The 12 Best Deep Search Engines to Explore the Invisible Web (2024)

Quick Links

  • What Is the Invisible Web?

  • The 12 Best Deep Search Engines

Key Takeaways

  • The invisible web is vast, including the deep & dark web.
  • Specialist search engines like Ahmia and Torch can access it but use Tor to access individual sites from the search results.
  • Sites like Pipl, Directory of Open Access Journals, The Wayback Machine, Veridian, and Project Gutenberg hold valuable content for different use cases.

Not everything on the web will show up in a list of search results on Google or Bing; there are numerous places that the sites' web crawlers cannot access.

To explore the invisible web, you need to use specialist search engines. Here are our top 12 services to perform a deep internet search.

What Is the Invisible Web?

Before we begin, let's establish what the term "invisible web" refers to. Simply, it's a catch-all term for online content that does not appear in search results or web directories.

There is no official data available, but most experts agree that the invisible web is several times larger than the visible web. The true size of the internet is unknown, and the same goes for the invisible web. However, the invisible web can be roughly divided into the deep web and the dark web.

The Deep Web

The deep web is made up of content that typically requires some form of accreditation to access. Examples include library databases, email inboxes, personal records (financial, academic, health, and legal), cloud storage drives, and company intranets. If you have the correct details, you can access the content through a regular web browser.

The Dark Web

The dark web is a subsection of the deep web. You need to use a dedicated browser (such as Tor) to access dark web content. It's more anonymous than the regular web and is thus often the home of illegal activities. However, not everything on the dark web is illegal. Some of the best dark web websites are just versions of regular sites but are hidden to enable users in totalitarian regimes to access them.

The 12 Best Deep Search Engines

1. Pipl

Pipl brands itself as the world's largest people search engine. Unlike Google, Pipl can interact with searchable databases, member directories, court records, and other deep internet search content to offer you a detailed snapshot of a person. You can also use Pipl to deep search yourself.

2. The Wayback Machine

Regular search engines only provide results from the most recent version of a website that's available.

The Wayback Machine is different. It has copies of more than 850 billion web pages on its servers, allowing you to search for content that's no longer available on the visible web. It's also a handy site for viewing old versions of any website.

3. The WWW Virtual Library

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The WWW Virtual Library is the oldest catalog on the web. It was started by Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the World Wide Web, back in 1991.

Volunteers compile the list of links by hand, thus creating a high-quality index of deep web content across dozens of categories.

4. DuckDuckGo

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DuckDuckGo is well-known as one of the best private search engines for the visible web and offers one of the best privacy-focused smartphone browsers. But did you know the company also offers an onion site that lets you explore the dark web?

Even the regular search engine offers more deep web content than Google. It pools results from more than 500 standalone search tools to find its results. If you pair the regular DuckDuckGo engine with the Onion version, you can perform an entire web search.

The Onion site can be found at https://duckduckgogg42xjoc72x3sjasowoarfbgcmvfimaftt6twagswzczad.onion/.

5. USA.gov

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The amount of content on USA.gov is seriously impressive. It's a portal to all the public material you need on every federal agency and state, local, or tribal government.

You will also find information about government jobs, loans, grants, taxes, and a whole lot more. Most of the information on the site will not appear on Google.

6. Directory of Open Access Journals

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The Directory of Open Access Journals is a deep internet search engine that provides access to academic papers. The papers are available to anyone without charge.

The current repository has over 20,000 journals with over 10 million articles across all subjects. Although you can easily find free articles on Google Scholar, and it can access some of the information, we think that the DOAJ is a better research tool.

7. SearXNG

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If you are looking for a dark web search engine that also gets data from the visible web, check out SearXNG. The site has an Onion domain name, so it is not accessible through a standard web browser. To load it, open a dark web browser such as Tor and paste http://searx3aolosaf3urwnhpynlhuokqsgz47si4pzz5hvb7uuzyjncl2tid.onion/ into the address bar.

It pulls data from different search engines, so it opens you to a world of endless possibilities. If it exists, this search engine can probably find it.

8. Veridian

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Veridian aims to provide a single portal to all the historical newspapers of the world. It's a fantastic resource for researchers—especially family historians, genealogists, and students.

Many of the newspapers on the site are exclusively on the deep web; they will not show up on Google. At the time of writing, over 3.6 million newspapers are available.

Veridian Software is the company behind the now-dead portal for historical newspapers, Elephind. If you loved Elephind and want an alternative, you'll be happy to know that all of its library is still accessible via Veridian's website.

9. Torch

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As one of the oldest deep web search engines, Torch is one of the best. Torch prides itself on not censoring any search results, and it scours the deep web every day for new publicly available Onion websites on the Tor network.

There are over three million documents indexed by the search engine as of writing. To access Torch, copy and paste the following link in Tor: http://xmh57jrknzkhv6y3ls3ubitzfqnkrwxhopf5aygthi7d6rplyvk3noyd.onion/

10. Ahmia

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Ahmia is a dark web search engine. But there's a twist—it is one of the few dark web search engines that is available on the regular web. Of course, any links and results will not be openable unless you have the Tor browser installed on your computer.

However, it's still a great way to get a taste of what's available on the dark web without exposing yourself to the inherent risks of using the dark web. Before exploring, you should first know how to avoid dangerous content on the dark web.

11. WorldCat

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How do you know which books the different local libraries in your area have in stock? Going through each library's site individually is time-consuming and potentially error-prone.

Instead, check out WorldCat. This deep internet search engine has two billion indexed items from libraries around the world, including many links that are only typically available with a database search.

12. Project Gutenberg

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If you search for obscure copyright-free ebooks on Google, you'll have to click through several pages to find a result that provides a download link.

Project Gutenberg offers over 70,000 free ebooks for you to check out and download. It provides variable formats and a list of similar books to download. It's undoubtedly one of the best sites to download ebooks for free.

The 12 search engines we have introduced you to should provide a solid base on which to start your hunt for content. Sadly, one of the most famous deep search engines from the past, Deeppeep, no longer exists, but all the sites in the article can help to recreate the lost features.

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The 12 Best Deep Search Engines to Explore the Invisible Web (2024)
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