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// BUY OUTLOOK

Buy Outlook accounts: fresh and aged

Last updated: July 15, 2026

You can buy Outlook accounts here from $0.004 for a fresh @outlook.com address, and around $0.040 for a trusted (aged) one. A region specific Outlook Countries product exists at around $0.005 but is not on sale at the moment; the live table below is the authority on what you can actually order right now. Every account arrives with the email and password, and most also carry an OAuth2 access token, a refresh token and a client ID. Delivery is instant and automated. The credentials appear in your dashboard the moment the order clears, with nothing waiting on manual approval.

The thing worth knowing before you pick: Outlook and Hotmail sit on the same Microsoft backend and behave near identically. The real difference is the domain on the address. Buy Outlook when the service you are registering with expects an @outlook.com address, buy Hotmail when it expects the older one. Everything below covers what the account actually contains, how the fresh, aged and country products differ, and what the login guarantee does and does not cover.

Live Outlook prices and stock, updated continuously
ProductPriceStock
Outlook Fresh$0.004Out
Outlook Trusted$0.0201

What you get on an @outlook.com account

Every Outlook account is delivered as an email address and a password at minimum, and most also carry an OAuth2 access token, a refresh token and a client ID. Those tokens matter more than they look. With them you can connect the account over IMAP or Microsoft Graph without ever touching the interactive web login, which is the step most likely to throw a challenge at a sign in from an unfamiliar location. The credentials land in your dashboard as soon as the order clears. Copy them one at a time, or download the whole order in a single file. Nothing sits in a queue and nothing waits on a human. What you do not get is a recovery phone or a recovery address, so the password is the only key to the account. Change it on anything you intend to keep past the first session.

Outlook or Hotmail: which address to buy

Pick based on which address the target service expects, because there is no technical advantage either way. Outlook and Hotmail run on the same Microsoft backend, so the accounts behave near identically: same inbox, same login, same tokens, same delivery. The practical difference is the domain printed on the address. Some sign up forms and internal blocklists treat @outlook.com and @hotmail.com differently even though Microsoft does not, and that is genuinely the only thing worth weighing. @outlook.com is the newer of the two and reads as the current default to most people, which is why it tends to get chosen for anything a human will eventually look at. @hotmail.com carries the older association. If you do not know which one a service accepts, buy a handful of each and find out in five minutes. At these prices the test costs less than the time spent guessing.

Fresh, trusted and Outlook Countries

Fresh Outlook accounts start at $0.004 and are newly created, with no history behind them. Trusted (aged) Outlook sits around $0.040, roughly ten times the price, and what the extra buys is age: an account that has existed for a while and holds up better under repeated use. There is also an Outlook Countries Fresh product at around $0.005 for region specific addresses, for when the service cares where the account was created. It is not on sale at the moment, so it will not appear in the table above; treat that table, not this paragraph, as the answer to what is orderable today. The choice comes down to how long the account needs to survive. For one verification code, fresh is the whole answer and paying ten times more buys you nothing. For anything you will come back to next week, or anything where a challenge would cost you real time, trusted usually works out cheaper once you count the fresh accounts you would otherwise burn through. Current prices and stock are in the table above.

How buying and payment work

Payment is cryptocurrency only: USDT on TRC20, Litecoin or Tron, handled through a secure Plisio checkout. No card, no personal details, no identity step. You top up a balance once and then spend it across as many orders as you like, so there is no separate checkout for every purchase. Delivery is instant and automated. When the payment clears, the credentials appear in your dashboard with no approval step and no support ticket in between. The whole loop from funding to holding a working @outlook.com address takes about a minute, most of which is the blockchain confirmation. The trade off is honest: if you do not already hold crypto, that first top up is more work than typing in a card number. Every order after it is two clicks. Fund a little more than you need and the friction disappears after the first time.

Reading the inbox without a mail client

For Outlook and Hotmail accounts you can read incoming mail directly on xMailHub. Open the account from your orders and the built in viewer pulls messages through the account's own credentials, so verification codes and confirmation links show up on the site without you configuring IMAP, installing a client or logging into Microsoft yourself. In practice the loop is: buy the account, paste the address into whatever you are registering with, switch back to the dashboard, read the code. That covers most of what people buy an Outlook account for in the first place. If you need more than reading, the OAuth2 tokens let you connect the account to your own client or script over IMAP or Microsoft Graph, which is the route for anything automated or anything where you want the mail inside your own system. Both paths use the same account, so starting with one does not rule out the other.

