The following section analyzes current darknet market prices for hacked accounts and explores why credentials for individual brands are currently valued as they are. It incorporates both US and UK data.
Find out more about how different types of hacked credentials can be used for fraud in the common scams section of our Dark Web Prices research hub.
Personal Finance
The trade in stolen financial details has long been the heart of the dark web’s economy. Credit card, debit cards, bank details and online payment accounts are listed in vast quantities and can command the highest prices, particularly when the lure of a high value balance is present.
Most fluctuation in this area is caused by where hackers have the most success in finding account details with high balances.
In last year’s Price Index, PayPal‘s average price of $247 was inflated by the number of accounts listed with balances in excess of $10,000.
This year, it’s listings for hacked bank accounts and debit card details where we found the highest balances.
Prices have inflated further as sellers demand a larger percentage cut of the balance. Accounts now sell for 20% or even 30% of the balance, compared to 5-10% previously. This has driven the average price up to $260, suggesting the increasing difficulty of stealing this data. In the UK, this is even higher at £348.
The current scarcity of high-balance PayPal accounts is also likely due at least in part to eBay starting to eBay transition away from PayPal as its main payment processor last year.[1] The two companies have long gone hand-in-hand (eBay accounted for 50% of PayPal’s profits in 2014[2]) and eBay is a common use case for hacked PayPal accounts. If it becomes harder to exploit these accounts it is likely that their average price will continue to fall.
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Proof of Identity
One of the more popular kinds of listing advertises “fullz”, which are bundles of “full” identifying data.[3] Listings for fullz often advertise an individual’s name, address, mother’s maiden name, social security number, date of birth, credit reports and other forms of personal data. [Note: where related financial account details such as credit cards were included with fullz we considered these to be personal finance listings].
Bringing down the price this year was a wider tendency to sell passport scans and other forms of ID in bulk.
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Online Shopping
The average shopping account sells for between $10 and $20 in the US, with the most expensive being Amazon ($30) and Best Buy ($26.50), both of whom have huge high-value inventories.
Stolen US Amazon accounts have tripled in price, which may be in anticipation of a wider rollout for Amazon Go. Thieves would potentially be able to wander in, fill a trolley and leave without detection.
Prices for stolen Best Buy accounts have more than doubled in the aftermath of a chat bot breach that exposed credit card details.[4]
In the UK, there’s some irony in that budget supermarket Morrison’s accounts (£16) were the most expensive on the dark web in this category. This was likely due to the potential for exploiting its rewards system.[5] At £14.50 on average, Amazon UK credentials were less pricey than those for US accounts.
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Delivery
Fraudsters have been caught setting up complex scams involving stolen Paypal and eBay accounts that they use to buy expensive electronics. A hacked FedEx account for $11 could be the missing piece of the puzzle that allows them to get their hands on the goods, which they would usually resell.
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Travel
The average value of hacked accounts for travel brands more than doubled year-over-year, due to the high value transactions associated with the category. There also remains plenty of scope for the abuse of such accounts.
British Airways accounts are typically associated with Avios airmiles that can be used on multiple airlines. Credentials more than quadrupled in value to £32 following its huge data breach last year.[6]
Uber accounts jumped 60% compared to last year to over $11 as they become more ubiquitous in our daily lives, making it less likely that fraudulent transactions will be spotted as quickly.
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Communication
Mobile phone carrier accounts are mostly getting cheaper. Verizon has fallen 20% in price, while AT&T’s average cost has halved.
This price fall may be due to the growing move away from using text messages as two-factor authentication. SMS has been repeatedly shown up as an insecure form of two-factor authentication and as companies continue to pivot away from using it these accounts will become less useful to hackers.[7][8][9]
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Social Media
Facebook ($9) spent much of 2018 under siege from the media and western governments and the value of its accounts slumped accordingly on the dark web.
However, just as its stock price recovered, so too has the dark-web worth of hacked accounts for the social media giant. It’s clear that despite the popularity of #DeleteFacebook, there’s plenty of mileage yet in the social media platform.
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Software
Subscription-based software is also making its first appearance on the Darknet Markets Price Index. The listings – largely for security software – we found are exclusively pitched as being for personal use rather for further fraud.
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Food
These accounts aren’t used for identity fraud so much as straightforward theft.
It follows then that hacked accounts for a delivery platform like Grubhub would be the most valuable at $9. There are reports of accounts being exploited by hackers for up to $180 in a single order.[10] Log-ins for Deliveroo, a similar service in the UK, trade for £3.
It is also interesting to see what kind of food the average dark web criminal likes best: unsurprisingly, mostly pizza and burgers, with the most popular stolen accounts for sale including Pizza Hut and Domino’s.
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Dating
The most commonly hacked dating accounts remain Match.com ($7) and Plenty of Fish ($4).
Prices remain relatively low despite the potential for “catfishing” on top of identity theft, as buying genuinely hacked accounts is a costly and ineffective method to do this compared to simply starting a new account with fake pictures.
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Entertainment
Prices are steadily rising for these accounts and are even beginning to rival hacked financial accounts in terms of sheer volume (and variety) of listings.
Joining global megabrands Netflix ($11) and Apple ($11) as the most desirable accounts is Fortnite ($11). The gaming phenomenon is unique in that despite being free to play, hacked accounts may include valuable in-game perks that would otherwise be difficult to obtain.
It’s common for vendors of stolen streaming services to offer “lifetime accounts”. This is a form of warranty under which buyers can switch to freshly stolen accounts every time they are locked out of their previous account by its legitimate owner.
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News/Magazine
This is the first time that accounts for newspapers and magazines have appeared in the course of our research. The majority of the hacked accounts we found in this category were being sold by a single seller on Dream Market, the dark web’s biggest market.
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Email
Hacked email accounts tend to be sold either in massive dumps from large scale data breaches or as small batches of verified emails. We even found some individual verified emails for sale. For the purposes of the Price Index, we disregarded dumps as unit prices work out at tiny fractions of a cent each and the accounts in these dumps are not guaranteed to be accessible or even valid.
Verified emails on the other hand trade for a few dollars each. That may not seem much for an account that can act as a skeleton key to your online life, however increasing adoption of two-factor authentication keeps overall prices relatively low.
Gmail accounts trade for well over five times as much as they did last year, however, due to the vulnerability of accounts using SMS for 2FA.
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