With Calendly, the first problem is practical: you often need an account to see the real dashboard of this scheduling and calendar coordination tool, but you may not want confirmation emails, reminders, and marketing messages in your main inbox. For a quick evaluation, tempmail.ee can act as a temporary buffer.
That boundary is important. Temporary email is not a tool for bypassing platform rules, evading bans, mass registration, spam, or abuse. It is best used for low-risk trials: receive a verification email, look around, and decide whether the product deserves a stable address.
A reasonable way to test Calendly
The sensible use case is to build a sample booking page, verify time zones, reminder emails, form questions, and meeting-link generation. Those actions are product evaluation, not long-term ownership, so they do not always need your personal, work, or client email address on day one.
Open tempmail.ee, copy the generated address, enter it on the Calendly sign-up page, and return to the temporary inbox if a verification email arrives. Some services may reject temporary addresses based on their own risk rules, so no sign-up method should be treated as guaranteed.
Move important accounts to a real inbox
If the account touches real client bookings, connected work calendars, paid teams, CRM integrations, and sales leads, use a long-term email address instead. Password resets, security alerts, invoices, team invitations, and ownership checks may all depend on that inbox later. Losing access to a temporary mailbox can become a real recovery problem.
The clean split is simple: use tempmail.ee for disposable exploration; use your real inbox for accounts that carry assets, reputation, payments, or team access. That keeps noise away without creating future lockout risk.