Output formats
CSV • Clipboard • Single-copy
Export-ready lists and one-click copy for sign-ups or imports
Free tool
Create username variants and aliases for work, campaigns, testing, and privacy. Choose templates (first.last, j.smith, role@domain, plus-addressing), review deliverability flags, and export CSV or copy single addresses for immediate use.
Output formats
CSV • Clipboard • Single-copy
Export-ready lists and one-click copy for sign-ups or imports
Validation
Syntax & spam-aware flags
Basic deliverability heuristics and provider-length guidance
Templates
first.last, role@, plus-addressing
Pattern-driven suggestions tailored to your domain rules
Quick overview
Enter a name or list of names and a target domain, pick one or more templates (first.last, first_initial+role, role@domain, plus-addressing). The generator returns ranked suggestions, flags obvious deliverability issues, and formats results for immediate export or copy.
Choose a template
Select common company and consumer patterns or build a custom regex-constrained template. The generator supports role addresses, personal aliases, localized name order, and provider-compatible length limits.
first.last, first_last, firstlast, first_initial.last — variants suitable for business cards and signatures.
support@, sales@, partnerships@ with regional or specialty suffixes (sales-uk@, support-eu@).
plus-addressing (name+tag@domain) and randomized readable tokens for disposable use or campaign tracking.
Ready-to-use prompts
Use these prompt clusters to get consistent results from the generator or when automating address generation in scripts. Each prompt maps to a clear intent: business identity, privacy aliases, role addresses, testing lists, localization, and deliverability constraints.
Make addresses that work
The tool performs basic checks and flags patterns that commonly trigger spam filters or fail provider rules. Use these guidelines to improve inbox placement and compatibility with company mail policies.
Ready for provisioning
Export generated addresses as CSV, copy lists to clipboard, or copy single addresses for immediate sign-up. For bulk testing, create incrementing aliases in CSV format (base+001@domain ... base+050@domain).
Typical users
Small founders, marketers, sales reps, freelancers, privacy-conscious users and growth engineers rely on structured address generation to save time, avoid collisions, and keep their primary inbox private.
Generated addresses are suggestions — formatted usernames you can provision on your mail system, register with an alias/forwarding provider, or use with plus-addressing. The tool does not create mailboxes; it helps you pick usable, policy-compliant addresses for identities, campaigns, testing, or disposable needs.
No. The generator produces suggested username strings and export files. To make an address live you must add it to your mail provider (Google Workspace, Exchange, alias/forwarding service) or configure plus-addressing on an existing mailbox.
Plus-addressing adds a tag after a plus sign (name+tag@domain). Many providers (Gmail, most modern mail servers) deliver these to the main inbox while allowing easy filtering and tracking. Use plus-addressing for signups, campaigns, and disposable tracking when your provider supports it.
The generator includes domain-aware guidance and basic length checks, but you should confirm your organization's specific policies (for example, banned characters, regex constraints, or max username length) before provisioning. Use the regex-constrained template mode to enforce rules during generation.
Prefer alphabetic usernames over heavy numeric or symbol patterns, avoid strings that resemble bulk or automated senders, and ensure your sending infrastructure (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) is configured correctly for sending addresses. The tool flags common spam-trigger patterns but does not replace deliverability testing.
Yes. Export options include CSV with columns for address, template, validation flag, and notes. This format is compatible with most CRM imports and bulk provisioning workflows.
When transforming a list of names, the generator adds collision notes and suggests variants (initials, numeric suffixes, location tags). For teams, agree on a standard template (e.g., first.last for external-facing, first_initial.role for internal) and use the generator to produce unique variants at scale.