Temp mail
for Amazon.
Spin up a private inbox to verify a new Amazon account — without wiring your everyday email to your order history and card.
Generate a real, working inbox in one click — no signup. Catch your Amazon verification mail, then walk away.
Reaching for temp mail for Amazon usually comes down to one thing: you want to create or verify an account without tying it to the inbox connected to your name, purchases, and payment cards. A temporary email for Amazon lets you receive the sign-up confirmation, click through, and keep your primary address out of Amazon's marketing and recommendation machine. The honest catch is that Amazon is a payment platform, so it verifies new accounts more strictly than a random newsletter would — and it often asks for a phone number too. Below we cover exactly when a disposable email for Amazon works, when it gets refused, and how a custom-domain address from EvilMail keeps you private without locking you out.
Why use a disposable email for Amazon
Keep your real inbox out of it
Amazon links your email to orders, browsing, and targeted offers. A throwaway email for Amazon keeps that profile off your primary address and away from data brokers.
Cut the promotional flood
Deals, delivery updates, and recommendation emails add up fast. Point them at a temp inbox so your main mailbox stays clean.
Isolate alts and regional accounts
Separate marketplace, trial, or region-specific accounts each get their own address, so a breach or spam wave on one never touches the others.
Recoverable when it matters
For an account holding payment details, an EvilMail custom-domain address stays private but still lets you receive password resets later — unlike a burner that vanishes in minutes.
How to use temp mail for Amazon
Open the EvilMail widget above and copy the generated inbox address (or create one on your own EvilMail domain for a keeper account).
Go to Amazon's sign-up page and paste the address into the email field along with your name and password.
Submit the form and watch the temp inbox for Amazon's verification message — it usually lands within a minute.
Open the email and enter the one-time code (or click the confirmation link) to activate the account.
If Amazon also asks for a phone number, complete that step separately — the temp email covers the address, not SMS verification.
Does Amazon block temp mail?
Amazon temp mail — frequently asked questions
Q1Can I make an Amazon account with a temporary email?−
Often yes. Amazon sends its verification code to the address, and a temp inbox receives it like any other mailbox. Just know that Amazon may still ask for a phone number, and it rejects some known disposable domains — so a custom-domain address is the more reliable route.
Q2Does Amazon accept disposable email for verification?+
Sometimes. Amazon accepts many addresses but actively blocks a number of public disposable-email domains, and it verifies new accounts strictly because payment data is involved. If your address is refused, switch to a private address on your own EvilMail domain, which isn't on shared blocklists.
Q3Will the Amazon verification email actually arrive in a temp inbox?+
Usually within a minute, as long as the domain isn't blocked. Keep the inbox open and refresh if it's slow. If nothing shows up after a few minutes, the domain was likely filtered — request the code again using a different EvilMail address.
Q4What if Amazon rejects the throwaway email or forces phone verification?+
Rejection means the domain is on Amazon's blocklist; create a fresh address on a custom EvilMail domain instead, since those aren't flagged as disposable. Phone verification is separate from email — Amazon requires a real number for that step, and no temp-mail service can bypass it.
Q5Is it safe to use temp mail for Amazon, and can I keep the address?+
It's safe for privacy — you're simply not exposing your primary inbox. A minutes-only burner is fine for a one-off signup, but for an account tied to a card or orders use an EvilMail custom-domain inbox so you can still receive password resets and security alerts months 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.

