Your free temporary email inbox.
Receive verification codes, sign-up links, newsletters, and attachments in seconds. No account, no tracking, no lingering traces once you're done.
Create one to start receiving email in seconds.
Use this address to sign up for services without spam.
Four taps, zero paperwork.
Everything you need to use this inbox is already on the page. No tutorial, no settings to hunt for — but here's the gist.
Tap Create to spin up a fresh temporary email address. Keep several at once and switch between them from the dropdown on the inbox card.
Sign-up walls, newsletters, download gates, free trial forms, "verify your email" flows — paste and carry on.
New mail shows up on this page the moment it arrives. Open it, copy the verification code or click the link, and move on.
Inboxes expire by default after 30 minutes. Extend the timer with one tap, or delete the address immediately.
The usual inbox, minus the commitment.
Whatever regular email can carry, this inbox can too — it just forgets about it 30 minutes later.
What happens to your mail when it's done.
A temporary inbox is only useful if it's actually temporary. Here's exactly what that means in practice.
Auto-expiring inboxes
Every address has a 30-minute default TTL. When it expires, the address and every message inside it are permanently erased.
No profiles, no ad tracking
We don't build user profiles, sell data, or scan your mail for ads. The only data tied to an anonymous inbox is a session cookie and an IP — kept briefly to enforce rate limits and dropped with the inbox.
Senders see only the temp address
The service you hand this address to never sees your real email. The only thing leaving your machine is the temporary address.
Messages aren't scanned
Your mail is visible to you in this browser session. We don't scan it for ads, summarise it, or share it with third parties.
Things people actually ask when using the inbox.
You can extend as many times as you like while the inbox is still active. Extending resets the timer back to 30 minutes from now — it does not stack on top of the time remaining. So tapping Extend with 5 minutes left gives you 30, not 35.
Most mail arrives within seconds. If yours has not: confirm you pasted the full address including the domain, check that the sender is not filtering disposable-email domains (some services do), and tap Refresh on the inbox toolbar. Messages normally appear without a manual refresh, but a nudge never hurts.
Open the message, click the three-dot options menu in the top-right of the reader pane, and choose Download .eml to save the full message to your machine. Attachments can also be downloaded individually from the list at the bottom of the message.
Yes. Create as many as you need within the daily cap and switch between them from the address dropdown on the inbox card. Each has its own countdown and can be extended or deleted independently of the others.
No. Once an inbox is deleted or its countdown reaches zero, the address and every message it held are permanently removed and cannot be restored. The practical fix is to generate a fresh address and repeat the sign-up or verification flow with the sender.
Small habits that keep your first inbox spotless.
Rotate addresses per service
Use a fresh address for each sign-up. If a service later leaks or spams, the damage is scoped to that one address — not your entire identity.
Extend before you close the tab
If you might need the address again — re-verification, password reset flows, follow-up emails — extend the timer before you leave.
Not for important accounts
Never use a disposable address for banking, healthcare, or anything you'd care about recovering. When the inbox is gone, it's gone.
Turn on desktop notifications
Waiting on a slow sender? Enable browser notifications so you can switch tabs without missing the message when it finally arrives.
Done with this one? Start a fresh inbox in a click.
No account. No cookie banner. No upsell at the end — just another address, ready when you are.