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// AGED VS FRESH

Aged vs fresh accounts

Last updated: July 15, 2026

A fresh account was created recently and has no history. An aged account, which this catalogue calls Trusted, has been around longer. Here the difference is exactly 10x in price: $0.004 fresh against $0.040 trusted, for Hotmail and Outlook alike. Buy fresh when the account is disposable. Buy trusted when it has to hold up under real use.

That is the honest short answer, and it is shorter than most pages on this topic because we are leaving out the part everyone else invents. You will find competitors quoting survival statistics to the percentage point. We do not measure survival, we do not publish a figure for it, and the rest of this page explains why that gap in our data is real rather than a coy sales tactic. What we can tell you precisely is what each tier costs, what lands in your dashboard, and how to verify both without taking our word for anything.

Live fresh and trusted prices and stock, read from the public stock endpoint
ProductPriceStock
Hotmail Fresh$0.004In stock
Outlook Fresh$0.004Out
Hotmail Trusted$0.020Out
Outlook Trusted$0.0201
Gmail$0.350Out

What actually separates a fresh account from an aged one

A fresh account was made recently and carries no history. A trusted account has existed for a while and carries some. That is the whole distinction, and it is worth stating that plainly because the word aged gets stretched in this market until it means nothing. Age is not something you can inspect from outside the mailbox. There is no reputation score Microsoft exposes, no field in the export that reads trusted, nothing you can query to confirm what you paid for. What you can observe is that the two tiers are sourced differently, priced differently, and that the market consistently pays more for the older one. Hotmail and Outlook run on the same Microsoft backend, so the fresh and trusted split behaves identically across both domains; the address suffix is the only real difference between them. Gmail sits in the catalogue as a single product at $0.350, with no fresh and trusted split at all.

The 10x price gap, and what it does not buy

Fresh Hotmail and fresh Outlook are $0.004. Trusted Hotmail and trusted Outlook are $0.040. Exactly ten times, and it is the most reliable number on this page because it is one we set and one you can check in the table above. What the gap buys is not extra data in the file you download. Both tiers deliver the same fields: the address, the password, and in many cases an OAuth2 access token, a refresh token and a client ID. Nothing extra is bundled into the trusted export, no support tier, no longer guarantee, no additional metadata. The gap is entirely about the account's history, which is scarcer and slower to source than a newly created mailbox. In absolute terms it is three and a half cents per account. Across a thousand accounts that is $36, which is small enough that buying both tiers to compare costs less than the time spent deliberating.

Why we publish no survival rates

Search this topic and you will find precise-looking figures: fresh survives some percentage at thirty days, aged some higher percentage. We do not publish numbers like that. The reason is not modesty, it is that we would be making them up. We sell credentials. Once an order clears, the account is in your dashboard and outside our view. We do not know what you sign up for with it, how quickly you move, how many accounts you run from one address, or whether you ever changed the password. Those variables decide whether a mailbox lasts a week or a year, and all of them sit on your side of the transaction. A vendor quoting a survival percentage is either measuring accounts they still control, which are not the accounts they sold you, or inventing the figure because it converts. We would rather tell you we do not know.

This has a practical consequence worth being blunt about: we cannot promise either tier will survive any particular use. Not fresh, not trusted. The login guarantee covers the account working when you receive it, which is a claim about delivery, not about the future. Anything past that first login depends on what you do next. If a competitor's confidence is more reassuring than our uncertainty, notice that their confidence is free to produce and impossible to check, while everything on this page can be verified in under a minute.

When fresh at $0.004 is the right call

Fresh is right when the account is disposable. You need an address, you need whatever verification code arrives at it, and after that the mailbox can rot untouched. Sign-ups you finish in one session, one-off confirmations, anything you never log back into: fresh does that for less than half a cent, and the trusted tier would be doing the identical work for ten times the money. Volume does not change the unit price, so a thousand fresh accounts is $4 and a hundred thousand is $400. At that cost, treating accounts as consumable is the entire point of the tier. The caveat worth naming: a brand new mailbox doing something unusual minutes after its first login is the most conspicuous pattern there is. We cannot promise a fresh account survives that. What we can say is that when an account only has to work once, paying 10x for history you will never use is just a donation.

When trusted at $0.040 earns the 10x

Trusted is what buyers pick when the account still has to be there later. Sending from it, returning to it next month, attaching it to anything you would be annoyed to lose: those are the cases where three and a half extra cents stops reading as a premium. The reasoning behind the tier is that history is what makes a mailbox look ordinary, and an ordinary-looking mailbox invites fewer questions. That is the logic the market prices in, and it is why the tier exists and why people pay for it. We will not inflate that into a guarantee. A trusted account pushed hard enough fails the same way a fresh one does, and again, we cannot promise either tier survives any particular use. The only reliable way to find out is to buy a small quantity of each, run both through your actual workflow, and let the outcome decide. That experiment costs a few dollars.

Both tiers ship exactly the same thing

Whichever tier you buy, delivery is identical. Every account arrives with the email address and its password. Many also carry an OAuth2 access token, a refresh token and a client ID, which let you connect over IMAP or Microsoft Graph without ever loading the interactive web login. That matters because the web login is where Microsoft is most likely to ask for a phone number or a second factor, and tokens route around it entirely. Delivery is instant and automated on both tiers: credentials land in your dashboard the moment payment clears, with no approval step and nobody in the loop. Payment is cryptocurrency only, through a Plisio checkout taking USDT on TRC20, Litecoin and Tron. No card, no personal details. You top a balance up once and spend it down. Orders run from 1 to 100,000 and the unit price never moves with quantity, so there is no bulk discount to negotiate for and none to miss.

