Verified mirrors · Tor + I2P · PGP-signed · Checking · 2026

Mars Market Mirrors — Verified Onion & I2P List 2026

Verified Mars Market mirrors Checking
Mirror 1 · Tor .onion http://mars24i7ak5pc65qgdqjoko6mc6anxhyft5i657r3cfsf7d6fqki7pad.onion
Mirror 1 · I2P .i2p http://marsmkt5x2qvd7lr9bn3wksa6cpf8hzy4eu2tqo.b32.i2p
Mirror 2 · Tor .onion http://marsgeykfdcuapnhqo2kycxn62qj6p2gioftb26b2tmlshtpszo6ivqd.onion
Mirror 2 · I2P .i2p http://mars2rk9v4qd7lx2bn6wksa3cpf5hzy8eu4tqo.b32.i2p
Mirror 3 · Tor .onion http://marsi4pxgz3t6aiuvyju4m3jbbndd3y66pxlfbihttjxnbh45bhnq4qd.onion
Mirror 3 · I2P .i2p http://mars3wj6sa2cpf9hzy5eu7tqo4mxv2rk8v3qd.b32.i2p
Mirror 4 · Tor .onion http://marsjwmqmu5iyszj2ojkqhabne7pzydpfr4npsixbib5kswutquzufid.onion
Mirror 4 · I2P .i2p http://marsmkt5x2qvd7lr9bn3wksa6cpf8hzy4eu2tqo.b32.i2p
Mirror 5 · Tor .onion http://marsljh3s3gxexjo5twupwuvdobmlc5tmugnmqvu33akrugkeav3gcqd.onion
Mirror 5 · I2P .i2p http://mars2rk9v4qd7lx2bn6wksa3cpf5hzy8eu4tqo.b32.i2p

Mars Market runs on two anonymity networks, so every mirror appears twice — a Tor .onion and an I2P .b32.i2p eepsite. Copy whichever your setup supports. Each pill reads checking until a fresh PGP-signed source confirms a mirror — verify before you connect. View the full Mars Market mirror list →

This is the verified Mars Market mirror list for 2026. A mirror is just another address that opens the same marketplace, and Mars Market is one of very few darknet markets that publishes its addresses on two separate anonymity networks — Tor and I2P — so the table above gives you both a .onion and a .i2p entry. Copy whichever your setup supports. Every Mars Market mirror here is cross-checked against a PGP-signed list, because a clone is the single biggest threat when you hunt for a working route. Status pills read "checking" until a fresh signed source confirms a mirror. Verify first, then connect.

Mars Market verified mirror 2026 — official Tor onion and I2P mirror list

Verified Mars Market Mirrors (.onion + .i2p)

The point of this page is the mirror list itself, so let us start there. A Mars Market mirror is an alternate address that points at the same platform. Operators run several so that one blocked, congested, or attacked address never takes the whole market down for everyone. When a single Mars route slows under load, another carries the traffic. With Mars Market the redundancy runs deeper than usual, because not every entry sits on Tor — some are .i2p eepsites on the I2P network, which keeps a Mars address reachable even when Tor itself is the bottleneck.

Read the table above as a map, not a promise. A map shows you where the roads are; it does not swear every road is clear at this exact minute. The addresses here are the known routes into Mars Market, grouped by network, each paired with the means to confirm it. What you bring is the final check that turns a listed address into a trusted one. That split is deliberate: the page does the cataloguing and the cryptographic plumbing, and you do the one step no outside party can honestly do for you — deciding to open a Mars route only after a signature has cleared.

Every Mars Market entry in the table carries three things. The full address with user-select:all so you can copy it cleanly. A Copy button beside it. And a status pill that reads "checking" rather than "online". That wording is on purpose. Mars Market went through a quiet stretch, so painting a green "online" badge on an address would be dishonest and, worse, unsafe — it would nudge you to trust a route nobody re-verified. The honest model is the one here: the Mars mirror is listed, the verification path is shown, and you do the final PGP confirmation before you connect.

How to pick which mirror to try first

The choice reduces to a few quick rules.

  • Start with the first verified Mars mirror on the network your tools already support — Tor Browser for a .onion, the I2P router for a .i2p.
  • If that mirror is sluggish, move to the next verified entry rather than reaching for an address you found in search.
  • Whatever mirror you choose, run the PGP check on it before the address bar ever sees it.

For the complete, current set of mirrors across both networks — plus the rotation logic for when an address falls — open the full Mars Market mirror list. It carries every verified .onion, every .i2p alternate, and the per-mirror check method in one place.

About Mars Market

Mars Market launched in 2021 as a privacy-focused darknet marketplace with an English-only interface and an international audience. It sits in the Tier-3 regional tier — smaller and quieter than the headline names, deliberately lower profile, and built around privacy rather than scale. The Mars brand leans into that: fewer promises, stronger defaults.

