Using temporary email for free trials
Some free trials ask for an email before showing a demo, sending a welcome link or unlocking a short preview. A temporary address can separate those one-off messages from your personal inbox. It works best when the trial has no payment method, no valuable files and no account you need to recover later.
Read the trial terms before signing up. If a card, invoice or renewal notice is involved, use a permanent inbox. Keep the temporary mailbox active long enough to receive the first message and any confirmation link. Do not use disposable email to bypass a service's limits or create repeated trial accounts.
How to use a temporary inbox responsibly
Create an address only for a short, low-risk task. Copy it into the form, keep the TempGo tab open and check the inbox while the address is active. If the sender promises a message, allow a few minutes before requesting another code. Repeated requests can trigger limits on the sender side.
A quick checklist
- Keep the inbox open until the message arrives.
- Use a permanent email for recovery, billing and important accounts.
- Do not share private documents or sensitive personal information.
- Create a new address when a service rejects an expired mailbox.
What temporary email cannot guarantee
TempGo displays messages that reach the active mailbox. The sending website still decides whether to send an email, delay a repeated code or reject a disposable domain. A temporary address is a privacy tool, not a replacement for a permanent identity. If access matters tomorrow, use an inbox you control long term.
Privacy and practical limits
Temporary email reduces unnecessary marketing and keeps one-off messages away from your personal inbox. It should not be used for banking, government services, medical records, work accounts or any service where losing recovery access would cause a problem. Use it deliberately and keep the task narrow.