Is esquire.com legit or a scam?
The official digital home of Esquire magazine, operated by Hearst Communications with a clean security record and 30-year domain history.
Analysis Summary
No threats detected
All checks passed. This site appears legitimate — but always stay alert for phishing even on trusted domains.
Website Preview

Automated page render — captured in a safe sandbox. What an ordinary visitor would see when loading the site. See full visual analysis →
Visual Screenshot Analysis
We capture a fresh screenshot of the live page and ask a vision model to look for scam visual patterns — fake trust badges, countdown timers, overlay pop-ups, and visual clones of legitimate brands.
No scam visual patterns detected
The screenshot shows a fully-rendered, professional editorial website for Esquire magazine with no visual indicators of scam or deceptive patterns.
What our vision model saw
6 signalsProfessional layout consistent with a major media publication
High-quality original photography and editorial content
Standard navigation menu with categories like Entertainment and Lifestyle
Functional search bar and subscription call-to-action
Byline attribution to specific authors for all articles
No visible urgency tactics, fake badges, or intrusive pop-ups
MT Intelligence
This domain has been registered since 1994 and is owned by Hearst Communications, a major global media conglomerate. Our antivirus network shows zero detections across more than 90 security engines. The site maintains a massive global traffic rank and uses high-grade SSL encryption. Visual analysis confirms a professional editorial layout with original journalism and clear author attributions. There are no technical or behavioral indicators of fraud or phishing on the domain itself.
Web Research Findings
Our live research agent queries scam-report databases, consumer-review sites, news coverage, and general web search for esquire.com, then cross-checks business-registration records and look-alike domain patterns. Everything below is pulled from what it actually found.
- esquire.com is the official website of Esquire, an American men's magazine first published in 1933 and currently owned by Hearst Communications.
- Domain registered on December 21, 1994 to Hearst Communications, Inc. (New York, USA); expires December 20, 2026; registrar CSC Corporate Domains, Inc.
- Hearst Communications is a major multinational media company with operations in 40 countries, owning numerous magazines including Esquire.
- One 2022 Reddit post discusses a suspicious Esquire subscription expiration email that appeared to be phishing.
- Official customer service contacts include membersupport@esquire.com (888-797-9927) for digital/premium and esqcustserv@cdsfulfillment.com (800-888-5400) for print subscriptions.
- No widespread scam reports, negative Trustpilot/BBB listings, or evidence of malicious activity associated with esquire.com itself.
- Wikipedia and multiple sources (including the site) confirm esquire.com as the legitimate online destination for Esquire's journalism on culture, style, politics, and more.
- Redditopen
"I received a rather unusual email claiming my Esquire Magazine subscription was expiring. At first this looked like the typical phishing email"
Published by Hearst Communications, Inc. (NY-based media conglomerate); domain registered to Hearst Communications, Inc.
Antivirus Engines
Security Scans
Checked against the major public blocklists used by browsers and security tools — no hits.
Contact Verification
We fetched the page and looked for real-world contact details. Legitimate businesses almost always publish an email on their own domain, a phone number, and a postal address. Scam shops usually don't.
- No contact email found anywhere on the page.
- No phone number listed on the page.
- Postal address visible on the page.
- Links to 12 social profiles.
Domain & Encryption
Redirect Chain
- 1301http://esquire.com/
- 2200https://www.esquire.com/cross-domain
Server Reputation
Still, stay alert
No major threat indicators — but a clean scan does not guarantee every page is safe, and phishing emails routinely spoof real domains.
- Double-check the exact URL in your address bar
Confirm you are actually on esquire.com and not a lookalike like e-squire.com.com or an IDN homoglyph.
- Use a password manager
Password managers only auto-fill on the exact domain they were saved for — they refuse to fill lookalike domains, which is the single best phishing defence.
- OpenDiscuss this site on the forum
If you have first-hand experience with this site — good or bad — share it with the MalwareTips community.
Reputation Sources
How this domain rates across independent threat-intelligence and blocklist providers.
Referenced Domains
Outbound domains this page links to or loads resources from. Each links to its own security scan.
Safety FAQ
Common questions about this site, answered directly from the scan data above — so the answers always reflect the latest verdict on this page.
- Our automated security review found no threat indicators on esquire.com. The site appears legitimate based on the signals we checked, but always stay alert for phishing emails that spoof real domains.
- esquire.com passed our automated security checks with a trust score of 97/100. No antivirus engines or major blacklists flagged the site at the time of the last scan.
- Yes. esquire.com presents a valid TLSv1.3 certificate issued by GlobalSign nv-sa · GlobalSign Atlas R3 DV TLS CA 2026 Q2, expiring in 190 days. Note that SSL only encrypts the connection — it does not guarantee that the site itself is trustworthy.
- esquire.com is 31.5 years old, registered on 12/21/1994 through CSC Corporate Domains, Inc.. Scam domains are often freshly registered — a site under 6 months old warrants extra caution.
- No. All 92 antivirus engines in our malware network report esquire.com as clean.
- No. esquire.com is not currently listed on the major browser blocklist feeds that modern browsers use.
- esquire.com resolves to an IP operated by Fastly, Inc. in US (usage type: Content Delivery Network). Hosting location alone doesn't make a site good or bad, but unusual geography for a brand's claimed country is one of many signals we weigh.
- Yes. esquire.com sits in the global top-100k on Cloudflare Radar, which means it has substantial real-world traffic. That does not automatically make it safe, but established brands almost always rank here and throwaway scam domains almost never do.
User reviews & comments(0)
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