Instant inbox
Generate an address quickly and use it in a signup, login, or verification flow.
Temp mail for developers
Use a temporary inbox to manually test signup, login, and verification email flows without burning real team email addresses.
Why developers use it
TempMy is useful when you need a fast receive-only address for low-risk manual testing.
Generate an address quickly and use it in a signup, login, or verification flow.
Check incoming test emails without exposing a personal or shared team mailbox.
Use a fresh address for repeated test passes, staging accounts, and one-off checks.
Separate temporary QA messages from durable inboxes and production records.
QA and testing
Use temporary inboxes for practical manual checks before relying on a real customer email address.
Confirm that signup, passwordless login, reset, or onboarding emails are being sent.
Inspect subject lines, message copy, formatting, and links from the receiver side.
Open verification links or read one-time codes in a controlled temporary inbox.
Signup and email flows
Temp mail is useful for low-risk test flows where the email address should not become a permanent dependency.
Create disposable test accounts without reusing the same real mailbox repeatedly.
Check whether confirmation emails, login links, and verification codes arrive as expected.
Run through failed attempts, repeated sends, expired links, and alternate form paths.
How to use
Create a temporary address from TempMy before running the test flow.
Use the address in your staging form, signup page, or verification screen.
Open the inbox and check the received message, code, copy, and links.
Privacy and safety
Temporary inboxes are best for low-risk testing. Do not use them for production credentials, customer data, payment flows, banking, medical, government, legal, crypto, or any account that needs durable recovery.
FAQ
Yes, it works well for manually testing signup, login, and verification email flows.
Not yet on a public basis today. Teams evaluating API-style workflows can review the early-access page.
No. Use it only for non-sensitive, non-production testing.
Most do, but delivery depends on the sending service, so it is not guaranteed for every test case.