Welcome to TempMailer
TempMailer is a simple temporary email service for moments when a website asks for an address, but you do not want to hand over your main inbox.
Use it to receive verification codes, confirm a download, try a new app, or separate low-trust sign-ups from the email address you use for work, banking, family, and long-term accounts.
What TempMailer is built for
Most people have one or two real email addresses that follow them everywhere. Those addresses become part of your online identity: they appear in sign-up forms, marketing databases, leaked contact lists, support tickets, and ad profiles.
TempMailer gives you a short-lived inbox for the parts of the web that do not need a permanent relationship with you.
- Quick sign-ups: receive a code or confirmation link without creating another permanent inbox.
- Cleaner inboxes: keep newsletters, coupons, and one-time downloads away from your primary email.
- Privacy separation: reduce how often your real address is shared across unrelated services.
- Testing workflows: check email forms, onboarding flows, and message rendering without using personal accounts.
How it works
Open TempMailer, generate an address, and use it wherever you need to receive a message. When mail arrives, it appears in the temporary inbox on the page.
There is no account setup for basic use. The goal is to keep the tool lightweight: generate an address, receive what you need, and leave when the task is done.
Privacy boundaries
A temporary inbox is useful, but it is not a magic shield. You should not use temporary email for accounts that matter long term, password resets, financial services, medical portals, legal documents, or anything you may need to recover later.
TempMailer is best treated as a privacy buffer for low-risk, short-lived interactions. It helps reduce exposure of your real email address, but it does not make unsafe websites safe and it does not replace a secure primary mailbox.
What comes next
We are building TempMailer as a practical privacy utility: fast enough for everyday verification, clear about its limits, and useful before your real inbox becomes the default destination for every form on the internet.
More guides and product notes will follow as the service improves.