Does Grammarly Accept Temporary Email?
Sometimes — Grammarly blocks some known temp email domains but is not exhaustive. Less common disposable domains sometimes work for account creation.
Grammarly checks email domains during registration and blocks some well-known disposable email services. However, their blocklist is not as comprehensive as larger tech companies. Less common temp email domains frequently pass through Grammarly's validation.
Grammarly's free plan offers basic grammar and spelling checking, which is useful for many users. The primary reason for temp email signups is to try Grammarly Premium features without committing a permanent email to potential marketing communications.
Grammarly sends a verification email during signup. After verification, the account is password-based for login, so you don't need ongoing email access. Set a password during registration and your temp email only needs to last long enough to click the verification link.
NukeMail works well for trying Grammarly since verification is a one-time link click. With your 24-hour active inbox window, you have ample time to verify and start using the service. If you decide Grammarly is worth keeping, you can update your email in account settings later.
Grammarly's browser extension and desktop app authenticate through your account, not through email. Once you verify and set a password, the temp email is no longer needed for day-to-day usage.
Tips
- Set a password during signup — after verification, you only need the password for login.
- Grammarly's free tier is quite capable — try it before committing to a Premium trial.
- Update to a permanent email in settings if you decide to keep using Grammarly.