Stop Polluting Your Dev Inbox: A Developer's Guide to Temp Email in 2026
If you have been a developer for more than six months, your personal inbox is already a disaster. Every staging environment you have tested, every SaaS trial you spun up, every API you signed up fo...

Source: DEV Community
If you have been a developer for more than six months, your personal inbox is already a disaster. Every staging environment you have tested, every SaaS trial you spun up, every API you signed up for, they all have your email address now. I used to have a folder in Gmail labeled 'dev junk.' It had over 14,000 unread emails. I deleted the folder. The problem was still there. The fix is simpler than you think: stop using your real email for development tasks. Use a temporary email service instead. Here is what I learned after making this a core part of my workflow. Why Developers Specifically Need Temp Email? There are a few scenarios unique to developers where temporary email is genuinely essential rather than just convenient: • Testing onboarding flows: You need to sign up as a new user 50 times while building a registration feature. Your real email receives 50 welcome sequences. • QA and staging environments: Verifying that confirmation emails fire correctly without filling your inbox