Disposable Email vs Email Aliases — Which Actually Protects Your Privacy?
"Just use a plus alias" is the most common advice when someone asks about inbox protection. Create yourname+shopping@gmail.com and you can filter out the spam later, right?
Not quite. Email aliases and disposable email addresses solve different problems, and understanding the difference saves you from a false sense of security.
What's an Email Alias?
An alias is a variation of your real email that still delivers to your inbox. There are three types:
Plus addressing (you+tag@gmail.com) — Built into Gmail, Outlook, and most providers. Free, no setup. But trivially strippable.
Custom domain aliases (shop@yourdomain.com) — Requires owning a domain. More effort, more control.
Relay services (SimpleLogin, AnonAddy, Firefox Relay) — Third-party forwarding. Monthly cost, another account to manage.
What's a Disposable Email?
A temporary email address that exists for minutes to weeks, then disappears permanently. No connection to your real identity. No forwarding. Nothing to strip or trace back.
The Honest Comparison
Privacy
Aliases lose here. A plus alias still contains your real email address. Any competent marketer (or data broker, or hacker) strips the +tag portion. Your real identity is trivially recoverable.
Disposable emails win. There's no connection to your real address. The address sleek.steel.amet@17mur6.tempy.email reveals nothing about who you are.
Convenience
Aliases win for long-term use. Set it once, filter automatically, keep receiving mail indefinitely.
Disposable emails win for one-time use. No setup, no filters to manage, no forwarding rules. Generate, use, forget.
Data Breach Protection
Aliases provide zero protection. If a service gets breached, your alias leads directly to your real inbox. Attackers just strip the tag.
Disposable emails provide full protection. If a breached database contains random@tempy.email, there's nothing to exploit. The address no longer exists.
Cost
| Solution | Cost |
|---|---|
| Plus aliases | Free |
| SimpleLogin | $4/mo |
| AnonAddy | $1-3/mo |
| Firefox Relay | $1/mo |
| tempy.email | Free |
Reply Capability
This used to be the killer argument against disposable emails. "But you can't reply!"
tempy.email supports replies. You can respond to emails directly from the temporary inbox. This makes it viable for conversations that need a response, not just one-way confirmations.
When to Use Each
Use disposable email when:
- Signing up for a service you'll use once
- Online shopping (guest checkout)
- Downloading a whitepaper or free resource
- Testing something as a developer
- Any situation where you don't want a lasting connection
Use aliases when:
- You need to receive emails indefinitely
- You want to identify which service leaked your address
- You're subscribing to something you actually want
- You need a consistent identity across sessions
Use your real email when:
- Banking, insurance, medical
- Work communications
- Close personal contacts
- Government services
The Best Strategy: Use Both
The privacy-conscious approach isn't either/or. It's a layered system:
- Real email for trusted, long-term relationships
- Aliases for services you use regularly but don't fully trust
- Disposable email for everything else
The vast majority of "enter your email" prompts on the internet fall into category 3. That free trial, that one-time purchase, that forum registration you'll never return to — all disposable email territory.
Get Started
Generate a free disposable address at tempy.email. No account needed, no tracking, expires automatically. Use it next time a website demands your email for something you don't care about.