Removal guide

How to Remove Leaked Content from Bunkr.

bunkr.cr

Finding your content on Bunkr is awful because it often shows up as neat little albums that people can share fast. If it is your OnlyFans, Fansly, Chaturbate, or private paid content, you do not have to “prove” you deserve privacy. You need to document it properly and send a clear copyright removal request.

Bunkr is commonly used as a file and album host for leaked creator content. The key is to report the exact album and file URLs, not just the main domain, because one album can contain dozens or hundreds of separate media links.

48.6K.

infringements for this domain

Source: Google Transparency Report, as of May 2026

First, collect the right Bunkr URLs

Before you report anything, gather evidence. Bunkr leaks often live in albums, and each image or video can have its own page or direct media link.

Collect:

  • The album URL on `bunkr.cr`
  • Each individual file/page URL inside the album
  • Any direct media URLs if they open separately
  • The uploader/profile URL if visible
  • Screenshots showing the content, the page URL, and the date/time

Do not rely on “there is a leak on Bunkr” as your report. A good takedown request names every URL you want removed. If there are too many files, start with the album URL plus a list of representative file URLs, then say the full album contains your copyrighted work.

Prepare a DMCA notice Bunkr can act on

Your notice should be short, specific, and legally complete. You do not need to write a dramatic explanation, and you should not send more private material than necessary.

Include:

  • Your name or authorized representative name
  • An email address for takedown correspondence
  • A description of your original content, such as “paid subscriber photos and videos from my OnlyFans account under the creator name ___”
  • The infringing Bunkr URLs
  • A statement that you have a good-faith belief the use is unauthorized
  • A statement that the information is accurate and, under penalty of perjury, you are the copyright owner or authorized to act for them
  • Your physical or electronic signature

If you are using a stage name, say that you are the performer/creator behind that name. For safety, many creators use a business address, agent, or takedown service rather than putting a home address in notices.

Submit the takedown to Bunkr

Look for Bunkr’s current DMCA, Abuse, or Contact link on the site and submit the notice there. Bunkr domains and contact routes can change, so use the active contact method shown on `bunkr.cr` at the time you file.

When you submit:

  • Put “DMCA takedown request” in the subject line
  • Paste the URLs in a clean list, one per line
  • Attach only necessary screenshots, not original nude files unless specifically required
  • Ask for removal of the album and all associated hosted media files
  • Save a copy of the notice and any confirmation you receive

If the form fails or you get no response, send the same notice through any listed abuse email and consider escalating to the site’s hosting provider, CDN, or registrar using a current WHOIS/ICANN lookup. The more precise your URL list is, the harder it is for anyone in the chain to ignore.

Remove Bunkr results from Google too

Bunkr pages are heavily indexed, so even after the files are removed, search results can linger. File a separate copyright removal request with Google for any indexed Bunkr URLs.

Use Google’s copyright removal tool and include:

  • The Bunkr album/file URLs appearing in search
  • The source where your original content was published, if safe to share
  • A clear description that the material is paid/private creator content posted without permission

If Bunkr removes the page first, you can also use Google’s outdated content removal tool to refresh or drop dead results. This step matters because fans, scrapers, and leak hunters often find the content through search before they ever visit Bunkr directly.

Watch for reuploads after removal

A Bunkr takedown can remove the current album, but leaked content is often copied into new albums or reposted on forums that link back to Bunkr-style hosts.

After removal, keep an eye on:

  • Your creator name plus “Bunkr” in Google
  • Reverse image search results for preview thumbnails
  • Telegram, Reddit-style forums, and leak indexes that shared the album
  • New Bunkr URLs using the same album title or file names

If you find reuploads, do not start from scratch emotionally — start from your saved URL list and notice. Reuse the structure, update the URLs, and file again quickly.

Questions.

Can I remove an entire Bunkr album with one DMCA notice?

Usually, yes, if the album is mainly made up of your copyrighted content. Still include the album URL and several individual file URLs so the reviewer can verify the claim quickly.

What if I do not own the copyright because a studio or photographer shot it?

You can only send a DMCA notice if you own the copyright or are authorized to act for the owner. If a photographer, studio, or agency owns the rights, ask them to file or give you written authorization.

Will removing it from Bunkr remove it from Google?

Not automatically or not immediately. You should also submit the Bunkr URLs to Google’s copyright removal tool, especially if they appear when searching your performer name.

Can Leakless handle Bunkr removals for me?

Yes. Leakless can document Bunkr albums, send DMCA notices, follow up on ignored requests, and work on Google delisting so you are not stuck chasing every URL yourself.

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