a service's name keeps your legal identity off the paperwork while still getting the content removed.
See if your content is on Fapello right now
Run a free scan with just your username and we will show you where you are exposed, across Fapello's domains and everywhere else, then handle the removals for you. No card, no selfie until you have seen what we found. Plans start at $49/mo.
Fanlock removes your content from Fapello automatically
You don't have to do any of this by hand. Sign up and Fanlock finds your content on Fapello (and across search, social, and Telegram), files the takedowns under our name so your identity stays private, and re-files automatically when it reappears. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, verifiable in Google's public Transparency Report.
About 1Kyle8
OnlyFans creator
1Kyle8 is an OnlyFans creator who removed her own leaks with Fanlock. She writes these removal guides from experience; the technical and legal steps are reviewed by Zander Small, Fanlock co-founder. More about the Fanlock team →