Throwaway Email Without the Sketchy Vibes: A Clean Temp Mail That Just Works
A disposable email generator with multiple domain options, auto-refresh, HTML rendering, and attachment support. No signup, no tracking, gone in an hour.
Every temp mail site I have used feels like it was designed in 2009 and monetized with aggressive pop-ups. The email works, technically, but the experience makes you feel like you need a shower afterward.
Z.Tools Temp Mail is different. It generates a disposable email address, shows you the inbox, and gets out of the way. No ads, no signup walls, no crypto mining scripts in the background.

临时邮箱
生成一次性邮箱地址,即时接收验证邮件
How it works
Open the tool. You get a random email address immediately. The domain is picked from a pool of available options, so your address might be on one of several domains rather than a single shared one that everyone knows is a throwaway.
The inbox auto-refreshes every 10 seconds. You do not need to sit there clicking a refresh button. If someone sends a message to your temp address, it shows up on its own.
Messages render in two modes. HTML mode shows the email as the sender intended, with formatting, images, and layout intact. Text mode strips everything down to plain text. Toggle between them depending on what you need. HTML is better for checking how a marketing email looks. Text is better when you just want the verification code.
Attachments work too. If a service sends a file with the email, you can download it directly. This is not always the case with disposable email services, many of which strip attachments entirely.
When this is actually useful
The obvious use case is signing up for services you do not trust with your real email. But the more interesting uses are less obvious.
Testing email templates. If you are building something that sends emails, a disposable address lets you check how the message renders without cluttering your real inbox. Send the test, check the HTML, done.
Grabbing a verification code. Some services require email verification to access a single page or download. You do not want to give them your real address for a one-time code. Temp mail handles this cleanly.
Avoiding newsletter traps. You want the free ebook or the discount code, not the lifetime of weekly emails. Use a temp address, grab what you need, and the address expires before the first newsletter lands.
Checking if a service actually sends the email. Some sites claim they will send a confirmation but never do. A temp address lets you test without committing.
The hour-long window
Every temp address has a time-to-live of roughly one hour. After that, the address and everything in it is gone. This is a feature, not a limitation.
The short window means your data does not linger on someone else's server indefinitely. It also means you need to act fast. If you are waiting for a verification email, do not walk away for lunch. The address might be gone when you get back.
Messages that arrive within the window are stored in localStorage on your device. Nothing is tied to an account. Close the tab, and the inbox is gone. Open the tool again, and you get a fresh address.
Multiple domains
The tool pulls from several email domains rather than using a single well-known throwaway domain. This matters because some services maintain blocklists of known temporary email providers. Rotating domains makes it harder for those checks to catch you.
You do not get to pick the domain yourself. The tool assigns one. But the variety means your address is less likely to be flagged as disposable by the service you are signing up for.
What it does not do
No custom addresses. You cannot pick myname@domain.com. The address is randomly generated.
No persistence. Close the tab, lose the inbox. There is no login, no history, no way to go back and find an email from yesterday.
No sending. This is receive-only. You cannot reply to messages or compose new ones from the temp address.
No guaranteed delivery. Some services actively block disposable email domains. If a site rejects your temp address, try another domain by refreshing, or accept that you might need a real email for that one.
The tool does one thing: gives you a temporary inbox that cleans up after itself. If you need more than that, services like SimpleLogin or AnonAddy offer alias management with persistence. But for the quick, disposable, no-commitment use case, a clean temp mail tool is hard to beat.
Temporary Email · Z.Tools
Generate disposable email addresses to receive emails instantly
