Mars Market Links & Verified Onion + I2P Mirrors 2026
Every Mars Market link below is published for verification, not as a guarantee of uptime. Status pills read "checking" and are confirmed only through a PGP-signed mirror list. Confirm any Mars Market link with PGP before you connect — a clone of Mars Market looks identical to the real thing.
A Mars Market link is a moving target by design, and that is a good thing. This page keeps the current, verified Mars Market mirrors in one place — across both Tor and I2P — each with a status and a Copy button, so you never have to gamble on an address you found in a search ad. Read the verification section once and you will be able to confirm a genuine Mars Market link in under two minutes, every time.
Live Mars Market Mirrors (.onion + .i2p)
This page collects the current Mars Market mirrors across both networks the marketplace runs on — Tor and I2P. That dual-network spread is the reason a Mars Market link list looks different here than for most markets: you are not just choosing between a handful of onions, you are choosing between two separate anonymity networks that both reach the same Mars Market.
A mirror is simply another address that points to the same marketplace. Operators publish several so that a single blocked, congested, or attacked address does not cut everyone off. When one Mars Market link slows under load, another carries the traffic. With Mars Market the redundancy goes a step further, because the alternates are not all on Tor — some are .i2p eepsites on I2P, which keeps the marketplace reachable even when Tor itself is the problem. For a market this is more than a convenience; it is the practical expression of the brand's dual-network design.
The live verified Mars Market mirror table loads for visitors arriving from a search engine. Open this page from your search results, or visit the Mars Market overview on the homepage — the verified address box there shows both the Tor onion and the I2P eepsite to everyone and copies cleanly on mobile.
Think of the list as a map rather than a promise. A map shows you where the roads are; it does not claim every road is clear at this exact minute. The addresses here are the known routes into Mars Market, grouped by network, with the means to confirm each one. What you bring is the final check that turns a listed route into a trusted one. That division of labour is intentional — the page does the cataloguing and the cryptographic plumbing, and you do the one step no external party can do honestly on your behalf, which is deciding to connect only after a signature clears.
Each Mars Market link in the table is shown with three things: the full address with user-select:all so you can copy it cleanly, a Copy button, and a status pill. The pill says "checking" rather than "online", and that wording is deliberate. Claiming a green "online" status for any address nobody re-verified would be dishonest and, worse, dangerous — it would invite you to trust a Mars Market link on faith. The safe model is the one used here: the address is listed, the verification path is spelled out, and you do the final PGP confirmation before you connect. Copy the address, then verify. Never the other way around.
How to Verify a Mars Market Link
Verification is the single most valuable habit on this page, because the biggest threat to anyone reaching Mars Market is not downtime — it is a convincing fake. Clone sites mirror the marketplace interface exactly, register a near-identical address, and wait for a careless login to steal credentials and coins. The defence is PGP, and it is not optional.
Mars Market signs its real addresses with a PGP key. A signed message is a block of text that only the holder of the private key could have produced, and anyone with the matching public key can confirm it. So the workflow is: import the Mars Market public key once, take the signed message that lists the current addresses, and run a verify. If the signature is good, the Mars Market link inside is genuine. If it fails, the address is forged — discard it, no matter how right it looks.
Three signals separate a real link from a clone
Check all three every time.
- The signature. A valid PGP signature on the address block is the strongest proof. A clone operator cannot forge it without the private key, which they do not have.
- The full string. Compare the entire address, end to end. Fakes frequently match the first six or seven characters of a real Mars Market link to pass a glance, then diverge in the middle and tail.
- The source. Trust addresses that trace back to a signed list, not to a random search result, a paste, or a forum reply. Search results are where most counterfeit Mars Market links live.
Do this for the very first visit and again after any rotation. A new Mars Market link means a new signature, and a new signature means you verify again from scratch. Two minutes of checking is cheap next to a drained wallet.
A word on importing the key
That is where beginners stumble. You import the public key once, and from then on your PGP tool already knows it; verifying a later address is a single command or a couple of clicks. Get the key from more than one independent reference and confirm the fingerprints agree before you trust it — that cross-check is what stops an attacker from feeding you a fake "official" key alongside a fake address. Once the genuine key is in your keyring, every future verification on Mars Market is fast, and the slow part never has to be repeated. The work front-loads; the payoff repeats on every visit.