For Hotmail and Outlook, either tier can be read in the built-in mail reader on this site. Open the account from your orders and messages come through in the browser, verification codes included, with no client to configure. The reader treats a fresh account and a trusted account the same way, because from the credentials outward they are the same object.

Check the prices yourself, no account needed

Every price quoted here is verifiable without signing up, without a key, without asking us. Send a GET to https://api.xmailhub.net/api/publicapi/stock and you get live Name, Price and Stock for every product in the catalogue, as JSON, unauthenticated. You will see the fresh rows at 0.004, the trusted rows at 0.040 and Gmail at 0.350, next to how many of each are genuinely in stock at that moment. The table earlier on this page reads from that same source, which is why it is neither a screenshot nor a number someone typed in. This is the flip side of refusing to invent survival statistics: where a fact is real and checkable, we would rather you check it than trust us. If the endpoint and this text ever disagree, the endpoint wins, because this text was written on July 15, 2026 and the endpoint is answering right now.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between aged and fresh email accounts?

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A fresh account was created recently and has no history behind it. An aged account, listed here as Trusted, has existed for longer. That is the entire difference. It is not visible in the credentials you download: both tiers deliver the same address, password and, in many cases, the same OAuth2 access token, refresh token and client ID. Nothing extra is attached to the trusted export. What differs is the account itself and, correspondingly, the price: $0.004 fresh against $0.040 trusted for both Hotmail and Outlook. Age is not a field you can query, because Microsoft does not publish a reputation score for anyone to read. It is a property of how the account was sourced, which is why it costs more and why nobody, us included, can hand you a certificate proving it.

How much more do aged accounts cost than fresh ones?

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Exactly ten times. Fresh Hotmail and fresh Outlook are $0.004 each. Trusted Hotmail and trusted Outlook are $0.040 each. In absolute terms the gap is three and a half cents per account, which scales to $36 across a thousand accounts and $360 across ten thousand. The unit price does not change with quantity in either tier, so there is no volume break that narrows the gap at scale; a hundred thousand fresh is $400 and a hundred thousand trusted is $4,000. Gmail is a separate product at $0.350 with no fresh and trusted split. All of these are live in the table on this page and in the public stock endpoint, so if a number here is ever stale, the endpoint is the one to trust.

Do aged accounts survive longer than fresh ones?

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We do not know, and we will not quote you a figure. We sell credentials; once an order clears, the account is yours and out of our view. We cannot see what you sign it up for, how fast you move, how many accounts you run from one address, or whether you changed the password. Those factors decide how long a mailbox lasts far more than its age does, and every one of them is on your side. The market pays 10x for the trusted tier because history is believed to make a mailbox look ordinary, and that belief is the reason the tier exists. But we cannot promise either tier survives any particular use. If you find a vendor quoting an exact survival percentage, ask how they measured accounts they no longer control.

Should I buy fresh or aged accounts?

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Fresh if the account is disposable, trusted if it has to last. If you need an address, need the verification code that arrives at it, and will never log in again, fresh at $0.004 does that job and the trusted tier would do the identical job for ten times the price. If you intend to send from the account, return to it next month, or attach anything you care about to it, trusted at $0.040 is what buyers pick for that, and three and a half cents is a small hedge against redoing the work. Neither choice is a guarantee. Because both tiers are cheap, the sensible move is to buy a small quantity of each, run both through your real workflow, and let the result decide instead of a page like this one.

Do fresh and aged accounts come with the same credentials?

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Yes, identical. Both tiers deliver the email address and its password. Many accounts in both tiers also include an OAuth2 access token, a refresh token and a client ID, which allow IMAP or Microsoft Graph access without going through the interactive web login, the place Microsoft most often asks for a phone number or a second factor. There is no extra field, no extra service and no longer guarantee attached to the trusted tier; you are paying for the account's history, not for a bigger export file. Delivery is the same too: instant and automated on both, credentials in your dashboard as soon as payment clears, no approval step. For Hotmail and Outlook, both tiers work in the built-in mail reader on this site.

Can I check aged and fresh prices without registering?

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Yes. GET https://api.xmailhub.net/api/publicapi/stock returns live Name, Price and Stock for every product as JSON, with no key and no account. You will see the fresh rows at 0.004, the trusted rows at 0.040 and Gmail at 0.350, along with real stock counts at that moment. The price table on this page reads the same endpoint, so it is live rather than a screenshot. If a product reads zero stock, it is genuinely out right then rather than hidden behind a login. We publish it keyless deliberately: the price gap between the tiers is the central claim on this page, and a claim you can verify in one request is worth more than one you have to accept.

Can I order fresh and aged accounts in bulk?

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Yes, from 1 to 100,000 per order in either tier, and the unit price does not change with quantity. A single fresh account is $0.004 and a hundred thousand fresh accounts are $0.004 each; the same holds for trusted at $0.040. There is no bulk tier to negotiate and no minimum to clear. Payment is cryptocurrency only through a Plisio checkout accepting USDT on TRC20, Litecoin and Tron, with no card and no personal details. You top a balance up once and spend it across as many orders as you want, mixing tiers freely. Delivery stays instant at every quantity. Check the live stock first if you need a large batch, since a tier can be genuinely out at any given moment.

Related pages

Compare the tiers with your own workflow

Fresh at $0.004, trusted at $0.040, live stock for both, delivered the moment you buy.

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