Nexus Mirrors — Verified Onion Mirror List 2026
| # | Nexus mirror (onion URL) | Status | Uptime | Copy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | http://nexusaldu7wwewcpcn4reptcp72rsaeogolfvjncafua2oywwswwyaqd.onion |
Checking | 99.6% | |
| 2 | http://nexusbbqsh42lvde337tiruwfbikusjhdfukr2roacd4m7t7j5esvtqd.onion |
Checking | 99.4% | |
| 3 | http://nexuscr3cittluc2rcu3qsyk4hcczor5py56nstpz4g4pohtfpt3qvqd.onion |
Checking | 99.2% | |
| 4 | http://nexusd6kh4at2iof2tg2a7vmzs5vz4ocdpc5v6onski4moafsj65lcid.onion |
Checking | 98.9% |
Pick a working Nexus mirror: start at the top (highest uptime), copy it, and open it in Tor Browser. If one is slow, try the next — every mirror reaches the same marketplace. A "checking" pill means unconfirmed from clearnet; verify it against the PGP-signed list before you log in. See the full Nexus mirror list →
This page keeps a verified Nexus mirror list with live status and uptime so you always have a working onion address on hand. The status table sits right here in the first screen — mirror URL, status pill, uptime, and a Copy button on every row. No scrolling, no hunting. A Nexus onion is a 56-character v3 address beginning with nexus; cross-check every URL here against the warrant canary before you trust it.

Verified Nexus Mirrors
The table at the top is the verified Nexus mirror list. Each row is one onion address that points to the same marketplace; they are interchangeable front doors. When one is slow or busy, the next one works. That redundancy is by design, and it is why a mirror list beats a single bookmarked link.
How to read the list
- Mirror URL — the full 56-character v3 onion, shown in monospace so every character is legible. Copy it with the button; never retype an onion by hand.
- Status — a pill. Green means the mirror was reachable at the last manual check. "Checking" means unconfirmed from clearnet — verify it through the PGP-signed list before trusting it.
- Uptime — the rolling reachability percentage for that mirror. Nexus runs at roughly 99.5% uptime across the set, so most mirrors sit in the high nineties.
- Copy — one tap puts the address on your clipboard. Paste it straight into Tor Browser's address bar.
Picking a working Nexus mirror right now is simple. Start at the top of the list — it is ordered by uptime, so the first row is usually your best bet. If it loads slowly, that is normal for Tor; give it fifteen seconds before you move on. If it genuinely will not open, try the next mirror down. The marketplace behind every mirror is identical: same account, same orders, same vendors. You are only changing which onion door you walk through.
One habit pays off forever: save two or three Nexus mirrors, not one. If your single bookmark goes stale during a rotation, you are locked out until you find a fresh address — and that gap is exactly when phishing clones rank highest in search. With a short backup list you simply switch to the next verified mirror and carry on. Bookmark the verified ones from this page, and re-check them against the canary every week or two.
A working Nexus mirror is a means to an end, not the goal. The goal is reaching the real Nexus marketplace safely. Every verification step on this page — the v3 format check, the PGP signature, the warrant canary — exists to make sure the mirror you copy is genuinely Nexus and not a look-alike harvesting logins. The complete Nexus mirror list carries the full set with per-mirror verification.
About Nexus Market
Nexus is a top-2 darknet marketplace that launched on 22 November 2023 and grew fast: 500 users at launch, 10,000 by Q1 2024, and a top-2 position with 50,000+ registered users by the end of 2024. Knowing what sits behind the mirrors helps you judge whether a given address is worth trusting.
Registered users
A base above 50,000 members, reached in just over a year from launch.
Vendors
1,800+ active at any time, 85% holding verified status.
Mirror uptime
Across the mirror set — RAM-only storage with automatic failover.
Nexus is built around a few clear ideas. The interface is a cyberpunk design that the market treats as a flagship feature, and it is mobile-first — fully responsive, dark-mode tuned for Tor Browser, with 15+ language options. That mobile focus is part of why a clean, tappable mirror list matters so much: a lot of Nexus traffic arrives on a phone, and an onion address that selects in one tap is a small thing that saves a lot of mistyped logins.
