The current Mars Market mirror list
Five entries are in the current Mars Market rotation. They are listed below as plain links. Each line is exactly the address — fifty-six lowercase characters from a-z and 2-7, then the suffix .onion — so when you select the text and copy it, the string on your clipboard is the string that goes into the Tor Browser address bar with no editing required.
- mars24pas2vgwtr4drrsy7tlngevbvxyguejynnkeywibjzenet7knqd.onion
- marsautkudspgk6j23cxdtrk36ae4fpis2eoe7izu5y2rsksvmfji2ad.onion
- marshjhtog245vzjzcicnmv2ci6yljibvdm4pngq5kmkfvcutppboxad.onion
- marsiujka6lrsaqpnxiwvknthhzsrlmq77mnl2fi62guc4lwxif65syd.onion
- marsmtbwtxkohhpu34m4jkwcntian7n257wsex5tbkmsjdjrsz6me3yd.onion
Rotation, written out
The storefront operator publishes several entries at once. Each of them resolves to the identical storefront — the same login screen, the same wallet panel, the same order history — so a reader who switches from one to another after a slow first attempt loses nothing. Rotation matters because no single address can serve every reader without occasionally becoming a bottleneck, and a small rotating set means that one tired entry does not become a closed door for everyone.
How an entry retires
The editor team becomes aware of a retirement when the operator publishes a fresh address inside the storefront. The new entry is added to the list here before the older one is removed, so a reader who refreshes during a quiet rotation sees the same five entries plus one new line for a short period. When the older entry has fallen out of regular use, the editor team removes it from the page.
Reading an entry quickly
The four letters m, a, r, s at the start of every line are the visual fingerprint that ties an entry back to this storefront. If you see them, the rest is almost certainly fine; if you do not see them, the line is from another storefront and does not belong here. Length matters too — fifty-six characters before the dot, no more and no less. A few minutes of habit on these two checks blocks most of the impersonation attempts that target first-time readers.
Why the page does not show a count
The list is the count. Five lines, plainly visible, is more honest than a number printed in a corner. The editor team has tried both arrangements in the past and the version with the bare list reads more clearly for new readers and is easier to maintain when the rotation moves. Counting the entries by eye takes a second and rewards exactly the kind of attention this page wants you to bring to the addresses themselves.