Welcome to OnionPages. This is a small, hand-kept index of the onion markets we think are worth a buyer's time. We do not chase every name on every forum. We keep a short list, we keep the links current, and we let the writing do the rest. Three markets are indexed here: Anubis, Nexus and Osiris.
Each listing below carries its own onion mirrors. Click an address to open it in the Tor Browser, or press the Copy button and paste it in yourself. The address you see is the full onion string, and the Copy button always hands you that exact string, never a shortened display version.
We think of this page the way the old paper directories thought of themselves: a plain, dependable place to look something up, with no animation, no popovers, and no demand that you switch on scripting to read a list. If it looks like a web page from the early days of the web, that is on purpose. A directory should be readable, fast over Tor, and honest about what it does and does not cover. This one indexes three darknet markets, keeps their onion mirrors current, and explains the rest in the guide pages further down.
Why a directory at all, rather than a bookmark? Because onion mirrors rotate. The address that works for a marketplace today is not guaranteed to answer next week, and a bookmarked onion link will quietly go stale on you. A bookmarked directory does not. We move with the markets, retire dead addresses, and publish the live set, so the one thing worth saving in your browser is this page, not any single onion underneath it.
Three mirrors per market, checked regularly. Pick a market, copy a mirror, and you are on your way.
Monero front and centre, 2-of-3 multisig on every order, and a tidy set of three onion mirrors kept current.
| Mirror | Onion address (click to open in Tor) |
|---|---|
| Primary | |
| Backup A | |
| Backup B |
A market with a longer track record, rotating onion mirrors, vendor reputation that carries weight, and rulings that land on time.
| Mirror | Onion address (click to open in Tor) |
|---|---|
| Headline | |
| Backup A | |
| Backup B |
Walletless by design: funds go straight into direct buyer-to-vendor escrow with no central wallet holding your coins, Monero first for privacy, mirrors on rotation, and active dispute resolution.
| Mirror | Onion address (click to open in Tor) |
|---|---|
| Primary | |
| Backup A | |
| Backup B |
A short shelf of plain-language reading for buyers. No jargon, no filler.
The directory is only useful if you reach the markets the right way, so here is the short version of the routine. Open every onion link in the Tor Browser, which you should download from torproject.org and nowhere else. Set the security slider to Safest before you go anywhere; all three storefronts work without scripting, so there is no reason to turn it down. Then copy a mirror from a listing rather than typing it out by hand.
That copy-not-retype rule matters more than it sounds. A current onion address is fifty six characters long, and a single wrong character does not give you an error page, it gives you somewhere you did not intend to be. The Copy button on each listing hands you the exact onion string every time, so use it. Paste the address straight into the Tor Browser, wait for the market to answer, and complete any challenge page that appears.
When it comes to money, fund in Monero. Bitcoin still works on some markets but is de-emphasised for a simple reason: the Bitcoin ledger is public and routinely analysed, while Monero's is not in any practical sense. Funding in XMR removes that tail risk and the on-chain fee is tiny besides. Send from a wallet you control, copy the deposit address rather than retyping it, and watch the deposit screen rather than refreshing your wallet. The Monero deposits guide walks through the whole send, and the six-step walkthrough covers everything from a clean install to a funded order.
There are plenty of names floating around the forums. We index three because three is what one webmaster can actually keep honest. Checking mirror sets, reading dispute outcomes, and watching how a market behaves under load is real work, and stretched across twenty names it becomes a rubber stamp. We would rather you trust three entries completely than skim past twenty you only half believe.
A market earns a place here by getting the basics right. It needs onion mirrors on rotation so one bad address does not take the whole thing down. It needs Monero as the recommended way to fund an account. And it needs an escrow model that does not let one party quietly hold and walk off with the money. Anubis and Nexus meet that last point with 2-of-3 multisig escrow, where any two of three keys are needed to release funds. Osiris meets it a different way: it is walletless, so there is no central wallet sitting on a pile of buyer deposits, and money flows straight into direct buyer-to-vendor escrow instead. Different mechanism, same goal.
The three also differ in character, which is why we keep all of them rather than crowning one. Nexus has the longest track record and the deepest pile of vendor feedback, so it suits a buyer who wants history to read. Anubis leads with sensible defaults that steer you toward Monero and multisig without hunting through settings, which makes it the gentlest on-ramp for a newcomer. Osiris is the structural outlier with its walletless escrow. The short list page explains the reasoning in full, and the Anubis and Nexus reviews set them side by side.
Should I bookmark a market or this directory?
This directory. Onion mirrors rotate, so a saved onion link goes stale, while a saved directory always shows the live set. This is the single habit that saves the most trouble.
A mirror will not load. What now?
Try the next onion in the market's list. If all of them time out, use New Tor Circuit for this Site in the Tor Browser menu and retry. A simultaneous outage usually means a passing flood rather than a closure.
Why three mirrors per market?
Redundancy. A flood aimed at one address leaves the other two serving, and the operator can bring a fresh onion online before retiring a tired one, so there is no gap. We check that discipline before a market earns a listing.
What does it cost me as a buyer?
The order price plus your wallet's on-chain fee. None of the three charge a separate buyer commission, and Monero's fee is negligible.
Where should a complete beginner start?
The starter pack lists four short reads in order, beginning with the walkthrough. The full FAQ answers the rest.