temp mail for suno (free ai music)
Create a Suno AI account with a 15-minute disposable email. Generate free AI songs without exposing your real address.
Here's something that would've sounded ridiculous five years ago: you type "upbeat 80s synthwave track about a road trip through Nevada" and a website spits out a full song — vocals, synths, drums, the works. That's Suno. And it's free to try. The only hoop is email verification at signup, which takes about 15 seconds with a throwaway inbox from 15minutemail.com. You'll have your first AI-generated track playing before the 15-minute timer even matters.
getting started — signup walkthrough
pick up a disposable address
Visit 15minutemail.com and there's already an inbox ready for you. Fifteen minutes on the clock. Copy the address and leave the tab open in the background.
create your suno account
Open suno.com, click Sign up or Get Started, and go with email instead of Google or Microsoft login. Paste the 15 Minute Mail address. Set a password.
verify and unlock
Suno fires off the verification email right away. Switch tabs — it's probably already sitting in your inbox. Click the link, and your account goes live with free daily credits ready to burn.
make your first song
Type a prompt. Genre, mood, a topic, even specific lyrics if you want. Hit create and wait about 30 seconds. A complete song plays back — vocals and all. It's kind of surreal the first time.
Suno doesn't fight disposable emails very hard. Their priority is getting people creating, not policing signup addresses. Most throwaway domains pass without a hiccup. If yours gets rejected for some reason, just generate a new one at 15minutemail.com — there are multiple domains in rotation.
suno vs udio — the quick comparison
These two are the main contenders in AI music right now, and they don't sound the same. Suno produces polished, radio-friendly tracks. Clean vocals, catchy hooks, tight production. It's like getting a studio demo. Udio leans into rawer, more textured output — stronger instrumentals, more experimental arrangements, vocals that feel less processed.
The honest move is to try both. Grab a 15-minute address for each signup, run the same prompt on both platforms, and listen back to back. That'll tell you more than any review article.
what the free tier actually includes
You don't need to pay anything to get a solid feel for the platform:
- daily generation credits — a set number of songs per day, reset every 24 hours
- full songs with real vocals — not just background music; the AI actually sings with words
- your own lyrics or AI-written ones — paste something you wrote or let Suno handle it
- genre flexibility — pop, hip-hop, jazz, folk, EDM, classical, lo-fi, metal, and way more
- shareable links — send your creation to anyone with a direct URL
The paid plans (Pro and Premier) unlock commercial licensing, more daily generations, faster processing, and lossless downloads. The free version is for personal messing around, and it's plenty for that.
why a throwaway email makes sense here
you don't know if you'll care about this tomorrow
Maybe AI music is a fun novelty for 20 minutes and you never think about it again. Maybe it becomes your new obsession. Either way, you don't need a permanent account to find out. The 15-minute inbox handles the signup, and if you walk away, there's nothing to clean up.
suno's gonna email you
After signup, expect messages about new features, credit resets, and the usual "come back and create" prompts. With a disposable address, all of that goes to an inbox that won't exist in 15 minutes. Your personal email stays completely untouched.
you're probably testing more than one thing
If you're curious about AI music, you're likely going to try Suno AND Udio at minimum. Maybe Loudly or Boomy too. Each signup is another email list. A fresh throwaway address for each platform keeps the whole experiment tidy.
your email doesn't need to live in another database
Suno stores your address and usage data when you register. For a casual test drive, there's no reason your real email needs to be part of that. A disposable address means your exposure starts and ends with the verification step.
the tradeoffs to know about
This works well for:
- hearing what AI-composed music sounds like before forming an opinion
- running a bunch of prompts across different genres to see range
- testing Suno against Udio without permanent signups for either
- keeping your email off yet another platform's marketing list
Skip the throwaway email if:
- you're upgrading to Pro or Premier — billing and receipts go to your account email
- you plan to release or monetize any tracks — licensing terms require a proper account
- you're building a library of songs you want to keep long-term — losing email access means losing account recovery
For more on how disposable inboxes work, check out what temp mail is and safe usage tips.
15minutemail.com — your inbox is live the moment the page opens. First Suno track? Give it about two minutes from right now.
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