Custom Email With Your Domain

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Domain Email

Have you thought about choosing a web domain for your WordPress blog or site?

WordPress.com starts you off with a subdomain such as mohamadkarbi.wordpress.com. Adding a custom domain, like mohamadkarbi.com, is the first step in building your online personal brand. It also gives you the ability to create professional email addresses such as contact@mohamadkarbi.com.

This post focuses on custom email with your domain, not on domains or registrars. That deserves a separate post of its own.

Domains and registrars

You can purchase a domain through WordPress.com or any external registrar and connect it to your site via the domain settings. Once you own the domain, most registrars allow you to create custom email addresses and enable email forwarding. In other words, messages sent to your domain email can arrive directly in your personal Gmail or Outlook inbox.

While forwarding is a simple and low-cost option, it isn’t a complete solution. Without a dedicated outgoing mail server, replies may fail authentication checks (SPF, DKIM, or DMARC); leading them to spam filtering or entire rejection.

Email Hosting (Recommended)

A proper setup involves choosing a dedicated email hosting provider and connecting it to your domain via DNS records (MX, SPF, DKIM, and DMARC).

This gives you:

  • Better deliverability
  • Full control over authentication
  • Identity Portability: You can move from one provider to another without ever changing your address. Your email stays the same: contact@mohamadkarbi.com.

Popular email hosting providers

These are personal observations based on real usage, not affiliate praise.

Microsoft 365 & Google Workspace
Powerful and industry-standard, but overkill for personal use. Bloated with features many don’t need, and tightly coupled to the ecosystem of Microsoft and Google.

Proton Mail
Very reliable and privacy-focused. However, using IMAP/SMTP with third-party email clients like Outlook or Apple Mail requires the Proton Bridge app; this reduces flexibility. Proton now offers a dedicated desktop application, though calendar and contacts syncing outside Proton’s own apps remains limited.

Mailfence & Mailbox.org
Both are excellent, standards-based European providers that strike a solid balance between privacy and full synchronization support (IMAP, CalDAV, CardDAV). Personally, I prefer Mailfence for its speed, pricing, and the quality of support I experienced. With Mailbox.org, I previously ran into limitations regarding two-factor authentication, which appears to have been fixed now.

Others worth mentioning

The following names are famous too in this field.

  • Titan
  • Fastmail
  • Thexyz
  • Runbox
  • Zoho

Final Thoughts

Go with Titan, Fastmail, Thexyz, Runbox, or Zoho if you want a professional experience, prefer using your favorite email app (like Outlook or Apple Mail), and simply want to move away from Google’s data-driven ecosystem.

Go with Proton Mail, Mailfence, or Mailbox.org if you handle sensitive information, live in a high-risk jurisdiction, or value the peace of mind that comes with strong privacy guarantees; even from the provider itself.

So, do you use a custom domain email, or are you still using a generic address?

If this resonated with you, let’s stay in touch. No spam.

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Comments

18 responses to “Custom Email With Your Domain”

  1. SueW Avatar

    I’m not a fan of having all my eggs in one basket. I treat my e-mail addresses as a tidy filing cabinet. I have one for friends and family, one for online shopping, one for WordPress and one for my partner. To merg them would defeat the purpose of having individual ones. It works well for me.

    1. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

      Thank you, Sue. I totally agree with you and I believe so. It’s a good privacy practice indeed. Here, i’m just trying to tell about how to create email connected to your domain in case you want so. If you went with domain email, you can still create alias for different purposes; for example: contact@mohamadkarbi.com, shopping@mohamadkarbi.com, wordpress@mohamadkarbi.com, …

      1. SueW Avatar

        Thank you, Mohamad.
        does it cost extra to get a domain e-mail from WP?
        Before joining WP I owned a couple of domains and had automatic e-mail addresses with those.

      2. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

        Hi, Sue. Right now, it costs extra to have a domain from WordPress. WordPress doesn’t host emails; in addition to hosting the blog, they sell domains only.
        Now for your case, I noticed that you already have a domain “nansfarm”. So, let’s say you want an email sue@nansfarm.net. Your registrar should have an option to forward an email or create inbox as explained in the post for free. Moreover, you can buy email hosting from one of the providers I mentioned above…
        Please don’t hesitate asking me about this if things are not clear… I’ll be gladly assist…

      3. SueW Avatar

        You may have noticed I created my own WordPress address, it was the best I could come up with at the time.
        You are very kind, thank you, Mohamad

  2. magickmermaid Avatar

    I also have individual emails for personal and business. I have one domain with WordPress for my blog. I’ve had my main domain for my website with godaddy for years and have my email for my website with them as well. They recently changed to Microsoft 365. I like it for the most part. I agree; there are many “features” that I don’t need.

    1. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

      Thank you, Morgaine. Honestly, nothing compete with Microsoft 365. Even when we say “stay away from Google or Microsoft”, you have the option to encrypt Microsoft 365 if you like… GoDaddy is a big name too in domains world.

  3. skarinblog Avatar

    I still don’t understand why to pay for email service?

    1. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

      Thank you, my dear. Well, sometimes, you might need to pay to protect your privacy. However, when you need a domain email, you’ll mostly need to pay regardless of privacy. In this post, I tried to concentrate on services that protect your privacy too.
      P.S., if you have the domain, there are methods (some of which mentioned above) to get a domain email without paying extra money…

  4. Susan W Goldstein Avatar

    Hello! All that I want is a larger audience. How should I best pursue that goal? Thank you; this column was filled with useful information!

    1. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

      Thank you, Susan. Hmm, there are many ways for that… From our side, I can help in inviting you to post a guest post on this blog if you like. Let me know if you’re interested

      1. Susan W Goldstein Avatar

        My goodness. That is very generous of you! I will first do as you recommend, and keep an eye on that section (thank you) and then when I feel confident enough, I would love to be a guest blogger. Thank you so much!!

  5. oneta hayes Avatar

    Thank you for visiting my blog today and leaving a like on “Weekend with Alayna.” Helps cheer my day. Blessings to you.

  6. sarah tinsley Avatar

    Thanks so much, very helpful. Been thinking for a while I should get a separate ‘business’ email for myself.

    1. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

      Thank you, Sarah. You won’t regret it and it’s the first step in building your brand… All the best and if i can’t be of any assistance, please don’t hesitate to call…

  7. The Dedicated Engineer Avatar

    nice article on email.
    I have learned something new

  8. magickmermaid Avatar

    With email accounts and hosting being so expensive lately, I now have my domain on WordPress. I also switched to their suggestion of Titan email; it’s well organized and easy to set up.

    1. Mohamad Al Karbi Avatar

      You won’t go wrong with Titan. It’s very good professional email provider with high delivery rate. I’m using it for this blog too

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