One dashboard. Five to four hundred mailboxes.
Spin up real, permanent email addresses in seconds. One unified inbox, zero phone numbers, no daily caps. Built for people who already lost the count of accounts they had to register.
Why one inbox is no longer enough
If you've ever opened a second Gmail account just to keep a side project's mail out of your main inbox, you already know the pattern. Then comes the third. Then the fourth. By the time you have ten, you're juggling browsers, profile switchers, and password managers — for what should be a basic primitive: an email address per context.
Aliases hit walls fast
Gmail's `+tag` aliases all land in the same inbox; senders can usually figure out the underlying address. Apple's Hide-My-Email is locked to iCloud. Most email-aliasing services let you receive — but not reply convincingly with a separate identity.
New accounts hit harder walls
Every major provider asks for a phone number, throttles signups by IP, and locks new accounts behind a 7-day reputation cooldown before letting you send. Spinning up 20 accounts means a fake-phone marketplace and a week of waiting.
Lost context is the real cost
Five accounts mean five places to check. Five places to check means you don't check. Important mail rots in a tab you forgot about. The pain isn't "another account" — it's losing the signal.
What QMailing actually does differently
QMailing gives you real mailboxes — not aliases, not redirect tricks. Each mailbox has its own address under @qmailing.com (or your own custom domain from the Plus plan). All of them surface in one unified inbox, tagged by mailbox, filterable in one click.
Create
Type a label, hit enter. The address `label@qmailing.com` is yours instantly. No verification email. No phone. No cooldown. Three seconds, end-to-end.
Use
Sign up for a service with that address. Replies route back to your unified inbox, tagged with the mailbox label so you instantly see which context the mail belongs to. Reply from the same identity — no "Sent on behalf of" leakage.
Manage
Decide a service is shady? Disable that one mailbox; everything else keeps working. Want to hand it to someone else? Mailbox transfer is built in. Done with it? Soft-delete with a 30-day recovery window.
Who actually needs 5–400 mailboxes
Not a niche. A growing default for anyone who treats their digital surface area seriously.
One mailbox per signup
When the mailing list you joined three years ago gets breached, the leak surfaces only the address you used for it. Rotate that one mailbox, your other 50 untouched.
Multi-account workflows
Marketplace sellers, indie game developers running multiple storefronts, freelancers with several client identities — each context needs its own real email, not an alias that gives the game away.
Bulk testing without burning your domain
QA engineers and devs need 50+ unique signups to validate flows. Burning your work domain on test traffic is bad — corporate spam filters notice. Use throwaway QMailing addresses, parse confirmations from a unified inbox, ship faster.
How this compares to what you tried before
Each alternative trades something. Here's the honest cut:
| Create | Limits | Reply | Ownership | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QMailing | 3 sec, no phone | Up to 400 mailboxes per workspace | Native send-as for every mailbox | Transferable, soft-delete with 30-day recovery |
| Gmail + aliases | Free, but all share one base address | All mail in one inbox, no per-alias control | Alias replies leak the base address | Locked to one Google account |
| Multiple Gmail accounts | 7-day cooldown, phone required | Browser profile per account; no unified inbox | Native, but switching is painful | Non-transferable, abandonment risk |
| Disposable / 10-min mail | Instant | Mail expires in minutes — not real mailboxes | Often receive-only | None — anyone can read your inbox |
Stop juggling browser profiles
Free plan covers 5 mailboxes forever. No phone, no credit card.
Create your first mailbox