What is a Email Validator?
The Email Validator is a precision tool that analyzes an email address syntax, checks its DNS and MX records, and determines whether the address is valid, temporary, or completely fake.
Invalid or fake emails in your database lead to bounced emails, which permanently ruins your domain sender reputation causing your legitimate campaigns to land in Spam folders. This tool helps you verify a lead before ever hitting the send button.
How to Use Email Validator
- 1
Enter the email address you wish to check in the search bar.
- 2
Click the 'Verify Email' button.
- 3
Wait a moment while the tool checks the syntax and queries the domain registry.
- 4
Review the card to see the Validity Status, Syntax accuracy, and domain health.
- 5
Check if it's flagged as a 'Disposable' or 'Role-based' (e.g., admin@) account.
Features
- 100% Free: Unlimited use without any hidden fees or premium locks.
- No Signup: Instantly start using the utility without registering an account.
- Works in Browser: Fully client-side processing natively in your web browser.
- No Data Stored: Your inputs are not saved, logged, or recorded on any server.
- Mobile Friendly: Perfect responsive design for smartphones and tablets.
- Instant Results: Lightning fast execution with zero loading screens.
Examples
Validates the structure and confirms Gmail MX records exist.
Catches common errors like name@gmail.con.
Flags domains known for 10-minute temporary mail.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this tool free?
Yes! While many services charge per validation, our single-check tool is free.
Is my data safe?
Yes, we do not store the emails you enter. They are only sent securely to the validation API.
Does it work on mobile?
Absolutely. Perfectly optimized for all devices.
Does this send an email to the person?
No. This tool performs a passive DNS/MX record lookup and syntax check. It does not send any test emails.
Why is an email marked invalid but they say it works?
If the domain has misconfigured their MX (Mail Exchange) records technically, our strict tool might fail it, even if some permissive servers still let mail through.