Torch Search Engine — Dark Web Onion Link & Guide (2026)

Type: Tor network search engine — unfiltered

Requires Tor Browser: Yes

Content filtering: None

Index size: 1B+ pages

Founded: 1996

Last verified: March 2026

Onion Addresses

http://xmh57jrknzkhv6y3ls3ubitzfqnkrwxhopf5aygthi7d6rplyvk3noyd.onion

Alternative:

http://torchdeedp3i2jigzjdmfpn5ttjhthh5wbmda2rr3jvqjg5p77c54dqd.onion

Torch maintains multiple addresses to stay online during DDoS attacks. If one fails, try the other. Both are official.

The Oldest Surviving Dark Web Search Engine

Torch launched in 1996 — two years before Google, six years before the Tor Project incorporated. Through nearly three decades of darknet market booms and busts, law enforcement operations and network disruptions, it has maintained continuous operation. That longevity is its primary credential.

Its approach is simple: crawl everything, filter nothing, index everything found. The result is the largest available index of .onion content. The trade-off is that results include scams, dead links and illegal material alongside legitimate resources.

Search Technique

Torch’s ranking algorithm is basic keyword matching — relevance ranking is minimal. Effective searches require precision.

Technique Example
Be specific “ProtonMail onion 2026” not “email”
Include “onion” or “.onion” Filters out surface web noise
Use quotes for exact matches “hidden wiki” address
Add the year “tor search engine 2026”
Try synonyms “darknet” if “dark web” returns nothing

Understanding Results

Dead links are common. A significant portion of Torch’s index points to sites that no longer exist. Tor sites go offline constantly — DDoS attacks, seizures, operator abandonment. If a result doesn’t load, the site is almost certainly offline, not a Tor connection issue.

Phishing clones appear. Fake versions of markets and services are indexed alongside the real ones. Verify any address against a second source before depositing funds or entering credentials.

No safe content guarantee. Torch returns everything. Set Tor Browser to Safest mode before searching — this disables JavaScript and blocks most drive-by exploits.

When to Use Torch

Start with Ahmia for any search. If it returns nothing useful, move to Torch. For niche content, recently launched services or anything obscure, Torch’s larger index is more likely to find it. For well-known services with stable addresses, Ahmia is faster and safer.

Common Questions

Why so many dead links? Torch crawls and caches but does not continuously verify that sites remain live. Dead links accumulate faster than they are pruned.

Does Torch log searches? No published privacy policy. Assume queries passed through the .onion version are not seen by your ISP. Whether Torch’s servers log queries is unknown — treat sensitive searches accordingly.