Buying Outlook accounts in bulk over the API

For bulk Outlook accounts, buy through the API rather than clicking through the store. Fund your balance once, then check live stock, read your balance and place orders from your own scripts. The response returns the credentials directly, so a script can buy an account, use it and move on with nobody watching it happen. Both the modern query format and the legacy path format are supported, which means scripts written against the older system keep running without a rewrite. Your API key lives on the API page and you can rotate it whenever you want. Stock numbers are real and update continuously, so the figure you see is what is actually available at that moment rather than a placeholder someone set once. If an Outlook product shows zero, the supply is genuinely out and there is no queue to join. Check back shortly, or buy the Hotmail equivalent instead.

The login guarantee and what to do first

If a delivered account fails to log in on first use, contact support with the order reference and it gets replaced. That is the guarantee, and it is deliberately narrow: it covers accounts that were broken on arrival, not accounts that stopped working later because of how they were used. Each account is sold once to a single buyer, so nobody else is holding the same credentials when you receive them. The first thing to do with any account you intend to keep is change the password. It takes ten seconds and it is what turns a set of delivered credentials into an account that is actually yours. Test the login on the day you buy rather than a month later, since the guarantee is written around first use, and an account that sat untouched for weeks is a much harder case to make.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to buy Outlook accounts?

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Fresh Outlook accounts start at $0.004 each, which is under half a cent. Trusted (aged) Outlook is around $0.040, about ten times more, and the difference is account age rather than anything extra in the box. Region specific addresses through the Outlook Countries Fresh product run around $0.005 when it is on sale, which it is not right now. There is no minimum order and no subscription: buy one account or four hundred, the unit price is the same. The live table on this page shows the current price and stock for each Outlook product, and it updates continuously rather than being a number someone typed in once. Payment is crypto only through a Plisio checkout, and you top up a balance once instead of paying separately per order.

What is the difference between Outlook and Hotmail accounts?

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The domain on the address, and very little else. Outlook and Hotmail run on the same Microsoft backend, so the accounts behave near identically: same inbox, same login, same OAuth2 tokens, same instant delivery. Choose based on which address the service you are registering with expects, because some forms and blocklists treat the two domains differently even though Microsoft does not. @outlook.com is the newer domain and reads as the current default, so it tends to be the pick when a person will eventually see the address. @hotmail.com is the older one. If you genuinely do not know which a service will accept, buy a few of each and test it. At a fraction of a cent per account, the experiment costs less than the time spent reasoning about it.

Can I read verification codes on the accounts I buy?

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Yes. Outlook and Hotmail accounts work with the built in inbox viewer, so you can open an account from your orders and read incoming mail on the site. Verification codes and confirmation links appear there without you setting up IMAP, installing a mail client or logging into Microsoft directly. Codes arrive as fast as they would to any other mailbox, because it is an ordinary @outlook.com mailbox. If you would rather have the mail inside your own system, most accounts ship with an OAuth2 access token, refresh token and client ID, which lets you connect over IMAP or Microsoft Graph from a script or client. Both routes use the same account, so you can start with the viewer and move to your own tooling later.

Are aged Outlook accounts worth the extra cost?

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It depends entirely on how long the account needs to survive. Trusted (aged) Outlook costs around $0.040 against $0.004 for fresh, so you are paying roughly ten times more for account history. If you need one verification code today and will never touch the address again, fresh does that job and the extra spend buys nothing at all. If you plan to log back in over the following weeks, or you are doing something that would be expensive to redo, aged accounts hold up better under repeated use and usually work out cheaper than replacing burned fresh ones. A reasonable split is fresh for throwaway work, trusted for the small number of accounts you actually care about. Test both against your own use case before committing to volume.

What happens if an Outlook account does not log in?

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Contact support with the order reference and it gets replaced. The login guarantee covers accounts that fail on first use, so test the credentials on the day the order lands rather than weeks afterwards. Each account is sold once to a single buyer, so a failure is never another buyer already sitting inside the account. What the guarantee does not cover is an account that worked at delivery and stopped later, because by that point what happened to it is outside anyone's view here. Two things cut the odds of trouble: change the password on any account you plan to keep, and use the OAuth2 tokens for IMAP or Microsoft Graph instead of the interactive web login, which is the step most likely to throw a challenge on a first sign in.

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