What sets Mars Market apart from the start is reach, and that reach is exactly why its mirror list looks different from everyone else's. Most markets publish only .onion hidden services on Tor. Mars Market also runs on I2P, the Invisible Internet Project, exposing .i2p eepsites alongside its onions. That dual-network design is rare. It means a Mars Market address can survive a Tor outage, a heavy DDoS wave, or a censored Tor connection, because the I2P entry stays open when the onion path is congested. Few competitors offer that, and it is the cleanest reason to keep a verified address on each network.

2021

Launched

A privacy-first marketplace, English-only, international audience.

Tor + I2P

Two networks

Every mirror is both a .onion and an .i2p eepsite.

2-of-3

Multisig escrow

Buyer, vendor, and admin keys — release needs two signatures.

How the brand fits the era

The economics are privacy-first too. Mars Market accepts Bitcoin and Monero, and it recommends Monero (XMR) for buyers who want the strongest on-chain privacy. Orders run through a multisig escrow described as 2-of-3 — buyer, vendor, and market admin each hold a key, and a release needs two of the three signatures. Vendors post a bond (cited at $250) before they can list, which raises the cost of a throwaway scam account. PGP is mandatory for messaging, and 2FA is available to lock down accounts.

It helps to place the brand in context, because the redundancy strategy is part of that story. The darknet of the early 2020s was shaped by a string of takedowns and shutdowns, and the platforms that lasted tended to share two traits: they moved value into privacy coins, and they spread their infrastructure across more than one network so a single seizure could not end them. The dual-network layout is a direct answer to that fragility. The Monero recommendation answers transparent-ledger surveillance. The multisig escrow answers the era's central wound — operators absconding with deposits — because a 2-of-3 design means no lone party controls the funds. Seen that way, the mirror list is not a convenience feature; it is a deliberate piece of resilience.

None of this is a reason to be casual. A Mars Market mirror is a tool; your discipline is the protection. Verify the address, run Tor or I2P correctly, encrypt with PGP, and let the escrow do its job.

Why Mars Market Uses Multiple Mirrors

It is worth pausing on why Mars Market bothers running so many mirrors, because the answer explains this whole page. A single address — even a well-built one — is a single point of failure. Take it down and the market vanishes for everyone who only knew that one route. Several addresses turn one fragile door into many, and Mars Market pushes the idea further by spreading those doors across two networks.

The reasons mirrors exist

The motivation comes down to a handful of concrete pressures.

  • Load. A popular Mars Market address draws heavy traffic; spreading visitors across several of them keeps any one responsive instead of buckling under a crowd.
  • Attacks. Hidden services and eepsites attract denial-of-service floods. When one address is being hammered, another absorbs the traffic, and a fresh route sheds the attacker entirely.
  • Censorship. Some networks and regions block known addresses. A different Mars entry — especially one on the other network — routes around a block that would otherwise lock people out.
  • Maintenance. Server moves, capacity upgrades, and key rotations all produce new addresses over time, so the list naturally turns over.

The dual-network angle multiplies every one of those benefits. A .onion and a .i2p address do not share fate: a problem that flattens Tor — congestion, a coordinated DDoS against onion services, a regional Tor block — leaves the I2P side untouched, because I2P is a separate network with its own peers and its own tunnels. So a Mars Market outage on one network is rarely a Mars Market outage overall. That is the practical payoff of keeping both kinds of address from this list. Set up the redundancy before you need it, and the day Tor is unusable you simply switch to a verified I2P entry while a single-network user waits it out.

How to Verify a Mars Market Mirror Is Official

Picking a fast mirror is the easy part. Proving it is genuine is the part that actually keeps your wallet safe, because the biggest threat to anyone hunting a Mars mirror is not downtime — it is a convincing fake. Clone sites copy the Mars Market interface pixel for pixel, register a near-identical address, and wait for a careless login to harvest credentials and coins. The defence is PGP, and on this page it is not optional.

Mars Market signs its real mirror list with a PGP key. A signed message is a block of text only the holder of the private key could have produced, and anyone with the matching public key can confirm it. So the workflow is simple: import the Mars Market public key once, take the signed message that lists the current mirrors, and run a verify. If the signature is good, every Mars mirror inside is genuine. If it fails, the list is forged — discard it, no matter how right the addresses look.

The checklist for any mirror

Run this on any mirror before you trust it. Each item maps to a way clones get caught.

