fiverr79.com

May 23, 2026

Fiverr79.com Looks Like a Very New and Thin Website

Fiverr79.com does not have much public information around it right now.

The strongest public trace I found is a domain-listing page that shows fiverr79.com inside a list of newly registered .com domains dated May 16, 2026.

That matters because a very new domain gives users less history to judge.

Older websites usually leave more signs online.

They may have reviews, cached pages, social profiles, business listings, old posts, or customer complaints.

Fiverr79.com does not appear to have that kind of public footprint yet.

When I tried opening the site directly, the fetch returned 403 Forbidden, so I could not inspect the homepage content from the browser tool.

That does not prove the site is unsafe.

Some websites block automated access.

But it does mean there is not enough visible information to treat the site as trustworthy.

The Name Creates a Big Trust Problem

The name fiverr79.com is very close to Fiverr.com, the well-known freelance marketplace.

Fiverr’s official site is fiverr.com, and its public pages describe it as a marketplace for hiring freelance services across categories like website development, design, writing, marketing, AI services, video editing, and software work.

The extra 79 in fiverr79.com is important.

It makes the domain look like it may be connected to Fiverr, but I found no public evidence that it is an official Fiverr domain.

That is the main issue.

A site that uses a famous brand name plus numbers can confuse people.

Some users may think they are logging into Fiverr.

Some may think it is a special Fiverr program.

Some may think it is a regional or hidden Fiverr page.

That confusion can be dangerous if the site asks for login details, payment details, identity documents, WhatsApp contact, crypto payment, or bank information.

I Would Not Treat It as Official Fiverr

Based on the public search results, fiverr79.com should not be treated as an official Fiverr website.

The official platform is on fiverr.com, and the official Fiverr pages show normal marketplace categories and service listings.

There is no clear public result from Fiverr saying fiverr79.com belongs to them.

There is no strong public business profile for fiverr79.com.

There is no clear brand page, help page, legal page, or trusted review profile that I could confirm.

That lack of proof matters more because the domain name borrows a famous platform name.

A normal small site can be unknown and still harmless.

But a new unknown site using a famous brand-style name deserves more caution.

The Fiverr Scam Context Makes This More Sensitive

There are already many scams around Fiverr users.

Fiverr’s own community has warned users that if someone asks for email or money outside the normal order process, it is a scam.

That is relevant because fake Fiverr-style pages often depend on urgency.

They may tell new sellers that they need to verify an account.

They may say a buyer cannot pay unless the seller enters an email.

They may send a fake payment page.

They may ask the seller to upgrade an account before receiving money.

A Reddit scam discussion describes a pattern where someone asks for an email, then the target receives fake Fiverr messages and is pushed into paying money for a fake “business account” or payment step.

So the problem is not just the domain itself.

The bigger problem is the kind of trick that often happens around freelance platforms.

A site named fiverr79.com could be harmless, parked, blocked, or unfinished.

But it also fits the style of a domain that could be used to look familiar enough to fool people.

New Domain Plus Famous Brand Name Is a Red Flag

A new domain is not automatically bad.

Every real company starts with a new domain at some point.

But a new domain that looks like another company’s brand is different.

Fiverr79.com appeared in a new .com domain list dated May 16, 2026.

That means there is little time for reputation to build.

There is also little time for search engines, security vendors, review sites, and users to flag problems.

This creates a short “blind window.”

During that window, a risky website may not yet have many warnings.

That is why people should not rely only on the absence of bad reviews.

No bad reviews does not mean safe.

It may only mean the site is too new.

The 403 Error Makes It Hard to Verify

The site returned a 403 Forbidden response when opened through the web tool.

A 403 response means access was denied.

It can happen for many reasons.

The site may block certain countries.

It may block automated tools.

It may require a user agent or session.

It may be behind security software.

It may also be configured poorly.

Because I could not see the homepage, I cannot confirm what fiverr79.com claims to offer.

I cannot confirm whether it has a login form.

I cannot confirm whether it copies Fiverr branding.

I cannot confirm whether it asks for money.

So the safest judgment is not “this is definitely a scam.”

The safer and more accurate judgment is: there is not enough public proof to trust it, and the name pattern is suspicious.

What a Safe Fiverr User Should Do

Use only the official Fiverr website when dealing with Fiverr work.

The official Fiverr marketplace is fiverr.com, and its public site clearly presents freelance categories and services.

Do not enter your Fiverr password on fiverr79.com.

Do not enter your email and password together.

Do not upload ID documents there.

Do not pay “verification” fees.

Do not send money to unlock orders.

Do not follow links sent by strangers in Fiverr chat.

Do not move payment outside Fiverr.

Do not trust a page only because it has Fiverr colors, Fiverr wording, or a Fiverr-style logo.

Scam pages can copy branding very easily.

The real safety test is the domain.

For Fiverr, the domain should be fiverr.com.

My Practical Verdict

Fiverr79.com looks risky to use because it has a weak public footprint, appears very new, uses a name close to Fiverr, and could not be inspected directly because access was blocked.

I found no evidence that it is an official Fiverr property.

I also found no strong evidence that it is a real independent business.

That places it in a high-caution category.

The best approach is simple.

Do not log in there.

Do not pay there.

Do not share private information there.

Use the official Fiverr site only.

If someone sent you fiverr79.com in a message and said it is needed for payment, order confirmation, seller verification, account upgrade, or withdrawal, treat that message as suspicious.

Report the message inside Fiverr if it came through Fiverr.

Block the sender if they push you to act fast.

A real buyer does not need you to use a strange Fiverr-like domain to receive an order.

A real platform does not need a new numbered clone domain to handle payments.