AI Girlfriend

OhChat Review 2026: 6.0/10, Real Licensed Celebrity AI Twins

OhChat review 2026: 6.0/10. Licensed AI twins of real celebrities (Carmen Electra, Katie Price). Verified $9.99/mo per character. UK operator.

By Alexandra Joly · Senior Editor · Reviewed July 17, 2026 · See our editorial process and errata log

What is OhChat?

OhChat is a London-operated adult AI companion platform, run by Utility3 Ltd, built around two catalogs: around 460 invented "Original" characters, and a smaller set of Digital Twins, which are AI replicas of real, licensed creators and celebrities like Carmen Electra and Katie Price. It offers text, voice, images and video, all AI-generated, 18+ only. The licensed real-person angle is what separates it from every generic app.

Most apps in this space sell you a fantasy they made up. OhChat sells you a fantasy attached to a real person who signed a contract to be there. That's the entire pitch, and it's a genuinely different product even though the underlying tech looks similar to everyone else's.

When I walked the site in July, the split was obvious the second I got past the age gate. The homepage is laid out like a social network, follower counts and all, and it mixes invented characters (Ava McKenzie, "your sexy secretary from London") right in with real names I recognized (Lisa Ann, Brandi Love, Kerry Katona) [Source: OhChat homepage roster, observed live · verified 2026-07-17]. The company behind it is Utility3 Ltd, registered in England and Wales, and it also runs a business arm that sells the same engine to other companies. Both the girlfriend side and a 48-strong AI boyfriend roster exist here, so whether you're after a her or a him, the catalog covers it. What it doesn't cover is you: there's no tool to build your own character, which for a 2026 companion app is a real absence.

Yes. The named celebrities are real people who opted in. Carmen Electra, Katie Price, Lisa Ann, Brandi Love and a group of former Playboy Playmates have signed likeness agreements, receive roughly 80% of the revenue their twin generates, and keep control over how explicit their character goes. Katie Price is reportedly the first British celebrity to trademark her own AI likeness. That documented consent is what separates OhChat from the unlicensed celebrity bots elsewhere.

This is the question that actually matters, and it's the one the rest of the internet answers badly. Here's the honest version. The stars on OhChat are there on purpose. The company signs written agreements, pays the creator about 80% of what their twin earns, and lets each person set how far their character will go. Carmen Electra is capped at suggestive; Lisa Ann and Brandi Love are set to explicit; Katie Price sits in between at topless. I could see those exact caps on the profiles myself [Source: OhChat character content-level labels, observed live · verified 2026-07-17]. Lisa Ann put it plainly to Wired: "This keeps my name alive. She's never going to age... It's full transparency. You know who you're talking to." [Source: Wired: porn stars embracing AI clones (Lisa Ann quote) · verified 2026-07-17]

The single most striking thing I found is on Katie Price's side of the catalog. There are two of her. One is her present-day self at 47. The other is "Jordan," her glamour-model persona from the early 2000s, whose profile literally opens "It's 2001. I'm on your telly" [Source: OhChat 'Jordan' character profile, observed live · verified 2026-07-17]. She licensed her own younger self as a separate, separately-billed product. That's legal because she owns the likeness (she reportedly trademarked it), it's consensual because it's her choice, and it's genuinely novel. Nobody else has written about it.

Now the industry bit, because it's the reason this section exists. Most reviews of OhChat you'll find right now either miss the celebrities entirely (one competitor stamps a "tested July 2026" date on a write-up that never once mentions a single licensed star) or run a "Carmen Electra AI" bot themselves with zero license behind it. We don't do either. The consent here is checkable, so I checked it, and where I couldn't verify a claim I've said so instead of dressing it up.

How much does OhChat cost?

OhChat costs $9.99, $19.99, or $39.99 per month, verified at the payment screen on July 17, 2026. The structure is the twist: one plan unlocks all ~460 synthetic "Original" characters, while a separate plan of the same price covers a single celebrity twin. Two celebrities means two subscriptions. Each tier shows a permanent "50% OFF" badge against a doubled anchor price, and media stays metered even on the top tier.

I'll spend a second here because it's where I can actually help you, and where everyone else is guessing. There is no pricing page on OhChat. Price only shows up when you hit Subscribe on a specific character. So I did that, on four different profiles, and stopped at the "Confirm and Pay" button without paying [Source: OhChat subscription paywall, walked on four profiles · verified 2026-07-17].

