Is stuff.com legit or a scam?
A highly established search directory and information portal with a 28-year domain history and zero security flags.
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.
Visual red flags detected in the screenshot
The website appears to be a legitimate information portal or search directory with a professional design and no obvious visual scam indicators.
What our vision model saw
4 signalsProfessional logo and clean navigation menu for Health, Home & Garden, Automotive, and Finance.
Functional search bar prominently displayed with high-quality custom illustrations.
Consistent branding and layout with no signs of urgency or fake trust badges.
No intrusive pop-ups or suspicious modals observed.
MT Intelligence
The domain was registered in 1998, making it one of the oldest active sites on the web. Our antivirus network shows a perfect clean record with zero detections across 92 different security engines. The site functions as a legitimate search aggregator and content hub, covering topics like health, finance, and automotive news. Visual analysis confirms a professional layout without any deceptive pop-ups or high-pressure tactics. While it lacks a direct public business registration in the immediate WHOIS data, its multi-decade uptime and clean reputation indicate a stable, non-malicious operation.
Web Research Findings
Our live research agent queries scam-report databases, consumer-review sites, news coverage, and general web search for stuff.com, then cross-checks business-registration records and look-alike domain patterns. Everything below is pulled from what it actually found.
- Domain stuff.com registered on 1998-01-26 (over 28 years old as of 2026), expires 2027-01-25; registrar eNom, LLC; privacy-protected WHOIS via Whois Privacy Protection Service, Inc., Kirkland, WA.
- ScamAdviser analysis (as of recent check): 'Very Likely Safe' / 'very likely not a scam but legit and reliable'; notes valid SSL, old domain age, vehicle-related content, but low Tranco rank.
- Site content appears to focus on vehicle-related products/technology (e.g., dash cams, wireless charging mounts) per ScamAdviser and page description.
- No scam reports, fraud complaints, or negative customer reviews specifically tied to stuff.com found across web searches, Reddit, Trustpilot, or other review sites.
- Separate unrelated sites like scamstuff.com (magic tricks/novelty gear) and stuff.co.nz (NZ news) appear in results but are distinct domains.
- No mentions of business registration, ownership details, or company filings; Glassdoor/Indeed list minimal employee reviews for 'Stuff.com' or 'Stuff Inc' (virtual assistant service, unrelated).
- No evidence of typosquatting, brand impersonation (e.g., of PayPal, Binance, OpenAI, etc.), or clone indicators in searches.
Antivirus Engines
Security Scans
Checked against the major public blocklists used by browsers and security tools — no hits.
Technical checksdomain · encryption · redirects · server reputation
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.
- No postal address visible on the page.
Domain & Encryption
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 stuff.com and not a lookalike like s-tuff.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 stuff.com. The site appears legitimate based on the signals we checked, but always stay alert for phishing emails that spoof real domains.
- stuff.com passed our automated security checks with a trust score of 88/100. No antivirus engines or major blacklists flagged the site at the time of the last scan.
- Yes. stuff.com presents a valid TLSv1.3 certificate issued by Amazon · Amazon RSA 2048 M01, expiring in 168 days. Note that SSL only encrypts the connection — it does not guarantee that the site itself is trustworthy.
- stuff.com is 28.5 years old, registered on 1/26/1998 through eNom, LLC. 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 stuff.com as clean.
- No. stuff.com is not currently listed on the major browser blocklist feeds that modern browsers use.
- stuff.com resolves to an IP operated by Amazon.com, 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.
- This is a permanent record of the scan run on July 5, 2026. The verdict and evidence above reflect that scan and do not change on their own. If circumstances around stuff.com have changed, MalwareTips staff can run a fresh scan, which re-runs every check from scratch and publishes an updated report.
User reviews & comments(0)
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