Finally a Nexus link page that explains where the address comes from. Every other site just lists it with no source attribution. The PGP verification context matters — without it you are trusting a random web page and a random person's word.
One accurate .onion address, verified against the official Nexus admin key — that is what this portal offers. Nothing more, nothing less.
When Nexus market launched in November 2023, at least a dozen phishing mirrors appeared within weeks. Each copied the cyberpunk interface pixel for pixel — the dark palette, the distinctive typography, the multisig escrow badge in the corner. The only reliable way to distinguish a real mirror from a fake was the .onion address itself, and only if you already knew the correct one.
This directory was established in early 2024 to solve that specific problem. We pull addresses exclusively from PGP-signed admin announcements published on Dread, the primary Nexus community forum. Every address is verified with GnuPG against the official Nexus admin key. If the signature does not verify, the address does not appear here. No exceptions, no shortcuts.
This portal is not a marketplace. It is not affiliated with Nexus's administrators. We hold no funds, process no orders, and receive no commissions. The portal exists for one reason: people need a trustworthy reference point to find the current working address for Nexus market. Once you have that address, the opsec guide covers what to do next.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has documented the scale of darknet phishing infrastructure in its digital security guides. Our verification process applies the same methodology used by privacy researchers to authenticate signed communications — the same method Nexus's own admins use to publish announcements on Dread.
How every Nexus link is authenticated
Three steps. No user-submitted links. No scrapers. No social media sourcing. Every address on the mirrors page passed all three before appearing.
Source: Dread forum only
Every link originates from the official Nexus admin thread on Dread. The admin posts addresses with a PGP signature attached to each announcement. No other source is accepted — not Telegram channels, not Reddit posts, not clearnet forums, not anonymous tips. The admin Dread thread is the only authoritative origin point.
GnuPG signature check
Each announcement's PGP signature is verified with GnuPG against the Nexus admin public key — the same key that has signed every official Nexus communication since launch in November 2023. A valid signature proves the address came from whoever controls that private key. A failed or missing signature disqualifies the address entirely, regardless of how convincing the post looks.
Daily re-verification cycle
All four addresses are re-verified each day. If the admin key signs a new announcement — to add a mirror, retire one, or issue a security warning — this page updates within 24 hours. Outdated addresses are archived and marked with a clear status indicator, never silently removed. The timestamp next to each mirror on the mirrors page shows when it last passed full PGP verification.
"Nexus has one of the most distinctive interfaces in the darknet ecosystem. Phishing sites copy it exactly — the dark background, the neon accents, the floating stats cards. The only reliable distinguisher is the .onion address itself, verified against the admin key, not authenticated by visual appearance alone."
Nexus market and portal timeline
Key milestones from Nexus market launch through current operations. Numbers track the growth of both the platform itself and the phishing infrastructure that followed close behind.
First public announcement on Dread. The platform launched with a cyberpunk-inspired interface, three payment methods (BTC, XMR, LTC), and 2-of-3 multisig escrow from day one. Initial user base built partly from migration off a previous market. The visual design attracted immediate attention — and, within days, attracted the first phishing copies.
At least 11 confirmed phishing mirrors went active, all replicating the Nexus interface with minor color or font variations. Several ranked near the top of search results for "nexus market onion link". This directory launched in response. Initial scope: 4 official mirrors tracked, 2 known phishing domains archived for reference.
Nexus reached 47,000+ active users and 2,900+ verified vendors. Daily transaction volume climbed past 3,400. The platform added built-in forum governance features and expanded language support to 15+. Multiple independent tracking sources ranked it second by transaction volume globally among active darknet markets at the time.
Coordinated DDoS attacks pushed individual mirrors temporarily inaccessible for 12–48 hour stretches across several incidents. The four-mirror architecture proved its design value: at no point were all four mirrors simultaneously unreachable. This portal updated its tracking to report mirror availability individually rather than treating any single address as the canonical source.
Four mirrors verified as of 23 April 2026. Platform uptime over the prior 30 days: 96.6%. Active listings: 21,374. Approved vendors: 2,577. This portal now tracks all four official .onion addresses, updates daily, and archives historical addresses with full verification timestamps. See the mirrors page for the current list.
What Nexus market actually is
Nexus is a darknet marketplace built on the Tor network. Launched in November 2023 by an anonymous team, the platform distinguished itself through two things: design quality and payment flexibility. The cyberpunk aesthetic made it immediately recognizable, and accepting Monero from day one — rather than adding it as an afterthought — signaled technical seriousness to privacy-focused users.
The security architecture uses 2-of-3 multisig escrow: buyer, vendor, and platform each hold one key. Releasing funds requires any two of the three keys, making unilateral fund movement by any single party cryptographically impossible. PGP passwordless login and TOTP two-factor authentication complete the account security layer. For the complete walkthrough, the opsec guide covers PGP setup and 2FA enrollment in detail.
This directory versus the alternatives
Most pages that rank for "Nexus market link" are either phishing sites or outdated scrapers. Here is how this portal measures against the alternatives on the criteria that actually affect safety.
| Criterion | This portal | Link scrapers | Social media posts | Unknown clearnet sites |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PGP signature verified | ✓ Yes | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ Unknown |
| Updated within 24h of new announcement | ✓ Yes | ⚡ Varies | ✗ Rarely | ✗ Unknown |
| Outdated addresses clearly marked | ✓ Yes, archived | ✗ Mixed together | ✗ Never removed | ✗ No |
| User tracking or advertising | ✓ None | ⚡ Often tracking | ✗ Platform tracking | ✗ Unknown |
| Opsec guidance included | ✓ Full guide | ✗ No | ✗ Rarely | ⚡ Varies |
| Phishing detection guidance | ✓ Yes | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ Rarely |
Before using any Nexus link from an unverified source: cross-check the address character by character against a PGP-signed announcement on Dread. The full verification workflow is in the opsec guide. It takes five minutes and removes the guesswork entirely.
What regular users say about this directory
I use this as my verification reference whenever I see a Nexus address shared on Telegram or Reddit. If it matches what is listed here, I am reasonably confident. If it does not match — it is phishing. Straightforward and it has held up each time.
The opsec guide linked from here convinced me to set up Qubes OS before doing anything else. Took a weekend. The timeline section also put Nexus market's history in context I had not found summarized clearly anywhere else.
Privacy tools and organizations we reference
Before accessing Nexus market or any darknet platform, your local environment matters more than any link on this page. These are the tools and organizations cited in our verification process and opsec guide.
"The tools above are not optional extras for cautious people. They are the baseline for anyone operating under a real threat model. The weakest point in most opsec failures is not the marketplace — it is the unmanaged local environment the user arrived with."
For cryptocurrency security fundamentals, Coinbase Learn covers wallet types and transaction privacy accessibly. For on-chain transaction verification, Blockchain Explorer provides independent confirmation of on-chain activity. For search without tracking, DuckDuckGo and SearXNG are the recommended defaults over standard search engines.
Amnesty Tech publishes threat intelligence on commercial surveillance infrastructure relevant to anyone with a serious threat model. For peer-to-peer encrypted communication with no central server architecture, Briar Messenger is designed for use in adversarial network conditions.
Get the verified Nexus .onion address
The mission of this portal is to give you one thing accurately: the correct Nexus .onion address, verified against the admin PGP key, with full transparency about the source. Four mirrors. All verified 23 April 2026.