Here's what came up, identically, every time:

Two things you need to know that the table can't show. First, that "50% OFF" badge was on every single profile I opened, celebrity and synthetic alike, against a "was" price that's always exactly double. A discount that's permanently on isn't really a discount, it's just how they write the price. Second, and this is the big one, the fine print under the celebrity plan reads "Other superModels not included," and under the synthetic plan it reads "Digital Twins not included." So $9.99 buys you all 460 invented characters, or it buys you one Carmen Electra. Want Carmen and Katie? That's $19.98 a month, two separate subscriptions. It's OnlyFans math wearing an AI costume: your bill goes up with every real human you want.

Why does this matter so much? Because the entire rest of the web has this wrong. On page one of Google right now I counted five different, incompatible OhChat price tables, ranging from $4.99 to $40, most of them months out of date, and one of them ($12.99) served by a fake OhChat lookalike site. There are even sites publishing invented "OhChat promo codes" that are just random letters. Ours is the price I actually saw on the actual checkout on the date stamped at the top. If a genuine deal ever appears, we track its real state on our promo codes page; as of this writing, the only "offer" is that permanent 50%-off framing, which isn't a code.

Is OhChat legit or a scam?

OhChat is a legitimate registered business, not a scam. It's operated by Utility3 Ltd, a company registered in England and Wales (number 14000143), named across its terms, privacy policy and 2257 statement. We found no lawsuits and no documented case of a non-consenting person being cloned. The real hazard is impersonation: the genuine site is ohchat.com, while lookalike domains copy the branding and invent prices, and coupon sites serve fake codes.

Short answer: it's real. The company is Utility3 Ltd in London, and unlike a lot of operators in this category, it doesn't hide, it names itself on every legal page and even publishes a records-custodian address [Source: OhChat 18 U.S.C. 2257 statement naming Utility3 Ltd · verified 2026-07-17]. It's raised real money and it's been covered by real press (CNN, Wired, VentureBeat's GamesBeat). I went looking for lawsuits, consent complaints, or any case of someone being cloned without permission, and came up with nothing on record. That's not proof none exists, but it's a cleaner sheet than most.

The thing to actually watch out for isn't OhChat, it's the fakes around it. The genuine product is ohchat.com. But oh-chat.eu, ohchat.org and a handful of others copy the look, and at least one of them slaps a "© 2026 OhChat" footer on a page quoting prices that exist nowhere on the real site. There's also an unrelated crypto coin using the "OhChat" name that muddies search results. So the one practical piece of scam-avoidance advice: type ohchat.com yourself, don't trust a random search result promising a discount.

Is OhChat safe and private?

Mostly, with two caveats. OhChat operates under UK and EU data law, uses a third-party provider for age or ID checks where a country requires them and states it does not store your ID documents, and doesn't keep full card details. The caveats: the visible age check is a simple self-declared 18+ gate whose compliance with the UK's stricter age-assurance rules we couldn't confirm, and the registered address on the legal pages doesn't match the footer.

On paper the privacy posture is one of the better ones I've read in this space, and it's the reason it's the platform's top-scoring area. It runs under UK and EU data protection law, names the data controller, says outright that it doesn't store government ID documents itself, and hands card processing to regulated providers [Source: OhChat privacy policy (UK/EU GDPR, no ID storage) · verified 2026-07-17]. Its 2257 statement, the legal record-keeping page, specifically addresses real-person likeness, saying signed agreements are in place and IDs were checked to confirm everyone was over 18.

The honest caveats. The age gate I hit was just an "I'm over 18" button, and since the UK tightened its rules on adult sites in 2025 to require proper age assurance rather than a self-declared click, I can't tell you from the outside whether OhChat meets that bar for UK visitors. And a small but real flag: the company's registered address on its terms page and the one in its own website footer are two different London addresses. Probably a stale footer, but I'm not going to pretend I confirmed it. One thing I can clear up: a scary MIT Technology Review story about underage celebrity chatbots that sometimes gets thrown at this category is about a different platform, not OhChat.

Can you cancel OhChat and get a refund?

You can cancel OhChat any time in your account settings, which stops the next renewal. But the terms say you're not refunded for the billing period you're already in, and one-off pay-per-view purchases are final. Subscriptions auto-renew until cancelled. Almost no other page answers this: cancelling is easy, clawing back the current month is not, except where local consumer law forces a refund.

This is the question that literally no other OhChat review bothers to answer, which is a small scandal given it's what people actually worry about before handing over a card. So, from the terms: you cancel in settings, it stops future charges, and it does not get you a refund for the month you're in [Source: OhChat Terms of Service, subscription and refund clauses · verified 2026-07-17]. Pay-per-view extras (individual media and bundles on top of your subscription) are non-refundable the moment you buy them. Given the per-character billing, my honest advice is to be deliberate about which stars you subscribe to, because each one is its own recurring line on your statement until you go in and stop it.

