Reusable Email Addresses & Email Aliases: The Privacy-First Guide
Every online account you create starts with the same question: what's your email address? Most people type their one real address without thinking. Over years of signups, that single address accumulates hundreds of connections — shopping sites, social networks, SaaS tools, newsletters, government portals, medical systems. Each one stores your email and creates another path back to you.
When a breach hits any of those services, your email address becomes the thread that connects your entire digital footprint. Attackers use it to cross-reference leaked databases, launch targeted phishing campaigns, and build profiles that include your name, location, purchasing habits, and more.
The solution is simple: stop giving out your real email address. Use email aliases instead.
What Is an Email Alias?
An email alias is an alternative email address that routes mail to your real inbox — or functions as its own standalone inbox. The key idea is that it gives you a layer of indirection between the services you interact with and your actual identity.
There are two main types:
Forwarding aliases receive mail at one address and forward it to another. You sign up for a service with alias@example.com, and incoming messages arrive in your real inbox at you@gmail.com. The service never sees your real address.
Standalone aliases are independent inboxes that don't forward anywhere. They receive and store email on their own. You check them separately from your main inbox, either through a web interface or an email client.
Both types serve the same purpose: they shield your real email address from exposure. The difference is in how you access the mail.
Reusable Email Addresses vs Throwaway Addresses
Not all alternative email addresses work the same way. The distinction between reusable and disposable addresses matters more than most people realize.
A disposable email address is temporary by design. You generate it, use it once, and let it expire. Services like Guerrilla Mail and Mailinator create addresses that last minutes or hours. They're useful for one-time verifications but useless for anything you need to come back to.
A reusable email address persists. You create it, use it with a service, and continue receiving mail at that address over time. You can check it days, weeks, or months later. It functions like a real email address because it is one — it just isn't your primary address.
The distinction matters because most online accounts aren't truly one-time. You might need to receive password reset emails, order confirmations, shipping updates, or account notifications. A disposable address that expires before the package arrives defeats the purpose.
For a deeper comparison of when each approach makes sense, see Reusable vs Disposable Email: Which Should You Use?.
Types of Email Aliases
Email aliases come in several forms, each with different trade-offs in terms of privacy, convenience, and control.
Forwarding Aliases
A forwarding alias accepts incoming mail and redirects it to your real inbox. You never check the alias directly — everything shows up in your existing mailbox.
Pros:
- Centralized inbox — all mail in one place
- No additional apps or logins needed
- Easy to manage for most people
Cons:
- Your real email provider sees all forwarded mail
- If the forwarding service is compromised, your real address could be exposed
- Replying requires the forwarding service to mask your address on the outbound side
Standalone Private Inboxes
A standalone inbox exists independently. It receives mail on its own, and you check it through a separate interface or email client.
Pros:
- Complete separation from your real inbox
- No forwarding chain to compromise
- Can function as a full email account
Cons:
- Requires checking a separate inbox
- More effort to manage multiple inboxes
Catch-All Domain Aliases
With a catch-all domain, any email sent to any address at your domain is received. You don't need to create aliases ahead of time — netflix@yourdomain.com, github@yourdomain.com, and random-string@yourdomain.com all work automatically.
Pros:
- Unlimited aliases with zero setup
- Instant creation — just give out a new address on the spot
- If one alias gets spam, you know exactly which service leaked it
Cons:
- Requires owning a domain
- Attackers can guess addresses by trying common prefixes
- Needs DNS configuration (though services like Reusable.Email handle this automatically)
Catch-all domains are the most powerful form of email aliasing. For details on setting one up, see Running Email on Your Own Domain.
Reusable.Email's Approach: Three Tiers
Reusable.Email structures its service around three inbox tiers, each corresponding to a different level of privacy and capability. This maps directly to the alias types above.
Public Inboxes — Throwaway Aliases
Type any address at reusable.email, and it exists instantly. No signup, no password, no configuration. These are true disposable email addresses — anyone who knows the address can read it, and emails are retained for 90 days.
Use public inboxes when you need a quick throwaway address for a signup you'll never revisit. They're equivalent to services like Mailinator or Yopmail, but with longer retention and no ads.
Private Inboxes — Persistent Protected Aliases
Add a password to any address, and it becomes a private inbox. Only you (or anyone you share the password with) can read it. Emails are retained for 180 days, and you get search and basic organization features.
Private inboxes are the middle ground — persistent enough to use as ongoing aliases, but lightweight enough that you're not managing a full email account. They're ideal for accounts where you need to receive emails over time but don't need to send replies.
Managed Inboxes — Full Reusable Email Accounts
For $3 one-time, a managed inbox is a complete email account. You get IMAP access at imap.reusable.email:993, SMTP at smtp.reusable.email:587, and POP3 support. Connect it to Apple Mail, Thunderbird, Outlook, or any standard email client.
Managed inboxes support sending, replying, custom folders, spam filtering, and email forwarding. Emails are retained for 365 days. These are reusable email addresses in the fullest sense — permanent accounts you use as long as you need them.
Custom Domain Aliases: The Most Powerful Option
For users who want maximum control, Reusable.Email supports custom domains at $10 per year. Adding your domain enables catch-all receiving, which means unlimited aliases at anything@yourdomain.com with no setup per alias.
The system auto-configures MX, SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records. Once DNS propagates, every address at your domain works immediately.
