Create inboxes
Generate fresh disposable addresses for staging or test accounts.
Temp mail API
TempMy is evaluating API access for development and QA teams that need temporary inbox workflows for testing email flows.
What it is
A temp mail API would let teams create temporary inboxes and inspect received messages as part of QA and development workflows.
Generate fresh disposable addresses for staging or test accounts.
Check received messages, codes, links, and email content from test flows.
Keep the workflow focused on temporary inbound testing, not permanent mail hosting.
Why teams want it
API-style access can help teams repeat checks without manually creating a new mailbox every time.
Run the same verification or onboarding test flow repeatedly with fresh addresses.
Evaluate whether temporary inbox checks can support staging and QA routines.
Avoid polluting real team inboxes with test accounts, resend attempts, and one-off messages.
Possible use cases
Check signup, login, reset, and onboarding emails in staging.
Create temporary accounts without using a real personal address.
Evaluate automated or semi-automated message inspection workflows.
Use clean addresses for repeated test passes and edge-case checks.
Availability
This page is an early-access funnel, not a public API launch. Access, limits, pricing, and endpoint behavior may change while the workflow is evaluated.
Manual temporary inboxes are available from the TempMy web interface.
API-style workflows are being evaluated for development and QA teams.
Describe your testing workflow, expected volume, and whether the use case is staging or production.
Privacy and safety
Do not use temporary inboxes for banking, government, medical, legal, production customer data, paid accounts, crypto, or any account that needs durable recovery.
FAQ
Not from this page today. This page collects early-access interest for development and QA use cases.
No. Temporary inbox workflows are best kept to low-risk testing and QA.
Use the contact link and describe your testing workflow, expected volume, and whether the use case is staging or production.
No. Email delivery depends on the sending service and mail routing, and some services block disposable domains.