Protect your identity with hide-my-email aliases in Proton Mail

Your email address is like your digital passport, a unique identifier for all the services you use online. But unlike a real passport, your email address is often publicly available for anyone to send you malware, bombard you with spam, or track your behavior.

Today we’re introducing a new way to protect your identity, control spam, and prevent phishing with hide-my-email aliases in Proton Mail. These are unique, randomly generated email addresses you can give out instead of your real email address, which stays private. Additionally, hide-my-email aliases are already available in Proton Pass.

You can create up to 10 hide-my-email aliases with the Proton Free plan, or upgrade to Proton Unlimited to create as many as you need. You’ll find your hide-my-email aliases in our new Security Center in Proton Mail. 

Read below to learn more about this new privacy feature and situations where you might want to use it.

A simple way to keep your email address private 

If you use the same email address for every account, you’re putting your online identity at risk. Most online services are vulnerable to cyberattacks, and hackers are becoming more relentless. Once your email address is in the wild, it can be added to spam lists or sold to marketers. You could also be targeted with spear phishing attacks.

Hide-my-email aliases are unique, randomly generated email addresses you can provide instead of your real email address. You can receive emails to these aliases within your Proton Mail account and reply without revealing your identity. 

Unlike your primary email address, you can easily deactivate aliases if they’re ever revealed in a data breach or start receiving spam.

  • Online purchases: Companies love to build a profile of you based on your spending habits. Providing an email alias protects you from being profiled and targeted.
  • Account creation: Whenever you create an account for an online service, you can provide a hide-my-email alias to avoid being tracked or attacked by hackers after a data breach.
  • Newsletters: Email aliases make it much easier to unsubscribe from newsletters you no longer want (or never wanted in the first place). Simply deactivate the alias. 

Plus, aliases help you organize your inbox. You can filter, sort, and label emails sent to your aliases in specific folders.

How to use hide-my-email aliases

It’s easy to create and use email aliases in Proton Mail:

  1. Create a Proton Mail account if you don’t already have one.
  2. Look for the new shield icon on the right side panel of the Proton Mail web app(new window). This is your new Security Center, where you’ll find your hide-my-email aliases.
  3. Create hide-my-email aliases with a single click. Once created, your new alias is automatically placed in your clipboard and ready to share. 

You can also generate email addresses instantly when creating new online accounts using Proton Pass. Visit our Pass email aliases page to learn more.

Fight online security threats, starting with your inbox

The new Security Center is the home of hide-my-email aliases, but it doesn’t stop there. It’s also where you can take simple steps to secure your account, whether it’s setting up two-factor authentication or a recovery phrase. And the Security Center gives you instant access to our Proton Sentinel account protection program, which monitors for suspicious account activity and blocks account takeover attacks.

Since Proton is 100% funded by our community, we prioritize your security and privacy above all. This new addition to Proton Mail is another step toward giving you total control over your email and building a future where privacy is the default.

Secure your emails, protect your privacy
Get Proton Mail free

Share this page

Anant Vijay

Anant is the Product Lead for Proton Mail and Drive. Before joining Proton in 2022, he had years of international experience leading tech products in Europe and the US (mostly in Silicon Valley), where he built email, sports and finance products. He holds a BSc in Technology Electronics & Communications, and a MSc in Business from University of Warwick.

Related articles

People and companies are generally subject to the laws of the country and city where they are located, and those laws can change when they move to a new place. However, the situation becomes more complicated when considering data, which can be subjec
Your online data is no longer just used for ads but also for training AI. Google uses publicly available information to train its AI models, raising concerns over whether AI is even compatible with data protection laws. People are worried companies
iPhone stores passwords in iCloud Keychain, Apple’s built-in password manager. It’s convenient but has some drawbacks. A major issue is that it doesn’t work well with other platforms, making it hard for Apple users to use their passwords and passkeys
There are many reasons you may need to share passwords, bank details, and other highly sensitive information. But we noticed that many people do this via messaging apps or other methods that put your data at risk. In response to the needs of our com
Large language models (LLMs) trained on public datasets can serve a wide range of purposes, from composing blog posts to programming. However, their true potential lies in contextualization, achieved by either fine-tuning the model or enriching its p
is Google Docs secure
Your online data is incredibly valuable, particularly to companies like Google that use it to make money through ads. This, along with Google’s numerous privacy violations, has led many to question the safety of their information and find alternative