Katie Price has slashed the price of her OnlyFans joining fee to pull in more members - and earn her more cash - from her adult-only site.
The 90s Jordan pin-up model, 43, has dropped the usual £11-a-month fee by a third as she attempts to claw back some cash amid her long running bankruptcy struggles.
The blonde beauty is offering the deal until next week and promised fee-payers her content is about to step up a gear.
She told followers: “Hey everyone, there’s lots of good shoots, lots of good content coming up for you guys.
As they say, never under-estimate the Pricey.”
KP had seen floods of fee payers not renew and she has since disabled the ability for fans to post their views and deleted all previous messages.
One person said in a now erased message to her page: “Wont be resubscribing, see more on google or newspapers!!! Very disappointing and let down x
Another chimed: “no offense katie but this is not worth anywhere near 11 a month, very misleading and definitely wont be resubscribing.”
The mum-of-five hopes to make around £1m in a year from her page.
In previous footage Katie perched on a table as she said: "Guys - can you do one thing for me?
"Subscribe to my OnlyFans channel. It's that easy - just go to the link below.
"You will get to see the real Katie price, the raw content, the photoshoots, my life, unedited footage - it's all raw stuff."
She then continued: "It all comes from the horse's mouth so enjoy the journey with me, join now."
Katie has also slashed the prices on her DePop account, offering fans 20 per cent off.
Speaking directly to fans ahead of her OnlyFans launch to address the sites content, she explained: "There will of course be glamorous pictures, I absolutely LOVE being in front of the lens, after all, this is where it all began for me!
"OnlyFans will also be a place where I can talk about what is REALLY going on in my life as well as sharing select images and exclusive behind the scenes footage from my shoots."
The mum-of-five was declared bankrupt in 2019 and owes £3.2m to creditors including HMRC, her mortgage company and small businesses.
Katie reportedly agreed to pay creditors £12,000 a month but allegedly failed to keep up with payments.
During a court case in February this year she managed to strike a ‘last-minute’ agreement that she would pay a ‘small contribution’ now to reduce her debt, as well as a new payment plan.