Temp mail
for Twitch.
Spin up a Twitch account and grab the verification code in a disposable inbox — no personal email exposed.
Generate a real, working inbox in one click — no signup. Catch your Twitch verification mail, then walk away.
A temp mail for Twitch gives you a real, working inbox to catch the sign-up verification code without handing Twitch your personal address. Whether you're creating an alt for a second channel, testing a new stream or bot setup, or just want to keep your main email off marketing lists, a throwaway email for Twitch gets you verified and into chat in about a minute. EvilMail generates the address instantly, shows the incoming code on screen, and never asks you to register.
Why use a disposable email for Twitch
Keep your real inbox private
Twitch, its partners, and any future data breach never see your personal address. The disposable email absorbs the verification code and any follow-up marketing on your behalf.
Perfect for alts and test accounts
Running a second channel, a mod/bot account, or a throwaway for a giveaway? A burner email for Twitch lets you register separate accounts without juggling multiple personal mailboxes.
No signup, instant code
The inbox exists the moment the page loads. Twitch's 6-digit verification email lands in seconds and appears right in the EvilMail widget — no app, no password, no account to create.
Zero long-term spam
Once you've verified, the address can simply expire. Streamer promos, re-engagement emails, and third-party offers pile up in a mailbox you'll never open again instead of your primary inbox.
How to use temp mail for Twitch
Open EvilMail and copy the disposable address shown at the top of the page.
Go to Twitch's sign-up page and enter a username, password, and date of birth, then paste the temp address into the email field.
Submit the form — Twitch sends a 6-digit verification code to that address.
Switch back to the EvilMail inbox, open the Twitch message, and copy the code (it usually arrives within seconds).
Enter the code on Twitch to confirm the email and finish creating your account.
Does Twitch block temp mail?
Twitch temp mail — frequently asked questions
Q1Can I make a Twitch account with a temporary email?−
Yes. Twitch only needs an inbox that can receive the verification code, and a temp address does exactly that. Paste the disposable email into the sign-up form, grab the 6-digit code from the EvilMail inbox, and enter it to activate the account.
Q2Does Twitch accept disposable email for sign-up?+
Most of the time, yes. Twitch delivers the verification email to disposable inboxes without issue, though it blocks a handful of the most common throwaway domains. If your address is rejected, generate a new EvilMail address — often on a different domain — and it will usually go through.
Q3Will the Twitch verification email actually arrive in the temp inbox?+
Normally within a few seconds. Twitch sends the code from a no-reply address, and it appears live in the EvilMail widget with no refresh needed. If it is slow, wait a moment or use the resend link on Twitch, and double-check that you copied the address exactly.
Q4What if Twitch rejects the temporary address?+
That means the specific domain is on Twitch's blocklist, not that temp mail is banned. Just spin up a fresh EvilMail address and retry. For an account you intend to keep or stream from, switch to an EvilMail custom-domain address, which isn't flagged as disposable and stays recoverable.
Q5Is it safe to use a temp email for Twitch, and can I keep it?+
It's safe for verifying and for throwaway or alt accounts — nothing sensitive is exposed. But public disposable inboxes are temporary and readable, so don't use one for an account tied to a payment method or one you want long-term. For those, use a private EvilMail custom-domain address so you can still receive password resets later.
Running many accounts? Give each one a permanent burner.
A free account unlocks persistent mailboxes, your own custom domain and an API — built for managing accounts at scale without ever exposing a real address.

