Yes. Mailcatch.com is a known disposable email service, so block it at signup. Mailboxes expire within minutes and any existing Mailcatch.com account should be treated as a fraud signal.
Every check returns one of three clear outcomes so you know exactly what to do with the address.
The mailbox exists and accepts mail. Send with confidence, the address is deliverable.
The mailbox does not exist, is disposable, or will hard-bounce. Remove it to protect your sender reputation.
The server is catch-all or greylisting, so existence cannot be confirmed. Send selectively and watch engagement.
mailcatch.com publishes 1 MX record. The primary mail exchanger is mail2.mailcatch.com, hosted by mailcatch.com, and it is currently reachable and answering SMTP. Mail is routed through these servers in priority order, lowest number first.
| Priority | Hostname | IP | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | mail2.mailcatch.com | 87.98.221.135 | Reachable |
220 mailcatch.com SMTP is watching you...No. mailcatch.com is a disposable email service. Its mailboxes are throwaway and expire within minutes, so addresses on this domain are not safe to accept or send to. Block it at signup and treat existing mailcatch.com accounts as a fraud signal.
Addresses on Mailcatch.com are throwaway inboxes that expire within minutes. Accepting them inflates your user count, wastes onboarding spend, and damages sender reputation when the mailboxes bounce.
Each address runs through 30+ checks including SMTP existence, catch-all detection, role-account filtering, and disposable matching. The same engine has verified billions of addresses since 2012.
Every unverified address is a gamble. Here is what happens when you skip verification and mail a list that has not been cleaned.
Disposable signups skew your activation rate, growth metrics, and analytics with users who never come back.
Welcome series and drip campaigns all fire at a mailcatch.com inbox that has already been discarded.
Throwaway addresses are the standard tool for free-trial farming, multi-accounting, and bot signups.
Mail to expired mailcatch.com inboxes bounces, and bounce rate is one of the first signals mailbox providers punish.
Mailcatch.com is disposable email, registered through GANDI SAS and first seen Jan 25, 2008.
Mailcatch.com is disposable email, classified as disposable email running on mailcatch.com. It operates 1 mail server and currently accepts SMTP connections.
Because mailcatch.com is disposable, every address should be blocked at signup. Mailboxes expire within minutes, so any existing mailcatch.com account in your database is a strong fraud signal worth removing.
Upload a CSV or TXT list of Mailcatch.com addresses to the bulk email verifier. Every address runs through a live SMTP handshake plus catch-all, role-account and disposable detection, and you download a clean list when processing completes. For real-time checks at signup, use the real-time email verification API.
CSV or TXT with one email per line. No formatting needed.
Each Mailcatch.com address is checked with a live server handshake.
Get a verified list with status codes, risk flags, and catch-all detection.
Pay as you go. No subscriptions, and credits never expire.
Everything about verifying email at this domain.
mailcatch.com is a disposable email service.
Yes, a known disposable provider.
Temporary mail infrastructure.
No.
Use disposable detection.
Upload a CSV or TXT list to the bulk email verifier. Every address runs through 30+ checks including SMTP existence, catch-all detection, role-account, and disposable matching. Processing time depends on list size.
99.7% accurate using a direct SMTP handshake with mailcatch.com's mail servers, the same engine that has verified billions of addresses since 2012.
Other disposable email domains we have audited.