Nexus Market Links logo Nexus Market Links Verified Tor Onions

Nexus Market Links

The shortcut for working Nexus Market tor links. Three verified onion mirrors, refreshed against the operator’s PGP-signed Dread announcement. Settlement in BTC, LTC and XMR. Login captcha embeds the canonical onion fingerprint so phishing clones don’t survive the first glance. Bookmark this page, the link set rotates, the URL of this page does not.

Primary Nexus Market Onion

Tap the address to highlight it, or hit Copy. Paste into Tor Browser.

3Verified Mirrors
BTC·LTC·XMRNative Settlement
2023Online Since

What this page is

Typing “nexus market” into Google and clicking the first result lands you on a phishing clone roughly half the time. The clones look identical to the real Nexus UI, same colors, same captcha, same login form. They eat your password, your first deposit, and your shipping address if you got that far. This page exists so you don’t have to go through Google.

Every Nexus Market link published here comes from the operator’s most recent detached-PGP-signed mirror announcement on Dread. The signature is verified against the operator’s pinned public key before any address gets added. We never copy links from Telegram, Reddit, email or chat groups, those are the channels phishing clones systematically use, and they can’t reject a fake signature because they don’t check for one.

Market interface preview

What the Nexus Market UI actually looks like once a tor link loads. From left to right: anti-DDoS gate, login captcha with the canonical onion baked into the image, account registration, and the post-login dashboard.

Nexus Market DDoS protection page
01.Anti-DDoS gate & captcha
Nexus Market login screen with fingerprint captcha
02.Login & fingerprint-embedded captcha
Nexus Market account registration and PGP setup
03.Account registration & PGP setup
Nexus Market dashboard after login
04.Post-login trading dashboard

Nexus Market in one paragraph

Nexus has been on the Tor network since late 2023. English-language UI, multisig escrow, standard dispute machinery, vendor profiles with deal-count and dispute-ratio headers above the fold. The bits that make Nexus different from the seven other English-segment markets we’d compare it to: native Litecoin acceptance (most operators stopped at BTC and XMR), three concurrent mirrors kept warm at all times (DDoS pressure on one onion moves traffic to the others without any client-side change), and a login captcha that embeds the canonical onion fingerprint into the image so a phishing clone has to either proxy the operator’s captcha (which mismatches the cloned address bar) or render its own (which can’t carry the matching fingerprint without the operator’s private key).

Verified Nexus Market mirror onions

Three hidden-service mirrors in current rotation. All three resolve to the same back-end (same account, same balance, same orders), so use whichever your Tor circuit reaches first. If one slows down, paste another into Tor Browser and continue. No re-login required.

Last verified: 17 June 2026

Always verify the full 56 characters against the PGP-signed Dread post before you log in. A partial-prefix match (first eight characters identical) is a known phishing pattern, vanity-key generation is cheap enough that a phisher can produce a string matching the prefix and randomise the rest of the address.

Leaked private Nexus addresses

Beyond the three public mirrors above, two private Nexus onions have surfaced in chat channels over the past months. The operator originally handed these out to specific groups (vendors, staff, beta testers); they weren’t part of the signed mirror set and weren’t meant to be shared. They still resolve to the same back-end, so the login and balance work, but the operator hasn’t endorsed them and may pull them at any time.

Why people use Nexus over other markets

Three live mirrors, always

Concurrent onions mean a single DDoS event doesn’t take the marketplace down. Paste a different tor link and continue from where you left off.

Native LTC alongside BTC + XMR

Litecoin is rare on Tor markets. On Nexus it’s the practical option for small deposits where BTC fees would dominate the order.

Fingerprint-embedded captcha

The login captcha image carries the canonical onion fingerprint. A phishing clone can’t fake that without the operator’s private key.

Signed mirror rotations

Every Nexus link rotation is announced as a detached-PGP-signed Dread post. Verified once, the operator’s key validates every future announcement.

Standard multisig escrow

Order funds enter a 2-of-3 multisig pool. Buyer confirms, funds release. Dispute, moderator pair decides on signed evidence. Nothing exotic.

English-language UI

No translation layer. Vendor messages, dispute screens and policy pages all in English. Account state is transparent and consistent across mirrors.

Before you click a Nexus tor link

The whole pre-flight check takes about a minute. Skip it once and you’ll skip it forever, until the day you don’t.

  1. Open Tor Browser. Not a regular browser with a VPN, not a Tor browser extension, the actual Tor Browser from torproject.org.
  2. Paste any of the verified Nexus links above into the address bar. Don’t click through to Nexus from a search-engine result, ever.
  3. When the marketplace loads, glance at the onion printed in the page banner. It must match what’s in your address bar character-for-character.
  4. On the login captcha, check the embedded fingerprint matches the address bar too. If the captcha image shows a different onion than the URL you typed, the page you’re looking at is the clone.
  5. Log in. Or, if it’s your first time on Nexus, register. The whole flow is on the walkthrough page.