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Inside the Bop House: the viral OnlyFans mansion

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The Bop House turned a shared mansion into one of the most-watched creator brands on the internet. Here is the full story of how it started, who lives there, and why a house full of OnlyFans creators became a viral phenomenon pulling tens of millions of views.

What is the Bop House?

The Bop House is a content-creator collective — a group of OnlyFans creators who live and work together in a shared mansion in Florida, producing collaborative videos for social media. The concept borrows from the "content house" model that TikTok and YouTube popularized, where a group of creators pool their audiences, film together, and cross-promote to grow far faster than any one of them could alone.

What set the Bop House apart was scale and timing. Almost overnight it became a recognizable brand, with a shared account and a roster of members who each brought their own following. The collective's members together command tens of millions of followers across platforms.

How it started

The Bop House was launched in December 2024 by Sophie Rain and Aishah Sofey. The debut could not have been simpler: a short TikTok clip filmed in front of the mansion's pool, with a placard that read "Bop House." That six-second video was enough to ignite the concept.

The growth that followed was explosive. Within roughly a month the Bop House TikTok account had gathered over a million followers, and the collective's combined reach across members quickly climbed into the tens of millions. It was a textbook demonstration of how a strong hook and a group of already-popular creators can compound into something much bigger.

Co-founder Aishah Sofey helped launch the Bop House in December 2024 alongside Sophie Rain.
Co-founder Aishah Sofey helped launch the Bop House in December 2024 alongside Sophie Rain.

Who lives in the Bop House?

The collective has centered on a group of around eight creators. Alongside the founders, members have included Summer Iris, Joy Mei, Ava Reyes, Camilla Araujo, and Julia Filippo, among others. Each member runs her own independent page, and the house functions as a shared platform that amplifies everyone involved.

The lineup has evolved over time, as content houses tend to. When the group looked to add a new member, it ran an online contest that reportedly drew thousands of applicants, ultimately welcoming Mexican creator Lexi Marvel to the mansion — a clever move that turned recruitment itself into a viral event.

Why it went viral

Several things made the Bop House take off so fast. First, pooled audiences: when several creators with large followings post the same content to their own channels, the reach multiplies. Second, curiosity: the "mansion full of creators" premise is inherently clickable, and short, playful clips travelled well on TikTok's algorithm. Third, consistency: a steady stream of group videos kept the account in people's feeds.

The result was a brand that transcended any single member. The Bop House name became a draw in its own right, and press coverage from mainstream outlets pushed it even further into the public conversation.

Members like Joy Mei each bring an independent following that the house amplifies through collaborative content.
Members like Joy Mei each bring an independent following that the house amplifies through collaborative content.

The move to Miami and how it evolved

As the brand grew, the Bop House upgraded its base, reportedly relocating to a multi-story penthouse in Miami's Brickell neighborhood — a high-end space befitting its new profile. The collective also went through natural roster changes: co-founder Sophie Rain moved on in 2025 to focus on her own solo brand, which by then had become one of the biggest individual success stories on the platform.

These shifts are normal for content houses, which tend to rotate members as careers grow and priorities change. What stayed constant was the core idea: a shared brand that gives each creator more reach than she would have alone.

What the Bop House means for the creator economy

The Bop House is a case study in how the creator economy is professionalizing. It applied a proven format — the content house — to the subscription era, and showed that collaboration and branding can matter as much as individual content. For creators, the lesson is that audience-building is increasingly a team sport, and that a memorable brand can travel further than any single post.

You can explore the individual creators associated with the house, and hundreds of others, throughout the OnlyFansPedia directory.

New member Lexi Marvel joined the Bop House through an online contest that drew thousands of applicants.
New member Lexi Marvel joined the Bop House through an online contest that drew thousands of applicants.

Frequently asked questions

When did the Bop House start? December 2024, launched by Sophie Rain and Aishah Sofey with a short TikTok video.

Where is the Bop House? It is based in Florida and reportedly moved to a penthouse in the Brickell area of Miami as it grew.

How many members are there? The collective has centered on roughly eight creators, with the lineup changing over time.

Is Sophie Rain still in the Bop House? She co-founded it but moved on in 2025 to focus on her solo brand.

This article summarizes publicly reported information and is provided for general interest. OnlyFansPedia is an independent directory and is not affiliated with the Bop House or OnlyFans.