Mars Market Connection Guide — Tor & I2P
Because Mars Market runs on two networks, opening a Mars Market link depends on which address you copied. The two paths are different, and using the wrong tool for an address simply will not connect. Here is the short version for each; the full walkthrough is on the access guide.
- For a
.onion(Tor). Download Tor Browser from the official Tor Project — never a mirror or a bundled re-pack. Launch it, open the shield menu, and set the security level to "Safest", which disables JavaScript and the script-based tricks used to deanonymise visitors. Paste the verified Mars Market.onioninto the address bar and connect. The.onionis a 56-character v3 hidden-service address, so a Mars Market link much shorter or much longer than that is wrong on its face. - For a
.i2p(I2P). Install the I2P router from geti2p.net and start it. Give it a few minutes to integrate into the I2P network and build its tunnels — I2P is peer-to-peer, so it needs to find peers before eepsites resolve. Configure your browser to use I2P's local HTTP proxy as the router documents, then open the verified Mars Market.i2peepsite. These addresses use base32 and end in.b32.i2p, which is how you know an address belongs to the I2P side of Mars Market rather than the Tor side.
Whichever path you take, the verification step from the previous section comes first. Connecting to an unverified Mars Market link — on either network — defeats the entire purpose of the careful setup. Tool ready, address verified, then connect.
Why Mars Market Runs Two Networks
It is worth pausing on why Mars Market bothers with both Tor and I2P, because this is the feature that defines the brand and shapes this whole mirror list. Almost every darknet market publishes Tor onions and nothing else. Mars Market also publishes I2P eepsites, and that decision pays off in three concrete ways.
- Redundancy against outages. Tor has bad days — congestion, large-scale DDoS campaigns aimed at hidden services, and regional blocking all happen. When the Tor side struggles, a
.i2pMars Market link still resolves over a network that is not affected by Tor's troubles. One network down does not equal the marketplace gone. - A second, independent route. I2P is not a tweak on top of Tor; it is a separate network with its own routing model, its own peers, and its own tunnels. Two genuinely independent paths to the same Mars Market are far harder to knock fully offline than one path with spares.
- Reach for I2P-native users. A smaller but committed group prefers I2P and would rather not run Tor at all. For them, the
.i2pis not a fallback — it is the front door to Mars Market.
The practical takeaway for this page is simple: keep both kinds of Mars Market link. Copy a verified .onion for everyday access and a verified .i2p as your backup. The day Tor is unusable, the I2P address is what gets you back into the marketplace while a single-network user is locked out. Redundancy you set up in advance is the kind that actually helps.
Account & Monero Wallet on Mars Market
Once you have a verified Mars Market link and you are connected, a few setup steps make the first session smooth. Registration on Mars Market is deliberately light on personal detail — that is the privacy posture working in your favour. Pick a username that appears nowhere else in your life, a password used on no other site, and you are most of the way there. Add 2FA the moment the account exists, since a marketplace account is worth protecting from the first login, not the tenth.
The money side is where a little preparation pays off. Mars Market recommends Monero, so the cleanest setup is a funded XMR wallet ready before you connect. Monero keeps the amount, the sender, and the receiver private on the chain, which is exactly what you want for a marketplace payment. Bitcoin is accepted too, but it is transparent, so if you use BTC, handle coin hygiene yourself and understand the visibility you are accepting. Either way, fund the wallet ahead of time rather than scrambling for a transfer with the Mars Market link already open.
When you place an order, the payment goes into the multisig 2-of-3 escrow rather than straight to a vendor. You fund the escrow, the vendor ships, and release needs two of the three signatures — buyer, vendor, admin. A short setup routine keeps a first Mars Market session clean:
- Register with a unique handle and password, then enable 2FA before anything else.
- Fund a Monero wallet in advance; reserve Bitcoin only for when XMR is not an option.
- Pay into the multisig escrow on every order — never settle directly with a vendor wallet.
Do this once and the pattern carries to every later visit. The account setup and the escrow are the two halves of using Mars Market the way it is meant to be used.
Why Mars Market Mirrors Rotate
New visitors are often surprised that a Mars Market link can change, sometimes more than once in a stretch of weeks. Rotation is normal, and it is a sign of a marketplace defending itself rather than a sign of trouble.