Verdict: should you subscribe to OhChat?

Subscribe to OhChat if the point, for you, is that it's really her. A licensed, consenting, recognizable person, with the deal and the revenue share and the content control all documented, is something no invented-girlfriend app can offer, and if that's what you came for, this is the only place that does it credibly. The compliance posture is solid and the pricing, once you understand the per-person structure, is at least honest and now verified.

Think twice if you want to build your own companion (you can't, there's no creation tool), or if you imagine one subscription getting you a harem of stars (it gets you exactly one). And keep your expectations set on the parts I couldn't test: I did not pay to chat, so the conversation, image, voice and video scores rest on what the platform shows publicly plus its own claims, and I've marked each of those honestly rather than inventing a hands-on session I didn't have.

We lock these scores before any conversation about what a brand pays, and we don't nudge them afterward. If OhChat adds character creation and I get to properly test the chat, this score can move up, and I'll re-test. For an all-rounder I've spent real time with, our Candy.ai review is the 8.4. For the other platform building AI twins of real celebrities, see our Joi.ai writeup. And if the licensed-real-person idea is what pulls you, the honest comparison to the human original is AI girlfriend vs OnlyFans.

Meet the real, licensed twins on OhChat →

Frequently asked questions

Are the OhChat celebrities real, and did they consent?

Yes, the named celebrities are real people who signed up on purpose. This is the one thing that genuinely sets OhChat apart. Carmen Electra, Katie Price, Lisa Ann, Brandi Love and a cluster of former Playboy Playmates all have signed likeness agreements, get roughly 80% of the revenue their twin earns, and keep control over how explicit their character goes. Katie Price is reportedly the first British celebrity to trademark her own AI likeness. Compare that to the unlicensed celebrity chatbots elsewhere that just scrape a face with no deal and no payment. On OhChat the consent is documented, which is why we cover it at all.

How much does OhChat cost?

We walked to the payment screen and read it ourselves on July 17, 2026: three tiers at $9.99, $19.99 and $39.99 per month, each shown against a struck-through price twice as high with a "50% OFF" badge that was on every profile we checked. The important part is what the money buys. One plan covers all of the roughly 460 original characters. A separate plan covers a single celebrity twin, and it says so in the fine print: "Other superModels not included." So Carmen Electra plus Katie Price is two subscriptions, not one. There is a free signup path, and media is still metered even on the $39.99 tier. See our promo codes page for the current discount state.

Is OhChat legit or a scam?

It is a real, registered business, not a scam. OhChat is operated by Utility3 Ltd, a company registered in England and Wales (number 14000143), and its terms, privacy policy and 2257 statement all name that entity. We found no lawsuits and no documented case of a non-consenting person being cloned. The bigger risk is confusion: the real site is ohchat.com, but lookalike domains like oh-chat.eu and ohchat.org copy the branding and even invent their own prices, and a coupon site serves fake OhChat promo codes. If you go, go to ohchat.com.

Is OhChat safe and private?

Reasonably, with two caveats. It runs under UK and EU data law, does not store your ID documents itself (a third-party checker handles age verification where a country requires it), and does not keep full card details. The caveats: the age check on the surface we saw is a simple self-declared "I'm over 18" gate, and we could not confirm it meets the UK's stricter age-assurance duty; and the registered address on the legal pages does not match the one in the site footer. It is 18+ only and everything is AI-generated.

Can you cancel OhChat and get a refund?

You can cancel any time in your account settings, and that stops the next renewal, but the terms say you are not refunded for the period you are already in, and one-off pay-per-view purchases are final. Subscriptions renew automatically until you cancel. Almost no other page answers this, so to be clear: cancelling is easy, getting money back for the current month is not, except where your local law forces it.

What is the difference between OhChat superModels and Digital Twins?

superModels (the app calls them "Originals") are invented, synthetic characters, and one subscription unlocks the whole catalog of around 460 of them. Digital Twins are AI replicas of real, licensed people, and each one is billed separately. Same three price tiers apply to both, but the value is completely different: $9.99 gets you every Original, or one single celebrity twin.

  • 8 tested AI girlfriends: our full short-list, where OhChat sits against the apps we've spent more hands-on time with.
  • Candy.ai review: the 8.4/10 all-rounder and our current top pick.
  • Joi.ai review: the other platform building AI twins of real celebrities.
  • AI girlfriend vs OnlyFans: the honest comparison between a licensed AI twin and paying the real person.
  • How we score: the eight categories behind the number, and why we lock scores before we look at commissions.

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