- ExpressMailGuard allows users to create unlimited email aliases for complete inbox control
- Users can manage forwarding, blocking and filtering through a central dashboard
- Aliases work perfectly with any email provider on multiple devices
ExpressVPN has introduced ExpressMailGuard, a tool designed to give users more control over one of their most exposed digital identifiers: their email address.
The service provides a central dashboard where users can generate unlimited email aliases, track which services each alias is used for, and view blocked or forwarded messages.
Users can set rules and automations to determine which emails arrive in their primary inbox and which are filtered or stopped, allowing precise control over incoming messages.
ExpressMailGuard: a solution for spam
The dashboard also provides clear visibility into usage and limits, showing monthly activity and delivery statistics at a glance.
ExpressVPN says the goal is to reduce exposure to spam, phishing attempts, and other threats without changing existing email habits.
Unlike many email aliasing tools limited to a single provider or ecosystem, ExpressMailGuard works with any email service and on multiple devices.
Users can assign destination inboxes for forwarded mail and update recipients without creating new aliases, simplifying management between applications and accounts.
ExpressVPN emphasizes that these aliases are disposable, allowing users to instantly block any address that receives spam or unwanted messages.
This flexibility is intended to protect privacy while maintaining daily usability, ensuring that all forwarded mail remains under the user’s control.
ExpressMailGuard integrates seamlessly into the broader ExpressVPN ecosystem, extending privacy protections beyond a VPN to everyday digital identity use.
This tool is now available as part of ExpressVPN subscription plans, starting at the Basic level, with additional features for Advanced and Pro users.
The web-based service requires an active ExpressVPN subscription and works in conjunction with the company’s VPN tools, providing a consistent layer of privacy across email, online browsing, and AI tools.
In 2025, nearly two billion unique addresses were publicly exposed. ExpressVPN describes the service as a practical answer to the growing risks related to email.
The platform also incorporates firewall protections, allowing users to control how aliases interact with external services and ensuring that messages are filtered and managed according to user preferences.
“Email addresses are permanent, but many of the services people sign up for are not,” said Shay Peretz, COO of ExpressVPN.
“ExpressMailGuard is like a VPN for email. We make it easy for anyone to protect their real email address, reduce unwanted exposure, and manage aliases in one place, no matter what email provider they use.”
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