The vendor side is sizeable. Nexus hosts 2,500+ vendors, of which 1,800+ are active, 85% are verified, and the average vendor rating sits at 4.7 out of 5. Listings span digital goods, services, electronics, guides, and tools, with roughly 25,000 listings live at any time. The marketplace clears more than 3,000 transactions a day with a satisfaction score around 4.6/5, and most of its users sit in Europe and North America. Nexus also runs DAO governance, so registered members vote on features and policy rather than having every decision handed down — a structural trust signal for a marketplace this size.
The growth curve says a lot too. Nexus went from 500 users at its November 2023 launch to a sustained 50,000+ in just over a year, passing 10,000 users in Q1 2024 and 1,000 verified vendors by mid-2024 before locking in its top-2 ranking. A marketplace growing that quickly is a marketplace worth impersonating, which is precisely why a verified Nexus mirror list and a strict verification routine carry their weight. The platform is stable; the clones are the moving target. That is the entire reason this Nexus mirror page leads with verification before convenience.
Why Nexus Uses Multiple Mirrors
A single onion address is a single point of failure. Nexus uses multiple mirrors so the marketplace stays reachable even when one address is under pressure, and a few engineering facts explain exactly why URLs rotate.
DDoS pressure
Tor hidden services are a frequent target for denial-of-service floods. When attackers concentrate on one onion address, that mirror slows or stops responding. With several mirrors live at once, traffic spreads across the set, and a flood against one URL leaves the others working. This is the most common reason a Nexus mirror you used yesterday feels sluggish today — and the simplest fix is to switch to another mirror on the list.
RAM-only databases and automatic failover
Nexus runs RAM-only database systems with automatic failover. In plain terms: sensitive data lives in volatile memory rather than on disk, and if one node drops out, the system fails over to another without operator intervention. Mirrors are the public-facing side of that same resilience — distributed front doors backed by infrastructure designed to keep serving even when individual parts go down. The 99.5% uptime figure is the visible result.
Blocks and stale addresses
Onion addresses get added to filter lists, flagged by relays, or simply aged out. Rotating mirrors keeps a fresh, reachable address available while older ones cool off. From a user's seat the rotation is mostly invisible — you just notice that the address you bookmarked three weeks ago no longer resolves, and you reach for the next mirror on your backup list.
So multiple Nexus mirrors are not a sign of instability. They are the opposite: a deliberate spread of access points backed by RAM-only storage, automatic failover, and DDoS-resistant routing. The practical takeaways are short:
- Keep two or three verified Nexus mirrors, never just one.
- When a mirror is slow, switch — do not assume the marketplace is down.
- Re-verify your saved mirrors against the PGP-signed list and canary on a regular cadence.
That last point is where reliability meets safety. Rotation is healthy, but it is also the moment phishing clones try to slip in. The next section is how you tell a genuine Nexus mirror from a fake one. The deeper walkthrough lives in our how Nexus mirror rotation works guide.
How to Verify a Nexus Mirror Is Official
Every Nexus mirror on this page is meant to be verified by you, not taken on faith. Verification is a short, repeatable routine, and once you have done it twice it takes under a minute. Here is the full checklist:
- Match the v3 format. A genuine Nexus onion is exactly 56 characters and ends in
.onion. It begins with thenexusprefix. Count length, read the prefix, and reject anything shorter or oddly spelled. - Compare against the PGP-signed mirror list. Nexus publishes its official mirror list signed with its PGP key. Import that key once, verify the signature on the list, and confirm the mirror you are about to use appears in the signed text. A signature that fails to verify means the list was altered — stop.
- Read the warrant canary. The canary is a signed statement Nexus updates on a schedule. A current, validly signed canary is a positive trust signal; a stale or missing one is a reason to slow down and re-verify through another channel before logging in.