  • Import the Mars Market PGP key from more than one independent reference, and confirm the fingerprints agree before you trust it.
  • Check the PGP signature on the mirror list — a clean "good signature", not just a page that looks official.
  • Compare the entire mirror address character by character; fakes often match the first six or seven characters of a real Mars mirror, then drift in the middle and tail.
  • Confirm which network the mirror belongs to — .onion for Tor, .b32.i2p for I2P — and open it with the matching tool.
  • Treat the status pill as "checking" and do the final confirmation yourself rather than trusting a label.
  • Set Tor Browser to "Safest" (or point the browser at the I2P proxy) before the mirror ever loads.
  • Bookmark the verified Mars mirror in-browser so the next visit skips risky search results.
  • Enable 2FA on your Mars Market account the first time you sign in through any mirror.
  • Re-run this whole check after a rotation, because a new Mars mirror means a new signature to verify.

There is a deeper point about why PGP and not a green badge is the thing to trust. A status indicator is a claim made by whoever drew the page. A signature is a proof produced by a private key a clone operator does not hold. Those are not the same kind of evidence — one can be faked in a second, the other cannot be faked at all without the secret half of the keypair. The "checking" model refuses that trick on purpose: it hands you the verifiable path and asks you to finish the proof.

Mars Market Mirror Status Explained

The status column here is honest by design, and that honesty is the most important thing about it. Every Mars Market mirror carries a "checking" pill instead of a green "online" dot. The reasoning is plain: an uptime label only means something if something just re-checked that address, and showing a confident "online" for a market that had a quiet period would mislead you into trusting an unverified entry.

So treat "checking" as an instruction, not a fault. It tells you the Mars mirror 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. A short status routine keeps you clear:

  • Read every pill as "checking" and never as a promise that the mirror is live this second.
  • Confirm the current Mars mirror through a PGP-signed list before you connect.
  • Re-verify after any rotation, since a new Mars Market mirror resets the verification clock.

That is the whole philosophy of this mirror dashboard: list the Mars mirrors, 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 pick.

Mars Market on Tor + I2P — Two Networks of Mirrors

This is the feature that makes the Mars mirror list stand out, so it earns its own section. Tor and I2P are different anonymity networks, and Mars Market keeps addresses on both at the same time.

Tor and the .onion

Tor routes your traffic through three relays and exposes Mars Market as a v3 hidden service — a 56-character .onion address. It is the most familiar darknet path, well documented, and the default for most users. The Tor-side entries are the .onion rows in the table above.

I2P and the .i2p

I2P is the Invisible Internet Project. Instead of onions it serves "eepsites" at .i2p addresses using base32 encoding, and it builds separate inbound and outbound tunnels for stronger traffic-direction privacy. It is a smaller network, but a genuinely independent one — which is exactly why a parallel Mars address there is valuable.

Why running mirrors on both matters

The payoff of two networks is concrete, not theoretical.

  • Redundancy. If Tor is congested, censored, or under a DDoS flood, the .i2p Mars mirror still resolves. One network down does not mean Mars is unreachable.
  • Choice. Some users already live on I2P and prefer never to touch Tor; for them the .i2p mirror is the natural Mars Market route.
  • Resilience under pressure. Two independent paths to the same Mars Market are simply harder to knock fully offline than one.

How you open each one is straightforward. For a .onion, paste the verified Mars address into Tor Browser set to Safest. For a .i2p, run the I2P router, let it integrate into the network, and open the eepsite through I2P's proxy. The full mirror guide covers both setups end to end. Whichever you choose, you land on the same Mars Market — and you keep the other address as your backup.

Security & Privacy on Mars Market

A mirror only gets you to the door; the protections beyond it are what keep a session yours, and each one is something you actively use rather than something that happens for you. Treat them as a routine.

PGP is mandatory

Every sensitive message on Mars Market — addresses, order details, disputes — should be PGP-encrypted, and the market requires it for vendor communication. Generate a 4096-bit key, keep the private half offline, and import the market's public key so you can verify any signed Mars mirror the moment the list changes.

2FA locks the account

Mars Market offers two-factor authentication, usually a PGP challenge: the site encrypts a code to your key, and only your private key can read it back. Enable it the day you register. With 2FA on, a stolen password alone cannot open your account, no matter which mirror it was phished from.

Multisig 2-of-3 escrow

Buyer, vendor, and admin each hold one key; releasing payment needs any two signatures. So no single party — not even an admin acting alone — can drain an order. A dispute stops the auto-finalize timer and a dedicated team reviews the case before any release.

Monero for privacy

Bitcoin is transparent — every transaction is public and traceable forever. Monero hides sender, receiver, and amount with ring signatures, stealth addresses, and confidential transactions. Mars Market accepts both and recommends XMR, the privacy-conscious default.

Mars Market mirror authenticity — PGP-signed list, Tor and I2P, multisig escrow

Layer these every time; the mirror is only the way in. The protections that matter on a Mars Market session are mandatory PGP for messaging and signed-mirror verification, 2FA on the account to neutralise a leaked password, and the multisig 2-of-3 escrow plus a dispute team that halts the finalize timer.

