Verified purchaser
Solid Features for the Price, but Needs Usability Improvements
While the core idea—email aliasing—isn’t new, it does work quite well in practice. Especially for the price, the features are solid: the ability to set a prefix and “catch-all” for that prefix (like prefix.*@domain.com) is very handy. This means I can segment my emails for different uses (newsletters, accounts, etc.) without enabling a real, global catch-all address that would flood me with spam. It’s a smart way to manage categories without overwhelming your inbox.
Another strong point is the option to bring your own custom domain, which is much appreciated for those who want more control and a personal touch.
However, there are downsides. The UI and UX feel clunky and unpolished; sometimes creating new aliases or even refreshing the mail list can be slow. The workflow isn't as seamless as it could be. A major letdown is the lack of a proper browser extension: there’s no Firefox extension at all, and the Chrome extension seems broken at the moment. For a service like this, having a reliable, easy-to-use browser extension would make a world of difference.
Overall, ProxiedMail gets the big things right and is a good value for the price—but I hope the team focuses on performance, usability, and browser integration in future updates.
apps68
Dec 10, 2025Hi,
It’s Alex from ProxiedMail.
Thank you for the review.
To be honest it’s very valuable.
Currently we took a focus on the performance and reliability and with the recent growth — we’re getting more people.
This review confirms once again that we’re on the right track.
Because we had to take a lot of things down due to the recent performance improvements.
Hopefully we’re going to finish in this year.