Links you can actually paste — seven Tor markets
Seven Tor marketplaces, grouped by what they take and who they serve. We don't rank, we don't review, we don't tell you which is "best". We give you links that paste cleanly into Tor Browser and load the real login page on the other side. The list below is current as of the last operator post on Dread.
The seven, by name
Click any name for the longer page with the mirror set and the key facts. The onion URLs underneath each card are the current ones — copy whichever loads fastest for you.
Nexus Market is grouped under multi-coin acceptance — BTC, LTC and XMR. English-language interface. Running since 2023. Three concurrent v3 mirrors in current rotation. Suitable for buyers who want the LTC option for low-value deposits.
BTC · LTC · XMR
Anubis Market is the entry under native Ethereum acceptance — BTC + LTC + ETH + XMR. English UI, running since 2024. Three v3 mirrors. Suitable for buyers who specifically need ETH on-site rather than via a third-party bridge.
BTC · LTC · ETH · XMR
Osiris Market is filed under XMR-default markets and high-availability operators. English UI, BTC + XMR, three v3 mirrors. Recommended when other operators are offline due to DDoS pressure.
BTC · XMR
Crown Market is filed under bespoke-codebase operators and verified-by-default vendor messaging. English UI, BTC + XMR, two v3 mirrors. Smaller mirror pool than multi-mirror operators.
BTC · XMR
Mars Market is filed under multi-coin acceptance — BTC + LTC + XMR. English UI, running since 2023. Three concurrent v3 mirrors. Suitable for low-value LTC deposits.
BTC · LTC · XMR
Awazon Market is filed under XMR-default markets and beginner-friendly UI. English storefront patterned on mainstream e-commerce, BTC + XMR, three v3 mirrors. Suitable for first-time Tor buyers.
BTC · XMR
WeTheNorth (WTN) is filed under bilingual interfaces (English/French) and Canadian buyer focus. BTC + XMR settlement, three v3 mirrors. Suitable for Canadian buyers and French-speaking users.
BTC · XMR
Pick by what you actually need
Most market lists order by alphabet or by some made-up "popularity" score. We group by the two things that actually matter when you're picking: what the market takes for payment, and who it's for. If you only do Monero, all seven work. If you want Ethereum on-site (no bridge), there's one answer — Anubis. If Litecoin is your thing, you've got Nexus, Anubis, or Mars. If you're in Canada and want a French-speaking interface, WeTheNorth is the one. Answer those two questions and the shortlist usually drops to one or two markets, which is the whole point.
"Audience" actually matters
Six of the seven are general-audience English markets — they ship internationally and have buyers from anywhere with Tor access. WeTheNorth is the outlier. It's Canadian-built and Canadian-served: vendors are mostly inside the country, shipping defaults to domestic, and the whole interface is bilingual English/French. If you're in Canada that matters a lot — you skip the customs gamble that comes with cross-border parcels. If you're not in Canada, the rest of the list is more relevant.
What each one's actually good at
Quick read on each market's specific strength — not marketing copy, just what we see in practice over the last twelve to eighteen months.
- Anubis — the only one that takes ETH natively. If you've been sitting on Ethereum balances and don't want to swap, this is the one.
- Crown — bespoke UI built from scratch, not the usual cloned codebase. End-to-end encrypted messaging is on by default.
- Mars — deepest mirror pool of the seven, best continuous-uptime numbers. If you get burned by mirror downtime on others, try Mars.
- Awazon — storefront UI looks like a normal online retailer. Easiest landing for someone who's never used a Tor market before.
- Nexus — longest of the multi-coin markets, supports BTC, LTC and XMR. Mirror discipline is unusually tight.
- Osiris — availability-first design with a three-onion rotation kept warm against DDoS waves.
- WeTheNorth (WTN) — bilingual EN/FR, Canadian focus. The longest continuously-running market on this list, since 2021.
Why a "by category" directory works better
The problem with ranked Tor market lists isn't that they're wrong — it's that the ranking depends entirely on what you need and the list-maker has no idea what that is. We've seen people pick the "#1" market for them only to find out three days in that it doesn't take their coin or doesn't ship to their country. A grouped directory skips that whole class of mismatch. Pick the constraint that actually applies to you, see the one or two markets that match, decide from there.
How the links stay current
Onion addresses rotate. Sometimes a market changes mirrors once a month, sometimes once a week during a DDoS wave. The addresses on this page are pulled from the operator's signed Dread account and refreshed twice daily on weekdays, once on weekends. Nothing surfaced through Telegram, Reddit, X or random clearnet sites makes it onto the list — clones spread through exactly those places. Bookmark linksmarkets.online rather than any individual address; we'll keep the link list current, you keep the bookmark.