10 minute mail is the most widely used kind of disposable email on the web. The 10 minute window hits the sweet spot: long enough that almost every signup verification arrives in time, short enough that nothing about the address sticks around afterwards. Open this page, copy the address, use it, walk away.
Whether you are signing up for Discord, Reddit, Telegram, a Substack newsletter, or a free trial of a SaaS product, 10 minute mail handles the verification and disappears. No password, no account, no tracking. Just a working inbox for ten minutes.
What is 10 Minute Mail?
10 minute mail is a disposable email address that works for 10 minutes and then permanently deletes itself along with every email it received. It is the most popular temporary email window because 10 minutes is enough time to receive an OTP, click a verification link, and finish a signup, without leaving a permanent inbox behind.
The name is literal. The clock starts when the address is generated, runs for exactly 600 seconds, then everything is wiped. Refresh the page during the window and you keep the same address with the remaining time. Refresh after expiry and you get a brand new address with a fresh 10 minute window.
10 minute mail is the default disposable email window for most use cases because most signup verifications arrive within 30 seconds, leaving plenty of buffer. The longer windows (15, 20, 30 minutes) exist for slower systems, but 10 minute mail covers the vast majority of needs.
Why People Choose 10 Minute Mail Over 5 or 15
10 minute mail is the most popular disposable email window for a reason. It balances safety (long enough for slow senders) with privacy (short enough that nothing lingers). Here is where it shines:
- Long enough for slow email systems (some platforms take 1-3 minutes to send the code)
- Short enough that you do not need to remember to delete anything
- Works with most signup flows, including Discord, Facebook, Reddit and Telegram
- Great for testing transactional emails during development
- Free trial verifications. Most SaaS trials verify in under a minute. 10 minute mail catches the verification and disappears before the trial-conversion email arrives.
- Developer testing of email flows. When you need a fresh inbox for every test run of your own email-sending code, 10 minute mail is faster than spinning up test accounts.
- Any signup that has burned you with spam before. If you have ever regretted using your real email somewhere, that is exactly what 10 minute mail prevents.
How to Use 10 Minute Mail
Your 10 minute mail address is already generated at the top of this page. Copy it, paste it into any signup or verification form, and wait. Incoming mail appears in the inbox above in real time. After 10 minutes the address stops accepting mail and all stored messages are deleted. You can reload the page any time for a fresh 10 minute window.
The inbox above auto-refreshes every few seconds, so incoming messages appear without any manual refresh on your part. You can leave this tab open in the background while you complete the signup in another tab.
- Copy your 10 minute mail address from the top of this page using the Copy button.
- Open the signup or verification form in another tab.
- Paste the temporary email address into the email field and submit.
- Switch back to this tab. The verification email appears in the inbox within seconds.
- Click the email to read it. Copy the OTP code or click the confirmation link inside.
- Finish on the original site. Your address self-destructs at the 10 minute mark, taking the message with it.
10 Minute Mail vs Other Windows
10 minute mail is the workhorse window. It is more forgiving than 5 minute mail (which can be too tight for slow senders) without keeping the address alive for half an hour like 30 minute mail. For most signups, 10 minute mail is exactly right. The longer options exist for specific edge cases: Facebook tends to be slow, banks send delayed verifications, and complex SaaS onboarding flows can send multiple emails over 15 to 20 minutes.
| Window | Best For | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| 5 min | One-time codes, instant signups, quick tests | Risky if email delivery is slow |
| 10 min | Most signups, Discord, Reddit, Telegram | Low — the standard window |
| 15 min | Multi-step verifications, slower senders | Low |
| 20 min | Facebook, marketplaces, two-email flows | Very low |
| 30 min | Slow banks, finance, full QA flows | None — longest window |
Services That Work With 10 Minute Mail
10 minute mail works with effectively any service that accepts a standard email address for verification. Specific platforms we have confirmed work reliably:
- Discord (account creation, server invite verification)
- Reddit (account signup, email verification)
- Telegram (web sign-in alternate email)
- Substack and most newsletter platforms
- Free trials of most SaaS products (Notion, Linear, Figma starter, etc.)
- Gaming forums and Discord server-list sites
- Coupon and deal sites with email-gated codes
- Most one-time download verifications
Privacy and Security
10 minute mail is designed so that no link between you and the temporary address can persist. We do not require account creation, so there is no profile to associate with the address. We do not retain logs of message contents after the 10 minute window closes. We do not share inbox data with advertisers or third parties.
The temporary address is generated cryptographically random with sufficient entropy to prevent guessing. Only the person holding the address in their browser session can receive its email. Once the 10 minute timer expires, the address and all messages are deleted from our database in real time, not on a delayed cleanup job. There is no archive.
When NOT to Use 10 Minute Mail
10 minute mail is perfect for short-lived signups, but it is the wrong tool for several common situations:
- Long-term accounts you intend to log back into. If you ever need a password reset, the address will be gone.
- Two-factor authentication backup email. Use a permanent address for security-critical accounts.
- Account recovery for important services (email, banking, social media you actively use).
- Anywhere you might receive a second email after the initial verification, more than 10 minutes later. Use 15, 20, or 30 minute mail instead.
10 Minute Mail FAQ
Is 10 minute mail safe?
Yes. The address is generated randomly with no link to your identity, the inbox is private during its 10 minute lifespan, and all data is deleted when the window closes. We do not scan, share, or sell inbox content.
Can I get the same 10 minute mail address back after it expires?
No. Once an address expires it is gone permanently, and a new random address is generated next time. This is intentional: it is what makes 10 minute mail disposable.
Will the 10 minute timer reset if I receive a new email?
No. The timer starts when the address is generated and runs continuously. Receiving email does not extend the window. If you need more time, switch to 15, 20, or 30 minute mail.
Does 10 minute mail work with Facebook?
Most of the time, yes. Facebook occasionally delays verification emails by several minutes, in which case 20 or 30 minute mail is safer. See our dedicated 10 Minute Mail for Facebook page for details.
How is 10 minute mail different from a fake email?
A fake email (a random string typed into a form) does not exist; verification emails sent to it bounce. 10 minute mail is a real, working address on a real domain. Verification emails actually arrive.
Can I customize the 10 minute mail username?
Yes. Click the username in the inbox at the top of this page to edit it. You can also pick from multiple domains via the dropdown next to the @ sign.
Does 10 minute mail receive attachments?
Yes, attachments are received and accessible during the 10 minute window. They are deleted when the window closes.
Can I use the same 10 minute mail address on multiple sites?
Yes, the address is yours for the full 10 minutes. Multiple sites can send to it during that time; all messages appear in the same inbox.
Other Minute Mail Options
Different signup flows need different windows. Pick the temporary email lifespan that matches what you are doing.