A temporary email address — also called disposable or throwaway email — is a real inbox that you use once and abandon. It receives messages instantly, needs no registration, and disappears on its own. When a site demands an email just to let you in, a temp inbox lets you get the verification link without handing over your personal address.

How temporary email works

A disposable-mail service runs a catch-all inbox on its own domain, which means it accepts mail sent to any address at that domain. You pick or are given a random name, hand it to a website, and the confirmation email lands in a public inbox you can read on the spot. There is no password and no account — the address simply exists, and messages are deleted automatically after a short window (24 hours on urlik temp mail).

When a disposable inbox is the right tool

  • One-time sign-ups for a tool you only want to try once.
  • Free downloads or whitepapers gated behind an email wall.
  • Forums and communities you may never return to.
  • Reducing spam — keep your real inbox clean of marketing lists.
  • Testing your own product's sign-up and verification emails — especially handy for developers.

When you should NOT use temp mail

A disposable address is the wrong choice for anything you might need later. Do not use it for banking, government services, online shopping with orders to track, or any account whose password you will one day need to reset. Because the inbox is public and short-lived, you could lose access — or someone else could read a message — so treat it as strictly throwaway.

Privacy: know the trade-off

Disposable inboxes are convenient precisely because they are open, and that openness is also their limit. Addresses are guessable and inboxes are not private, so never send or receive sensitive personal data, financial details or long-term credentials through one. Use it for low-stakes verification and nothing more. For a deeper look at protecting links you share, see how a URL shortener adds password protection and expiry.

How to use urlik temp mail

Open the temp-mail page and you instantly get a random @urlik.xyz address — or type your own name. Copy it into any sign-up form. The inbox on the page refreshes by itself, so the verification message appears within seconds; click it to read the code or link. When you are done, generate a new address or just walk away — messages self-destruct after 24 hours.

For developers: the API

If you build software, disposable mail is invaluable for automated testing of registration and one-time-password flows. urlik exposes a simple API to request an address, poll its inbox and read parsed messages (both text and HTML), so your test suite can complete a real sign-up end to end without a mailbox of your own.