Addresses rotate for a few practical reasons. Hidden services and eepsites draw denial-of-service attacks, so moving to a fresh address sheds an attacker who was hammering the old one. Phishing operators clone a known Mars Market link and try to outrank the original in search, so cycling addresses limits how long any single clone stays useful. And ordinary infrastructure work — server migrations, capacity upgrades, key rotations — naturally produces new addresses over time.
What rotation means for you is a habit, not a worry. Do not memorise one Mars Market link and assume it is permanent. Instead, return to a verified, signed source whenever you need the current address, and re-run the PGP check each time. The mirrors here exist precisely so you always have a fresh, confirmable Mars Market link rather than a stale bookmark that quietly stopped being genuine. When an address changes, the old one going quiet is expected — verify the new one and carry on.
Choosing a Mars Market Mirror When One Is Slow
In practice you will sometimes copy an address, try to connect, and find it sluggish or unresponsive. That is normal on hidden-service networks, and the mirror list exists precisely so this is a minor inconvenience rather than a dead end. Here is how to think it through without reaching for an unverified address out of frustration.
First, decide whether the problem is the address or the network. If a Tor .onion is crawling, the network itself may be congested — and that is exactly the moment the I2P side earns its place. Switch to a verified .i2p and you are routing over an entirely separate network that is not feeling Tor's load. If instead one specific address fails while another on the same network connects fine, the issue is that single mirror, and you simply move to the next verified Mars Market link on the list.
A short decision routine helps:
- Tor feels slow across the board? Reach for a verified
.i2pand use the I2P path to the same marketplace. - One address dead, another alive on the same network? Use the working one; the dead mirror will likely return after a rotation.
- Nothing connecting and you are tempted to grab an address from search? Stop — re-verify against the signed list first, because frustration is when people fall for clones.
The one rule that never bends, even when you are impatient, is that the next Mars Market link you try must still pass the PGP check. A slow connection is annoying; a phished login is far worse. Patience plus verification beats speed plus risk every time, and the dual-network design means you almost always have a verified alternative within reach.
Mars Market Mirror Status
The status column on this page is honest by design, and that honesty is the most important thing about it. Each Mars Market link carries a "checking" pill instead of a green "online" badge. The reason is straightforward: an uptime label is only meaningful if something actively re-checked the address a moment ago, and presenting a confident "online" for an address nobody confirmed would mislead you into trusting an unverified Mars Market link.
So treat "checking" as an instruction, not a defect. It tells you the Mars Market link is published and the verification path is available, and that the final confirmation is yours to make through PGP. This protects you in the exact situation where a fake status would hurt most — when an address has not been independently confirmed and a flashy green dot would push you to connect anyway.
- Read every pill as "checking" and never as a promise that the Mars Market link is live right now.
- Confirm the current address through a PGP-signed list before you connect to Mars Market.
- Re-verify after any rotation, since a new Mars Market link resets the verification clock.
That is the whole philosophy of this mirror page: list the Mars Market links, show how to prove them, and let you do the proving. No fake green dots, no pressure — just a verifiable path to the real Mars Market on whichever network you choose.
Mars Market Links — Frequently Asked Questions
A mirror is an alternate address that opens the same Mars Market. Operators publish several so a single blocked, congested, or attacked Mars Market link does not take the whole market down. With Mars Market the spares span two networks — Tor onions and I2P eepsites — which adds an extra layer of resilience.
Verify it with PGP. The genuine Mars Market link sits inside a PGP-signed message; import the market's public key and check the signature. A clone cannot forge a valid signature, so a failed check tells you the address is fake regardless of how authentic it looks.
Because we will not assert a mirror is live without a fresh PGP-signed confirmation. "Checking" is the honest status — the Mars Market link is listed, the verification path is shown, and you complete the final confirmation yourself rather than trusting a label.
Keep both. The .onion over Tor is the everyday default; the .i2p over I2P is your fallback when Tor is congested or blocked. Holding a verified Mars Market link on each network means a single-network outage never locks you out of the market.
Back to the Mars Market Overview
That covers the verified mirror list across both networks, how to check each link, and why the mirrors rotate. Copy any verified address above, confirm its PGP signature, and open it in the matching tool. Want the brand background and the instant address box again? Head back to the Mars Market overview on the home page. New to Tor or I2P? The info guide walks you through both setups, PGP, Monero, and OPSEC. Verify first, pick your network, then open Mars Market.
Educational and research notice: this page lists and explains how to verify Mars Market links for informational purposes. Follow the laws of your jurisdiction.