Free Model Release Form Generator
Shared or exclusive rights, up to 4 models, signatures and witness — a professional release agreement PDF, built in your browser.
Who will own the content after the shoot?
Tip: you can leave signatures blank, print the PDF, and collect wet-ink signatures on set.
Why every collab needs a signed release
The moment two creators appear in the same content, the ownership question exists whether you answer it or not: who may post it, who may sell it, who keeps the money, and what happens if one of you deletes their account — or leaks the content — a year from now. A co-model release answers those questions in writing, before the content earns a cent. Every serious platform expects one too: OnlyFans, ManyVids, and Fansly all require documentation for every person appearing in uploaded content.
Release rules on OnlyFans, Fansly, ManyVids, Clips4Sale & JustForFans
Each platform runs its own consent flow — OnlyFans and Fansly verify tagged collaborators and their documents in-app, ManyVids and Clips4Sale verify co-performers before collab content goes on sale, and JustForFans can request documentation at any time. Those flows prove consent to appear, but none of them settle ownership: who may sell the content, on which platforms, and what happens after a falling-out. That's this agreement's job — keep the signed PDF alongside each platform's own paperwork and you're covered on both fronts.
Shared vs. exclusive — which one do you need?
- Shared content release: all models jointly own the content. None of the parties may reproduce, sell, license, or redistribute it without the written consent of the others, and everyone agrees not to disclose the others' personal information. This is the standard for equal collabs where both creators post and monetize the content on their own pages.
- Exclusive rights release: the co-model signs over sole, exclusive, perpetual ownership to one owner — including all rights to reproduce, sell, license, and distribute — and waives claims of co-authorship or royalties. Use this when one creator produces the shoot and compensates the other up front.
What this agreement covers
- Confirmation that every participant is a consenting adult (18+) acting of their own free will.
- ID exchange — each model agrees to provide a valid government photo ID, and consents to it being shared with platforms on request.
- Identification of the exact content, shoot date, and location.
- The ownership arrangement — joint (shared) or sole (exclusive).
- Optional sale restrictions you define.
- A non-disclosure clause protecting everyone's personal information (shared releases).
- Responsibility and platform definitions, plus an entire-agreement clause.
Don't stop at the release. U.S. law also requires an age-verification record for every performer — generate the matching 2257 form for each person in the shoot (free, and IDs never leave the device).
Before you hit record — a 60-second checklist
- Release generated, reviewed, and signed by every model (typed, drawn, or wet-ink).
- A completed 2257 record with photo ID for each performer.
- Everyone keeps a copy of both documents.
- Agreed in writing where the content will and won't be posted.
- A plan for leaks — because collab content leaks more, not less. Check what's already out there with the free OnlyFans Traffic Booster.
Contracts deter partners. They don't deter pirates.
Even perfectly documented content gets stolen and reposted. BranditScan monitors the internet for your content around the clock, files DMCA takedowns automatically, removes impersonators, and delists stolen copies from Google — 1.2 billion+ links removed and counting.
- 24/7 leak detection
- Automated takedowns
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Disclaimer: this generator and page provide general information and a document template, not legal advice. Contract requirements vary by jurisdiction — for high-stakes productions or disputes, consult a licensed attorney.
Model release — frequently asked questions
What is a model release form and when do I need one?
A model release (co-model release) is a signed agreement between everyone appearing in a piece of content that settles who owns it, who may sell and distribute it, and confirms every participant is an adult acting of their own free will. You need one every time you shoot content with another person — collabs, boy/girl scenes, group content — before anything is published. Platforms like OnlyFans and ManyVids require releases for every non-account-holder appearing in uploaded content.
What is the difference between a shared and an exclusive release?
A shared content release means ownership of the content is jointly held by all participants — nobody may sell, license, or redistribute it without the written consent of the others. An exclusive rights release means the co-model signs all ownership over to one owner, who then has sole and perpetual rights to distribute and monetize the content. Choose shared for equal collabs; choose exclusive when one creator is producing and paying the other.
Do I need this release for OnlyFans, Fansly or ManyVids collabs?
Yes — and the platform's own in-app release form doesn't replace it. OnlyFans, Fansly, ManyVids, Clips4Sale and JustForFans all require proof of consent and identity for everyone appearing in uploaded content, but their forms only cover what the platform needs. This agreement settles what the platforms don't: who owns the content, who may sell or repost it, sale restrictions, and non-disclosure of personal information. Use both — the platform's flow for their compliance, this release for your rights.
Is this generator really private?
Yes. Names, addresses, signatures, and ID photos are processed entirely inside your browser — nothing is uploaded to BranditScan. The PDF is generated on your device and saved directly to your downloads folder.
Do all models have to sign at the same time?
No. You can generate the document with typed or drawn signatures for whoever is present, or leave the signature lines blank, print the PDF, and collect wet-ink signatures on paper. Each model should keep a copy of the fully signed agreement.
Do I still need a 2257 form if I have a model release?
Yes — they do different jobs, which is why the "2257 model release form" people search for is really two documents. The release settles ownership and distribution rights; the 2257 form is the federal age-verification record required by 18 U.S.C. § 2257. For any collab you should have both: a signed release plus a completed 2257 record (with ID) for every person in the content. Our free 2257 generator handles the second part.
What happens if a collab partner leaks or resells shared content?
The release gives you a contractual claim against them — and because you co-own the copyright, you can also file DMCA takedown notices against any site hosting the content without your consent. Our free DMCA generator creates that notice, and BranditScan can automate detection and takedowns at scale.
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