- Check the on-page status and uptime. Use the status pill and uptime column here as a first filter, not the final word. They narrow the list; PGP confirms it.
- Inspect the address character by character. Phishing clones swap a single letter deep in the string, where the eye skips. Compare the full address against the signed list rather than glancing at the first and last few characters.
- Never enter credentials before the marketplace loads. A real Nexus mirror shows the marketplace first; login comes after. Any page that demands your username, password, or PGP passphrase before the site renders is harvesting them.
- Confirm 2FA still behaves normally. Once inside, your 2FA prompt and PGP challenge should look exactly as they always do. An altered or missing security step is a red flag even if the URL looked right.
- Re-verify after every rotation. When you notice a mirror has changed, run this checklist again on the new address. Rotation is routine; skipping verification during rotation is how people land on clones.
- Bookmark only verified mirrors. Once an address passes all of the above, save it. Bookmark verified mirrors, never search results, so next time you skip the search engine entirely.
Treat this list as muscle memory. The single most protective habit is item 2 — cross-checking against the PGP-signed list — because it does not rely on how a page looks, only on whether the signature holds. Looks can be cloned; a valid signature cannot.
Nexus Mirror Status & Uptime
Mirror status and uptime are the two numbers this page exists to surface, so it is worth being precise about what they mean and what they do not.
Status is a snapshot: was this Nexus mirror reachable at the last manual check? A green pill says yes at that moment. It is not a live, second-by-second monitor, because a clearnet web page genuinely cannot reach into the Tor network and ping a hidden service. That limitation is honest and built in — a "checking" pill means the address is unconfirmed from here, and you should verify it yourself through the PGP-signed list. We deliberately never paint a mirror "online" without a real check behind it.
Uptime is the longer view: across recent checks, what fraction of the time was this mirror reachable? Nexus runs near 99.5% uptime across its mirror set, which is what you would expect from RAM-only storage with automatic failover. In day-to-day terms, high-nineties uptime means a given mirror is almost always up, and on the rare occasion it is not, another mirror on the list covers the gap.
Read the two numbers together. A green status with high uptime is your first choice. A "checking" status with high historical uptime usually just means the address has not been manually re-checked recently, not that it is dead — verify it and it will most likely work. A consistently low uptime mirror is one to skip in favor of a fresher address near the top of the list. The last-checked timestamp above the table tells you how recent the snapshot is; if it is old, lean harder on PGP verification before trusting any single pill.
Security & Privacy on Nexus
The mirrors on this page lead to a marketplace that takes security seriously, and understanding that stack helps you verify a mirror with confidence rather than guesswork.
PGP & 2FA
Nexus makes PGP mandatory for sensitive communication and supports 2FA on accounts, with messages end-to-end encrypted. PGP is both how you protect your own messages and how you verify the mirror list itself, since the official list is PGP-signed.
Multi-signature escrow
Nexus uses a multi-signature escrow system with dispute resolution. Funds sit in escrow rather than going straight to a vendor, and a multisig setup means no single party can move them unilaterally. Buyer protection and a transparent rating system sit on top.
RAM-only infrastructure
The platform runs on Tor hidden services with RAM-only databases, automatic failover, and DDoS protection, backed by regular penetration testing. The same resilience that produces 99.5% mirror uptime keeps sensitive data off disk.
Crypto privacy
Nexus supports Bitcoin as its primary currency, Monero for privacy, and Litecoin for fast, low-fee transactions, with an integrated wallet and automatic conversion. Monero's ring signatures make XMR the privacy-forward choice.
A short, practical security baseline before you use any Nexus mirror: keep PGP set up so you can verify the signed mirror list and the canary yourself; enable 2FA on your account and confirm the prompt looks normal on every login; prefer Monero when transaction privacy is the priority; and treat escrow as the default — let the multisig system hold funds until an order is settled. Each layer covers a different risk, and the verified mirror on this page is your entry point to all of them.
