Temp Mail Blocked on Twitter/X?
Temp Mail domains are blocked on Twitter/X. Here's why and what you can do instead.
Why It's Blocked
Twitter/X blocks Temp Mail domains during account registration. Temp Mail's domain rotation, while intended to evade detection, is tracked by automated blocklist services that monitor domain changes via Temp Mail's public API. Twitter subscribes to these services and updates its blocklist accordingly. New Temp Mail domains are typically added to Twitter's blocklist within 48-72 hours of deployment, leaving a very narrow usability window.
What You Can Do
The rapid blocklist tracking of Temp Mail domains makes it unreliable for Twitter signup. Services that don't expose their domains through an API are fundamentally harder to track. NukeMail's domain pool isn't programmatically discoverable, and its domains are registered to look like regular email providers, giving them longer viability.
Email alias services like Firefox Relay and SimpleLogin are the most reliable options for Twitter. They create addresses on high-reputation domains that Twitter has no reason to block. Firefox Relay is free and creates addresses instantly.
A free Tutanota account is another solid option. No existing email needed, setup takes a minute, and it provides a permanent private email for all social media accounts.