Mailinator Blocked on Amazon?
Mailinator domains are blocked on Amazon. Here's why and what you can do instead.
Why It's Blocked
Amazon blocks all known Mailinator domains during account registration. Mailinator operates hundreds of alternate domains, but Amazon's blocklist is regularly updated to include new ones. The public nature of Mailinator inboxes is an additional red flag for Amazon, since anyone could potentially access verification emails sent to a Mailinator address. Amazon's detection catches both the primary mailinator.com domain and the vast majority of its alternate domains.
What You Can Do
For Amazon, you need a service with private inboxes and domains that don't appear on major blocklists. NukeMail's token-based private inboxes address the security concern that makes platforms especially wary of Mailinator -- nobody can access your inbox without your specific access code. The fresh domains help avoid the blocklist issue.
Email sub-addressing is particularly practical for Amazon. Most people already have a Gmail or Outlook account, and addresses like [email protected] work perfectly. Amazon accepts them, and you can filter these messages into a separate folder to keep your inbox organized.
For complete separation, a dedicated Outlook or ProtonMail account for shopping sites gives you a permanent, unblockable email that keeps your primary address out of marketing databases and potential data breaches.