Live Nexus Crypto Prices
Because Nexus prices in crypto, a quick read on current rates is useful before you fund an order. The widget above pulls BTC, XMR, and LTC prices live and refreshes about every 60 seconds, so the numbers you see are current rather than baked in. It is a convenience, not a wallet — it does not connect to your funds, hold balances, or touch your Nexus account. When you are deciding which coin to use, the rate is one input; privacy is the other. Monero is the privacy-forward option, Bitcoin the most widely accepted, and Litecoin the fast, low-fee middle ground. Treat the displayed numbers as indicative; for the actual amount you will pay, the marketplace checkout is the source of truth.
How to Access Nexus via a Mirror
Reaching Nexus through a mirror is a short sequence. Follow it in order and you connect to the genuine marketplace, not a clone.
- Open Tor Browser. Use the official Tor Browser from torproject.org, kept up to date. For higher assurance, run it inside Tails or Whonix, which route all traffic through Tor and leave little behind. A mirror is only as safe as the browser you open it in.
- Copy a verified Nexus mirror. From the status table on this page, copy the top mirror with the Copy button. Do not retype the 56-character address by hand — one wrong character is a different site.
- Verify before you log in. Cross-check the address against the PGP-signed mirror list and confirm the warrant canary is current. This is the step that separates a real Nexus mirror from a phishing copy, so never skip it during a rotation.
- Open it and sign in normally. Paste the address into Tor Browser, let the marketplace load (Tor can be slow — give it a moment), then log in with your credentials, 2FA, and PGP challenge exactly as usual. If any security step looks different, stop and re-verify the mirror.
That is the whole flow: open Tor, copy a verified mirror, verify it, sign in. The complete list lives on the full Nexus mirror list page if the top address is not cooperating, and the how Nexus mirror rotation works guide explains the verification steps in more depth.
Nexus Security & Privacy Resources
Before you open any Nexus mirror, get the fundamentals right. These are the official, independent tools the privacy community trusts — for anonymity, encryption, wallets, and verification. Bookmark them, then come back to the verified mirror table above.
Nexus Mirrors — Frequently Asked Questions
Start at the top of the status table on this page — it is ordered by uptime, so the first row is usually reachable. If it is slow, give it fifteen seconds (Tor takes a moment); if it genuinely will not open, move to the next mirror down. Every mirror leads to the same marketplace, so you lose nothing by switching. Always verify the address against the PGP-signed list before logging in. For the full set, see the complete Nexus mirror list.
Run the checklist: confirm the 56-character v3 format and the nexus prefix, cross-check the address against the PGP-signed mirror list, and read the current warrant canary. The signature is the decisive test, because looks can be cloned but a valid PGP signature cannot. Never enter credentials before the marketplace loads.
For resilience. Multiple mirrors spread traffic so a DDoS flood against one address leaves the others working, and rotation keeps a fresh, reachable URL available as older ones get filtered or aged out. Backed by RAM-only databases and automatic failover, this is what produces Nexus's roughly 99.5% uptime. Keep two or three verified mirrors so a rotation never locks you out.
The status pill is a snapshot of whether a mirror was reachable at the last manual check — green for confirmed, "checking" for unconfirmed from clearnet. Uptime is the rolling share of recent checks where the mirror was reachable. Read them together: a green pill with high uptime is your first choice, and the last-checked timestamp tells you how fresh the snapshot is.
Yes, once you have verified it — and it is smart to bookmark two or three rather than one. Save verified mirrors instead of search results so you can skip search engines next time, then re-check them against the canary every week or two, since addresses rotate.
Yes. Nexus is mobile-first and fully responsive, and every URL on this page uses one-tap select so you can copy a 56-character onion cleanly on a small screen. Use Tor Browser for Android; verify the mirror the same way you would on desktop. For sensitive activity, a desktop running Tails offers stronger isolation.
Access Nexus Now
You have everything you need on this page: a verified Nexus mirror list with status and uptime, a one-tap Copy button on every row, and a verification routine that catches clones. Copy the top mirror, verify it against the PGP-signed list and the warrant canary, and open it in Tor Browser. If the first mirror is busy, the complete list carries the full set.