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Temporary OTP inbox

Receive OTP Online

OTPMail.online helps you receive OTP verification codes and confirmation emails without exposing your personal inbox. Create a temporary email address, use it on a sign-up or testing form, then read the verification message directly in your browser.

This page focuses on the OTP workflow itself. For a broader explanation of disposable inboxes, use the free temporary email guide. For automated test suites, use the temp mail API page.

What does receiving OTP online mean?

Many websites send a one-time password or confirmation link to an email address before allowing access. Instead of using your personal inbox for every trial, test account, or low-risk registration, you can use a temporary inbox. OTPMail is designed for this short-lived workflow: generate an address, wait for the email, copy the code, and move on.

When it works best

Testing sign-up flows

Use temporary addresses while checking whether your own app sends verification emails correctly.

Trying non-sensitive tools

Keep your real inbox cleaner when a service only needs a quick confirmation.

Reducing spam exposure

Avoid handing your personal email to every form you need to test or preview.

Do not use it for sensitive accounts

Temporary inboxes are not private accounts. Anyone who knows the address may be able to view messages while they are available. Do not use temporary email for banking, crypto, government services, password recovery, business accounts, or anything that you cannot afford to lose.

How to receive an OTP code

  1. Open the OTPMail inbox and use the generated address or type your own mailbox name.
  2. Paste the temporary email address into the service that sends the verification code.
  3. Wait for the inbox to refresh, open the message, and copy the OTP code.
  4. Finish the verification before the message expires.

Related guides

Use temporary email for verification when you want the privacy angle for account confirmation. Use the 10 minute mail alternative page when you are comparing short-lived inbox behavior.