The Moment

Denise Richards is drawing a big, neon line between her ex and her online hustle. In new court filings, she’s asking a judge to stop estranged husband Aaron Phypers from getting a cut of her OnlyFans income,income he reportedly pegs at a jaw-dropping $200,000 to $300,000 a month.

According to the filings, as described in a January 27, 2026, entertainment news report, Aaron has asked for half of that subscription money. Denise, in turn, is asking the judge to deny his request because he allegedly missed a key procedural step: filing an updated income and expense declaration by a court-ordered Friday deadline. As of the following Tuesday, he still had not filed, per that same report.

Their divorce has already been labeled nasty in coverage, with money front and center and Aaron’s financial struggles being aired in public. For now, the judge has not ruled on Denise’s latest request, so the OnlyFans fortune is still in legal limbo.

The Take

Let’s just say this: we have officially reached the Is my ex entitled to my thirst-trap money? phase of celebrity divorce. Honestly, it was only a matter of time.

On paper, this is a fight about paperwork and percentages. In real life, it’s about something much bigger: who gets to profit from a woman’s image once the marriage is over. Denise is out here building a late-career digital empire on a platform that still makes some people clutch their pearls, and now her ex allegedly wants in on the monetization.

There is, of course, the boring-but-important legal angle. In California, income earned during a marriage can be treated as community property. That doesn’t automatically mean an ex gets half of your post-split side hustle; it depends on the exact timeline, the separation date, any agreements they signed, and what a judge decides. But it does explain why Aaron would even try to make a claim in the first place.

Still, the optics? Rough. The man who isn’t making the content, asking for half of the content money, feels a bit like your ex showing up at the grand opening of your new boutique with a lawn chair and a calculator. Technically, he might have arguments. Emotionally, the public is likely to side with the woman who’s actually doing the work.

And Denise knows this. She’s not just leaning on legal arguments; she’s highlighting that alleged missed filing deadline. Translation: if you want my OnlyFans coin, at least do your homework on time. It’s a savvy move in court and in the court of public opinion.

The cultural twist here is that OnlyFans money still carries a different charge than, say, a sitcom residual check. It’s personal. It’s intimate. Fans are paying for her face, her body, her time. Having an ex-husband stake a claim to that cash feels, to many people, like a step too far, even if a lawyer could map out an argument on a whiteboard.

Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers together at an event (Getty)
Photo: Getty

Receipts

Confirmed:

  • Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers are in the middle of a divorce and have been involved in public disputes over money, according to ongoing media coverage.
  • Court filings exist in which Denise asks a judge to deny Aaron’s request for a share of her OnlyFans income, as described in a January 27, 2026, entertainment news report that says it reviewed the documents.
  • Those same filings, as summarized in that report, state that Aaron claims Denise earns roughly $200,000 to $300,000 per month on OnlyFans.
  • Denise publicly announced she was joining OnlyFans in 2022 via an Instagram post and subsequent interviews, positioning the move as a business decision and a way to control her own image.
  • As of that January 27, 2026, report, the judge had not yet ruled on Denise’s request regarding the OnlyFans money.

Unverified / reported:

  • The exact current amount of Denise’s monthly OnlyFans income is Aaron’s claim in the filings and has not been independently confirmed.
  • The allegation that Aaron missed a specific Friday deadline to file an updated income and expense declaration, and still had not filed as of the following Tuesday, comes from descriptions of the court paperwork in that entertainment report; the underlying documents are not publicly reproduced in full.
  • Any broader details about Aaron’s finances beyond what he has personally shared or what is summarized from court papers remain private.

Backstory (For Casual Readers)

If you remember Denise Richards as the actress from Wild Things and Starship Troopers, you’ve watched her reinvent herself more than once. She moved from film to reality TV as a cast member on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, then into the creator economy when she joined OnlyFans in 2022, after her adult daughter signed up first. Aaron Phypers, an actor and wellness business owner, married Denise in 2018. Their relationship and money issues have played out in public for years, and now their breakup has landed squarely in court, with digital subscription money becoming a major flashpoint.

What’s Next

The next big moment is simple but huge: a judge will decide whether Aaron’s request for a slice of the OnlyFans income goes anywhere, and whether that alleged missed deadline actually hurts his case. We don’t know when a ruling will land, but it will likely shape the rest of their financial negotiations.

Expect more filings, more leaks, and more debate about what counts as our money versus my money in a digital-creator age. If the court treats this like any other marital income, it sends one message. If the judge carves it out as uniquely personal work that shouldn’t be shared with an ex, it sends a very different one especially to women making serious money on subscription platforms.

Either way, Denise and Aaron’s divorce just became a test case for what happens when old-school marriage law meets new-school content cash. And you can bet other celebrities with side hustles are watching closely.

Your turn: should an ex ever get a share of money made from personal subscription content like OnlyFans, or is that where you draw the line in divorce?

Reaction On This Story

You May Also Like

Copy link