1
0 Comments

What Email Services Are Best For Crypto Users?

EtherMail—this one’s my ride-or-die. It’s Web3 to the core, made for crypto heads. You’re blasting emails right to wallet addresses, no sketchy inbox nonsense. Locked up tight with encryption, keeps it hush-hush, and takes Bitcoin or Ethereum to pay. I’ve hit my trading posse with it—like “yo, this NFT’s popping off”—and it’s just wallet-to-wallet, no leaks, no BS. Feels built to dodge the hacks that’ve smoked some folks I know.

ProtonMail—Swiss as hell and tough. Been cool with Bitcoin since 2017, and it’s got encryption that’s no joke—end-to-end, nobody’s peeking. I’ve fired off trade confirmations and slept like a baby knowing it’s safe. Their servers are legit buried in a mountain or some wild shit—100 million users back it up. It’s my pick when I want rock-solid over flashy.

Tutanota—German, open-source, and down with Bitcoin payments. Encryption’s clutch, keeps your exchange logins or seed phrases out of sight. I’ve used it for quick “hey, check this coin” notes—simple, no frills, just works. Not as Web3-deep as EtherMail, but it’s got that clean, paranoid edge crypto peeps need.

Mailfence—privacy nut, takes Bitcoin and whatever else you’re hodling. OpenPGP encryption and two-factor keep it tight. I sent a buddy some staking tips through it once—felt safe, not slick like EtherMail, but it did the trick. Good for low-key crypto moves.

Hushmail—old-school but sneaky good. Bitcoin payments, encrypted, and it’s got self-destructing emails—perfect for “here’s my wallet, don’t save this” vibes. I’ve used it when I didn’t want stuff hanging around. Not Web3-native, but it’s got that crypto caution.

Dmail—new kid, Web3-flavored, tied to blockchains like XDC. Takes crypto to pay, encrypts it all, and throws in this “MailtoEarn” thing—kinda dope if you’re into rewards. I haven’t leaned on it heavy, but it’s got potential for wallet chats.

These are my faves—EtherMail’s the crypto king for wallet action, ProtonMail’s the bunker you trust, and the rest fill gaps. All take crypto, keep you safe, and dodge the centralized crap.

on April 10, 2025
Trending on Indie Hackers
Why Indie Founders Fail: The Uncomfortable Truths Beyond "Build in Public" User Avatar 139 comments Your AI Product Is Not A Real Business User Avatar 87 comments The Clarity Trap: Why “Pretty” Pages Kill Profits (And What To Do Instead) User Avatar 34 comments I built an enterprise AI chatbot platform solo — 6 microservices, 7 channels, and Claude Code as my co-developer User Avatar 29 comments Stop Building Features: Why 80% of Your Roadmap is a Waste of Time User Avatar 28 comments I got let go, spent 18 months building a productivity app, and now I'm taking it to Kickstarter User Avatar 18 comments