This is the most powerful form of email aliasing because:
- Unlimited aliases — create a new one for every service by just making up an address on the spot
- Leak detection — if
amazon@yourdomain.comstarts getting spam, Amazon leaked your data - Professional appearance — email from your own domain looks more credible than a random alias service
- Portability — your domain is yours; if you leave Reusable.Email, update the DNS and take your addresses elsewhere
For a complete guide on custom domain email, see Custom Domain Email Guide.
How to Use Email Aliases in Practice
Having aliases is only useful if you use them systematically. Here's a practical approach.
One Alias Per Service
The simplest strategy: give every service a unique email address. If you use a catch-all domain, this is effortless — just invent an address on the spot. If you use Reusable.Email's public or private inboxes, create one per service.
Naming conventions that work:
| Convention | Example | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Service name | netflix@yourdomain.com |
Easy to remember |
| Service + year | netflix-2026@yourdomain.com |
Track when you signed up |
| Category + service | shopping-amazon@yourdomain.com |
Organize by type |
| Random string | x7k9m@reusable.email |
Maximum privacy |
Tracking Data Leaks
When you use one alias per service, spam becomes a diagnostic tool. If linkedin@yourdomain.com starts receiving phishing emails from addresses you never gave it to, LinkedIn leaked your data — either through a breach or by selling it.
You can then:
- Stop using that alias
- Report the leak
- Create a new alias and update only that one service
- Leave all other services unaffected
Organizing by Sensitivity
Not every account deserves the same level of protection. A practical hierarchy:
- Real email: banks, government, healthcare, close personal contacts
- Managed inbox: freelance clients, professional services, anything requiring replies
- Private inbox: ongoing accounts where you need persistence but not send capability
- Public inbox: throwaway signups, free trials, one-time downloads
Email Alias Services Comparison
Several services offer email aliasing, each with different approaches and trade-offs.
| Feature | Reusable.Email | SimpleLogin | AnonAddy (addy.io) | Apple Hide My Email |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free tier | Public + private inboxes, no signup | 10 aliases | 20 standard aliases | Included with iCloud+ |
| Alias type | Standalone inboxes | Forwarding | Forwarding | Forwarding |
| Reply support | Managed tier ($3 one-time) | Yes (via forwarding) | Yes (via forwarding) | Limited |
| Custom domains | $10/year with catch-all | Paid plans | Paid plans | No |
| Send from alias | Managed tier (SMTP) | Via forwarding | Via forwarding | No |
| Email client access | IMAP/SMTP/POP3 | No | No | No |
| Password-protected inboxes | Yes (private tier) | No | No | No |
| Pricing | Free / $3 one-time / $10/yr domain | Free / $4/mo | Free / $1/mo | $0.99/mo (iCloud+) |
SimpleLogin and AnonAddy are forwarding-only services. They create aliases that redirect to your real inbox. This is convenient but means your real email provider handles all the mail, and the forwarding service is a dependency in the chain.
Apple Hide My Email generates random addresses that forward to your iCloud inbox. It's tightly integrated with Apple devices but limited — you can't use a custom domain, send from aliases, or access them via IMAP.
Reusable.Email takes a different approach by providing standalone inboxes rather than forwarding. Your aliases are real inboxes, not redirects. This means no forwarding chain to compromise, and the managed tier gives you full email client access — something no other alias service offers.
The right choice depends on your priorities. If you want everything in one inbox and don't mind forwarding, SimpleLogin or AnonAddy work well. If you want standalone inboxes with optional email client access and no recurring fees, Reusable.Email is the more flexible option.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an email alias?
An email alias is an alternative address that receives email on your behalf. It can either forward messages to your real inbox or function as an independent inbox. The purpose is to keep your real email address private while still being able to sign up for services and receive mail.
Is an email alias the same as a disposable email?
Not exactly. A disposable email is a temporary address you use once and discard. An email alias can be permanent — you use it as an ongoing alternative address for a specific service or purpose. Disposable emails are a subset of aliases, but aliases can also be long-lasting and reusable.
Can I reply from an email alias?
It depends on the type of alias. Forwarding aliases (like SimpleLogin or AnonAddy) let you reply through the forwarding service, which masks your real address on the outbound side. Standalone inboxes on Reusable.Email let you reply directly from managed inboxes using SMTP — no forwarding involved.
Are email aliases safe?
Yes. Email aliases add a layer of protection by keeping your real address hidden. If an alias is compromised in a breach, you discard it and create a new one. Your real inbox remains unaffected. The security of an alias depends on the service providing it — look for services that don't log your real identity or sell data.
What's the best email alias service?
There's no single best option — it depends on what you need. For forwarding-only aliases with a simple interface, SimpleLogin and AnonAddy are strong choices. For standalone private inboxes with no signup required, Reusable.Email's free tier is the easiest starting point. For full email accounts with IMAP/SMTP access at a one-time cost, Reusable.Email's managed tier is hard to beat. For a broader look at online privacy strategies, see our guide to protecting your identity online.
Conclusion
Email aliases are one of the simplest and most effective tools for online privacy. They break the link between your real identity and the services you use, contain the damage from data breaches, and give you control over who can reach you.
The best approach combines different alias types for different situations. Use throwaway addresses for one-time signups, persistent private inboxes for ongoing accounts, and full email aliases for anything requiring replies or long-term use. Add a custom domain if you want unlimited aliases with zero per-address setup.
Your real email address should be reserved for people and institutions you actually trust. Everything else gets an alias.