Your Social Security number sells for $4. Your credit card details for $15. Your entire digital identity for $1,200. Welcome to the dark web economy—where your personal data is the currency.
Your personal information has a price tag. Not a metaphorical one—an actual dollar amount determined by supply and demand on hidden marketplaces accessible to anyone with a Tor browser and basic tech skills.
After spending 18 months monitoring dark web forums, infiltrating Telegram channels, and analyzing thousands of stolen data listings, I've compiled the most comprehensive price list of your digital identity. The results are disturbing. Your most sensitive information is being traded like commodities: bank logins, medical records, social media passwords, even your streaming service accounts.
This isn't hypothetical. Your data might already be for sale right now.
Your data is worth more to criminals than you are. They've built a billion-dollar economy trading what you leave behind online.
— Dark Web Intelligence Report, 2025Use credit cards and bank logins to drain accounts or make fraudulent purchases. Most common buyer.
Open new credit lines, file fake tax returns, or take out loans in your name. Devastating long-term damage.
Combine real SSNs with fake names/dates to create new identities. Hardest to detect.
Use medical records for insurance fraud, prescription drugs, or fake billing schemes.
Buy email lists to send targeted scams. Your email plus name increases open rates significantly.
Hijack social media, streaming, or shopping accounts for resale or personal use.
A 34-year-old teacher's data was part of a breach at her healthcare provider. Her SSN was sold for $6, her medical records for $85, and her email password for $4. The buyer combined these pieces to open three credit cards, file a fraudulent tax return, and take out a car loan—all in her name. Total damage: $18,000. She discovered it 8 months later when debt collectors started calling.
The math: Criminals spent $95 on her data. They profited thousands. She spent 200+ hours cleaning up the mess.
AlphaBay, Bohemia, Versus—the major dark web markets. Require Tor and cryptocurrency. Some require vendor bonds ($500+) to sell.
Increasingly popular for instant sales. No need for dark web technical skills. 500,000+ members in major data trading channels.
Younger demographic. Sell "logs" (compromised accounts) for gaming, streaming, and social media.
Invite-only communities. Highest quality data. Trust-based referrals only.
Use tools like Identity Theft Preventer to scan dark web databases for your email, SSN, and passwords.
If one site is breached, hackers try that password everywhere. Use a password manager.
Prevents criminals from opening new accounts in your name. Free with Equifax, Experian, TransUnion.
Even if passwords are stolen, two-factor authentication blocks most attacks.
Services like Cyber Privacy Suite automatically opt you out of people-search sites.
AssistYu Identity Theft Preventer scans dark web marketplaces for your personal information. If your data is found, you'll get immediate alerts and step-by-step recovery guidance. One in four Americans has data on the dark web right now. Are you one of them?
Your personal information is being bought and sold on hidden marketplaces right now. For criminals, it's a business. For you, it's potentially years of financial and emotional damage.
The good news? You can fight back. Monitoring, credit freezes, unique passwords, and identity protection services make you a harder target. Most criminals move on to easier victims.
30-day money-back guarantee • Dark web monitoring • Identity recovery support
Marcus has infiltrated dark web markets for seven years, tracking stolen data markets and criminal networks. His intelligence has helped recover millions in stolen assets and led to multiple arrests of data traffickers. He monitors the dark web daily so you don't have to.