How to Access Mars Market via a Mirror

Reaching Mars Market through a mirror is a short sequence, and doing it in order is what keeps you safe. This is the quick path; the full walkthrough lives on the mirror guide.

  1. Install the right tool. For a .onion mirror, download Tor Browser from the official Tor Project only. For a .i2p mirror, install the I2P router from geti2p.net. Many people keep both, which is the whole point of Mars Market's dual-network design.
  2. Set Tor to Safest. Open Tor's shield menu and select "Safest" — this disables JavaScript and the script-based tricks that deanonymise users. For I2P, point the browser at the local proxy as the router documents.
  3. Verify the Mars mirror. Import the market's PGP key, check the signature on the mirror list, and confirm the full string. Only a Mars mirror that passes goes into the address bar.
  4. Prepare PGP and a wallet. Have your PGP keypair ready and a funded Monero or Bitcoin wallet before you connect, so you are not improvising mid-session.
  5. Connect, enable 2FA, use escrow. Open the verified Mars mirror, turn on 2FA immediately, and keep every order inside the multisig escrow — never settle outside it.
How to check a Mars Market mirror is genuine over Tor and I2P with PGP

Follow those five steps and a Mars Market visit through any mirror stays clean from the first click. Rush them and you trade safety for nothing.

Live Mars Market Crypto Prices

XMR Monero · recommended on Mars
BTC Bitcoin · also accepted

Prices for Monero and Bitcoin move every minute, and since both fund Mars Market orders it helps to size a transfer against a current rate. The live widget here refreshes the XMR and BTC quotes roughly every sixty seconds. Glance at it before you fund the escrow so the amount you send matches the order, with a small margin for network fees and confirmation time. It is a convenience, not financial advice — the figures track the market, and you make the call.

Mars Market Mirror Verification Checklist

Run this before you trust any Mars mirror. It is the whole anti-phishing routine in one place, and it takes under two minutes.

  1. Imported the Mars Market PGP key and confirmed it against more than one independent reference.
  2. Checked the PGP signature on the mirror list — a clean "good signature", not just a green-looking page.
  3. Compared the entire mirror address character by character, not only the first few letters.
  4. Confirmed the network — .onion for Tor, .b32.i2p for I2P — and used the matching tool.
  5. Set Tor Browser to "Safest" (or pointed the browser at the I2P proxy) before loading the mirror.
  6. Treated every status pill as "checking" and did the final confirmation yourself.
  7. Enabled 2FA on the Mars Market account the first time you signed in through a mirror.
  8. Bookmarked the verified Mars mirror in-browser so the next visit skips risky search results.
  9. Re-ran this check after any rotation, because a new mirror means a new signature to verify.

Nine boxes. Every one ticked means the Mars Market mirror in front of you is the genuine one, on the right network, opened the right way.

Mars Market Security & Privacy Resources

Before you open any Mars Market mirror, get the fundamentals right. These are the official, independent tools the privacy community trusts — for both anonymity networks, encryption, Monero wallets, and verification. Bookmark them, then come back to the verified mirror list above.

Mars Market Mirrors — 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 address does not take the whole market down. With Mars Market the spares span two networks — Tor onions and I2P eepsites — which adds a layer of resilience most lists do not have.

On this page and on the mirrors page. Every Mars Market mirror here is tied to a PGP-signed source. Confirm the signature yourself before the first visit — that is what separates a genuine mirror from a clone, far more than where you found it.

Use PGP. Import the market's public key, check the signature on the mirror list, and compare the full address. A forged Mars mirror cannot produce a valid signature, so a failed check is your answer. Never rely on a mirror looking familiar.

Yes — that dual-network reach is Mars Market's signature feature. The list carries a .onion for Tor and a .i2p for I2P. Use Tor Browser for the onion and the I2P router for the eepsite. Both lead to the same Mars Market.

Because we do not claim a mirror is live without a fresh PGP-signed confirmation. "Checking" is the honest label — the Mars mirror is listed and the verification path is shown, and you complete the final confirmation through PGP rather than trusting a green dot.

Yes. PGP is how you prove a signed mirror list is genuine, and it is mandatory on Mars Market for messaging and 2FA. Generate a 4096-bit key, keep the private half offline, and import the market key. Without PGP you can neither confirm a mirror nor secure your account.

Open a Verified Mars Market Mirror

You have the verified Mars Market mirror list, both network addresses, and the routine to keep them safe. Copy a .onion or a .i2p entry from the table at the top, run the matching tool, confirm the PGP signature, and connect. For the complete set of verified Mars Market mirrors across Tor and I2P with the rotation logic, or the full mirror explainer guide, follow the links below. Verify first, pick your network, then open Mars Market.

Educational and research notice: this page lists and explains how to verify Mars Market mirrors for informational purposes. Follow the laws of your jurisdiction.