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Research — Market History

Darknet market history: the closed markets that shaped the dark web

From Silk Road in 2013 to Abacus in 2025, this is a growing archive of the darknet markets that have been seized or exit-scammed. Each case study covers what the market was, how it fell, and what replaced it.

Updated May 2026Hand-written by researchers

The history of the darknet is mostly the history of its markets dying. A handful explain how the whole ecosystem works today. Silk Road proved the model. AlphaBay scaled it. Hydra turned it into a national economy. Abacus showed how fast a dominant market can vanish. We are documenting each one in depth, and adding more closed markets over time, so you can recognise the same patterns playing out in the markets running now.

In-depth case studies

Want the markets that are actually online right now? See Top Darknet Markets 2026. For the full chronology of every takedown and exit scam, see the market shutdown timeline.

More closed markets we are documenting

The four above are the flagships, but they are not the whole story. We are building dedicated case studies for the other markets that mattered, including Dream Market, Empire Market, White House Market, Hansa, Wall Street Market, Kingdom Market, Nemesis, and Archetyp. Until each gets its own page, you will find every one of them in the market shutdown timeline, which tracks the date, cause, and scale of every major closure from 2013 to 2026.

Frequently asked questions

What was the first darknet market?

Silk Road, launched in 2011 by Ross Ulbricht, was the first true darknet market. It proved that Tor, Bitcoin, and an escrow system could support anonymous online trade, and every market since has copied the model. Full breakdown in the Silk Road case study.

What is the largest darknet market in history?

Hydra, the Russian-language market seized in 2022, is the largest ever recorded, with around 17 million accounts and an estimated $5.2 billion in turnover. See the Hydra Market case study.

Why do darknet markets shut down?

Most fall for one of two reasons: a law enforcement seizure, usually triggered by an operator's operational security mistake, or an exit scam where the operators keep the funds and disappear. Honest, voluntary retirements are rare. The OPSEC guide covers the mistakes that get markets caught.

Are any of these darknet markets still online in 2026?

No. Silk Road, AlphaBay, Hydra, and Abacus are all closed. The markets that are active and verified in 2026 are listed on the Top Darknet Markets page.