Every exchange, airdrop, NFT mint, and crypto Discord wants an email before it lets you in, and each one is another place your real address can leak. EmailOnDeck gives you a free temporary email in two steps, with no registration, so your personal inbox stays out of it. Grab one with the tool above, then read on for how to use it.
Crypto is one of the fastest ways to get your inbox spammed. Here's what happens to your address once you hand it over:
The tool at the top of this page is the same one on our homepage:
Step 1: Complete the captcha.
Step 2: Click Get Email.
Your address and inbox are ready instantly, with no account, no personal details, and nothing to install. Paste the address into any crypto site and the verification email arrives in your EmailOnDeck inbox.
Anywhere in crypto that wants an email but doesn't deserve your real one:
Many crypto sites block the big throwaway-email domains on sight. EmailOnDeck addresses tend to work where other disposables get rejected, which can make a big difference when a form turns away obvious temporary-email domains.
The inbox also outlasts many 10-minute services. Crypto confirmations can arrive after short timers would have expired. With EmailOnDeck, the inbox stays available long enough to complete your signup, and the address may be recoverable if you need to come back later.
Need more? EmailOnDeck Pro can send and reply from your address and keeps it active for over a year, and it accepts crypto payment.
Candidly, since money is involved: a burner is right for many low-risk crypto activities, but not all of them.
If your exchange account will hold funds, sign up with an address you can keep, such as Pro (long term holding). Withdrawal confirmations and 2FA recovery run through email, and a lost address can lock you out of your own money.
For airdrop farming, mints, faucets, communities, and throwaway signups, a temp address is ideal. And whatever you use, never share your seed phrase, by email or anywhere else. No real exchange, airdrop, or support agent will ask for it.
Yes, when you use it for the right purpose. A temp email keeps your real address out of signup forms, leaked lists, and phishing databases. The inboxes are real, so verification emails arrive normally. Just match the address to the job: use a temp one for throwaway signups, and use one you can reliably keep for accounts that hold funds. And never share a seed phrase by email, because no one legitimate will ask.
You may be able to use a temp email for some exchange-related signups, especially if you are browsing, testing a platform, or avoiding another marketing list. EmailOnDeck addresses tend to work where many disposable emails get blocked. But if the account will hold serious funds, use an email address you can reliably keep and recover. Active EmailOnDeck Pro users can keep an address active for more than a year, which matters because exchanges may send withdrawal confirmations, login alerts, and 2FA recovery emails there.
Better not to. Generate a separate address for each wallet or identity. One email shared across wallets lets a project, or anyone who buys its list, link them together. A fresh address per identity helps keep them unconnected. You can create as many as you need.
Yes. Receiving works fully on the free tier, so confirmation links, one-time codes, and airdrop announcements all land in your inbox on the site. Sending and replying are Pro features, but for verification you only need to receive.
Longer than the 10-minute timers many disposable email services use, and long enough to finish a signup and come back later in many cases. Some free addresses may be recoverable. To keep the same address for long periods, active EmailOnDeck Pro users can keep an address for more than a year.