Every time you hand over your email address, you lose a little control. MySafeInbox gives it back — one alias at a time. Sign up for the beta below, or scroll down to learn more.
Limited beta · Waitlist now open
No credit card. No catch. Free forever for personal use. (Your email will never be shared — that would be ironic.)
Every signup, every checkout, every "enter your email to continue" — your real address goes somewhere new. From there it gets sold, shared, leaked, or breached. And you have no idea who's responsible.
Spam filters catch some of it. But they don't tell you who betrayed your inbox. And they certainly don't give you back control.
MySafeInbox sits between your real address and the internet. Create a unique alias for every service you sign up for. Mail still arrives in your normal inbox — but now you know exactly where it came from, and you can cut it off in one click.
Generate a unique MySafeInbox address in seconds for any service, tied to that relationship in your dashboard.
Everything routes to your real inbox as usual. You don't change how you read email — you just gain visibility you never had before.
MySafeInbox monitors each alias. When spam arrives, you know exactly which service is responsible — not just that you're getting spam.
One click kills the alias permanently. The spam stops. The source is on record. You're back in control.
The Bigger Picture
"The email identity layer the internet should have built from the start."
Email was designed in a different era — before data brokers, before surveillance capitalism, before your inbox became a commodity. MySafeInbox doesn't patch the problem. It rebuilds the relationship between you and your email from the ground up.
Starting with the tool that gives you control. Where it goes next is where it gets really interesting.
Create unique aliases for every signup. Track who you gave your address to. Kill aliases that get abused. See the full lifecycle of your email identity in one place.
Know when an alias starts receiving spam, when your address appears in data breaches, and which services have a pattern of selling user data. Email accountability, finally.
When businesses want to reach you, they ask — and pay. Your inbox becomes an asset, not a liability. The model that should have existed from day one.