The practical way to search by location on OnlyFindX is to start with a public country page, then check each profile’s displayed location. Country is a supported browse grouping; city and state are profile details, not public browse filters. Treat every location as a self-described discovery hint, never as proof of where someone lives or where they are now.
Start with a country page
Open the Best directory and look for an available country page. OnlyFindX maps approved country aliases to one normalized country label, so variants can feed the same page instead of creating duplicate lists.
Observed product behavior: a country page is published only when its normalized country has at least three eligible, active, published profiles. A country below that public threshold may have records in the system without having a browseable page. This is a publication rule, not evidence that no other creators describe themselves as being from that country.
Narrow the shortlist from profile details
After opening a country list, use these checks:
- Read the location shown on each profile. OnlyFindX formats city and state together when both are present, otherwise it shows whichever location field is available.
- Compare categories, public price, and page counters rather than relying on place alone.
- Open the linked profile and confirm that the public details still match before making a decision.
- If the country page is broad, apply the process in How to refine a broad creator search.
Product limitation: there is no public city or state directory to browse. A search term may match text associated with a profile, but that is not the same as a structured city-radius or proximity search. OnlyFindX does not present GPS coordinates, distance, or live-location data.
Read a location label conservatively
A city, state, or country field can be useful for discovery, but it can also be blank, old, promotional, or intentionally broad. The safe interpretation is: this public profile has been recorded with this location label. It does not establish legal residence, nationality, identity, availability to meet, or current whereabouts.
Do not combine a listing with people-search records or other personal data to pinpoint someone. The FTC warns that people-search products can create safety concerns, particularly when location information affects someone who is dealing with stalking or domestic violence.
For a privacy-first workflow, use safer local creator discovery and keep the task focused on comparing public creator pages—not identifying a private person.
What to do when a place looks wrong
First, check whether the linked public profile now uses a different location or no location at all. A mismatch may simply reflect an older observation. Then send the profile URL and the specific field at issue through the OnlyFindX contact page. State what is currently displayed and what correction you are requesting; do not include private addresses or live-location information.
This correction path is appropriate for inaccurate directory metadata. It is separate from a copyright notice, and submitting a report does not by itself prove which location is correct.