Email Validation is a library that validates email addresses and checks againts more than 10K domains used for disposable emails
If you want to block disposable email addresses at signup, or if you are a B2B company and want only professional email adresses, this is the solution for you :)
This library does multiple verifications:
- Email format validation
- Free email address (@gmail.com, @hotmail.com, @protonmail.com, ...)
- Disposable email address (@maildrop.cc, @fakemail.net, @trashmail.com, ...)
- Possible typos in popular email domains
Email Validation has 0 dependency, 100% coverage, and is fully configurable.
Install using npm
:
npm install emailvalid
or Yarn yarn
:
yarn add emailvalid
Email Validation is initialized with a list of default domains
const EmailValidation = require('emailvalid')
const ev = new EmailValidation()
// This email will be invalid because it is a free email
const result = ev.check('[email protected]')
console.log(`${result.email} validity: ${result.valid}`)
// This email will be invalid because it is a disposable email
const result2 = ev.check('[email protected]')
console.log(`${result2.email} validity: ${result2.valid}`)
// You can also check for possible typos
const result3 = ev.check('[email protected]')
if (result3.typo) console.log(`Did you mean ${result3.typo}?`)
The output will be an object with some information on the validity (see result section)
Email Validation can be configured with more advanced options as an object:
whitelist
(Array) Add some email domains you want to whitelist (default is [])blacklist
(Array) Add some email domains you want to blacklist (default is [])allowFreemail
(Boolean) Allow free emails such as @gmail.com, ... (default is false)allowDisposable
(Boolean) Allow disposable emails such as @trashmail.com, ... (default is false)
You can for example choose to allow freemails, and add a domain baddomain.com in addition to the preconfigured list
const EmailValidation = require('emailvalid')
const ev = new EmailValidation({ allowFreemail: true, blacklist: ['baddomain.com'] })
// This one should have result.valid = true because we allowed free mails such as gmail.com
ev.check('[email protected]')
// But this one is blacklisted now
ev.check('[email protected]')
Or if you want to disallow all free mails, except gmail.com :
const ev = new EmailValidation({ whitelist: ['gmail.com'] })
You can check some examples in example.js
In case you need to update options after initialization, you can do it on the fly with different methods:
whitelist
(Function) Add a new domain to the whitelistblacklist
(Function) Add a new domain to the blacklistsetOptions
(Function) Changes the options
const EmailValidation = require('emailvalid')
const ev = new EmailValidation()
// This adds a new domain as invalid
ev.blacklist('baddomain.com')
// This marks a domain as valid
ev.whitelist('gooddomain.com')
// This changes options to allow freemails
ev.setOptions({ allowFreemail: true })
Email Validation will output an object with the following information:
email
(String) Email in a standardized format (trimed and lowercased)domain
(String) Domain from the emailvalid
(Boolean) Is the email address valid?errors
(Array) List of errors if anytypo
(String) Is there any possible typo in the email?
Errors contains strings and can be one of :
invalid
Email is not present of format is invaliddisposable
Email is disposable (and not whitelisted or allowed in parameters)freemail
Email is a free mail (and not whitelisted or allowed in parameters)blacklisted
Email is blacklisted in parameters
const EmailValidation = require('emailvalid')
const ev = new EmailValidation()
const result = ev.check('[email protected]')
console.log(result)
// This will return :
// {
// email: '[email protected]',
// domain: 'gmail.com'
// valid: false,
// errors: ['freemail'],
// typo: null
// {
If you need a simple way to add domains to the list, just run yarn add-domain [DOMAIN] [CATEGORY]
For example yarn add-domain freemail gmail.com
Then feel free to create Pull Requests :)