Buy Gmail accounts
Last updated: July 15, 2026
You can buy Gmail accounts here for around $0.350 each, delivered the moment the payment clears. Every account comes with the address and password, and most include OAuth2 tokens as well. Payment is cryptocurrency only, there is no approval step, and each account goes to exactly one buyer. If a delivered account will not log in, support replaces it against the order reference.
$0.350 is the premium end of this store. A fresh Hotmail or Outlook account costs $0.004, which is not a small gap, and for plain throwaway sign-ups Microsoft is the sensible buy. Gmail is worth the difference when the address itself has to be a Google one: services inside the Google ecosystem, or forms where a gmail.com address gets through and a hotmail one does not. One thing to get straight before you buy: the inbox viewer on this site reads Microsoft accounts only. Gmail accounts arrive as credentials for your own client or script.
| Product | Price | Stock |
|---|---|---|
| Gmail | $0.350 | Out |
What you get when you buy a Gmail account
Every Gmail account you buy comes with the address and the password. Most also include an OAuth2 access token plus the matching refresh token and client ID. That is the whole delivery. There is no manual approval and no waiting on a seller. The credentials land in your dashboard as soon as the order clears, and the price sits around $0.350 per account. You can copy lines one at a time from the order screen, or download the whole order at once if you bought a batch. Each account is sold once, to a single buyer, so nobody else receives the same credentials later. One limitation is worth knowing before you pay. The inbox viewer built into this site reads Microsoft accounts only. A Gmail account arrives as credentials for you to use somewhere else. It is not an inbox you open here.
Why Gmail costs more than Hotmail, and when it's worth it
Gmail costs around $0.350 an account. A fresh Hotmail or Outlook account starts at $0.004. That is close to ninety times the price for what looks like the same thing, an email address, so the honest answer is that Gmail is the premium option and most disposable work does not need it. The gap exists because Google accounts are harder to create and harder to keep, and supply reflects that. What you are paying for is acceptance. A Google account is also a YouTube and Drive account, so anything inside that ecosystem needs Gmail specifically rather than any working mailbox. Some sign-up forms treat a Gmail address more favourably than a Microsoft one, and a few services only take Gmail at all. If your use case is one of those, $0.350 is the whole cost of the problem. If it is not, buy Hotmail and save the difference.
How to buy Gmail accounts step by step
Register, top up your balance, pick the quantity, buy. The credentials are yours a second later. Funding happens through a Plisio checkout that takes USDT on TRC20, Litecoin or Tron. No card details and no personal information. You add money once and it sits as a balance you spend across as many orders as you want, so there is no separate payment step every time you need another account. On the store page you choose the Gmail product, set a quantity and confirm. Nothing is queued for review. The order appears in your dashboard with the credentials visible immediately, and you can copy them individually or download the file. If stock shows zero on a product, that means the supply is empty right now rather than the product being gone. Prices and counts on this page come from the live catalogue, so what you see is what is actually sitting there.
Delivery, and what the OAuth2 tokens are for
Delivery is instant and automated. The moment payment clears against your balance, the account credentials are written into your order and shown in the dashboard. Nobody approves anything. Alongside the address and password, many accounts carry an OAuth2 access token, a refresh token and a client ID, and those exist so you can reach the mailbox programmatically without typing the password into a login form. The access token is short-lived. The refresh token is the useful one: it lets your client mint a new access token when the old one expires, which is what keeps a script working past the first hour. If you only plan to log in through a browser, ignore the tokens and use the password. If you are wiring the account into a mail client or a script, the tokens are the part you want, and the client ID tells Google which application is asking.
Reading a Gmail account in your own client or script
You read Gmail accounts somewhere other than this site. The built-in inbox viewer only supports Microsoft accounts, so a Gmail purchase gives you credentials and nothing on-site to open them with. That is the trade-off, and it is worth knowing before you buy rather than after. In practice you have two routes. Sign in through the normal Google web interface with the address and password, which needs no setup and works for a one-off code. Or point a mail client or a script at the account using the OAuth2 credentials, which is what makes sense once you have more than a handful. Thunderbird handles it with a bit of configuration, and a few lines of Python against the Gmail API does the same at scale. If reading the inbox on xMailHub itself matters to you, buy Hotmail or Outlook instead. Those are cheaper anyway, and the viewer handles them.
Buying Gmail in bulk through the API
For bulk Gmail, use the API rather than clicking through the store. Fund your balance once, then your own script can check live stock, read the remaining balance and place orders without a browser anywhere in the loop. The purchase response returns the credentials directly, so a script can buy an account, use it and move to the next one. Your API key lives on the API page and can be rotated whenever you want. Two request formats work: a modern query format and the older path format, kept around so scripts written against the legacy system keep running unchanged. Stock on the page and through the API is the live number, not a cached figure, so check it before a large run rather than assuming yesterday's count still holds. If a product reads zero, the supply is empty at that moment and you will need to check again later.
The login guarantee, and what happens after delivery
If an account you bought will not log in on first use, contact support with the order reference and it gets replaced. That is the guarantee, and it is deliberately narrow. It covers the account arriving dead, which is the failure you cannot check before you pay. It does not cover what happens later, because once credentials leave the dashboard the access is out of our hands. Every account is sold once to one buyer, so a working account is not being handed to somebody else in parallel. Change the password on anything you intend to keep. Doing that immediately is the single most useful thing you can do with a bought account, and it is the difference between an inbox that stays yours and one that might not. Fresh credentials are exactly as secure as the person holding them, which after delivery is you.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a Gmail account cost?
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Around $0.350 each. That is the live price, and the table above shows what it is right now along with how many are in stock. For comparison, a fresh Hotmail or Outlook account starts at $0.004, so Gmail runs close to ninety times more. The gap is real and there is no point pretending otherwise. What you pay for is a Google account rather than just a working mailbox, and that only matters if your use case actually needs Google. If it does not, the Microsoft products do the same job for a fraction of the money. Buy one Gmail first and test it against whatever you are signing up for before committing to a batch. At this price a single test account costs nothing worth worrying about.
Can I read the Gmail inbox on xMailHub?
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No. The on-site inbox viewer supports Microsoft accounts only, so Hotmail and Outlook purchases can be opened and read here, and Gmail purchases cannot. This is the clearest limitation on the product and it is better to know it now than to find out after paying. What you get instead is the address, the password and usually a set of OAuth2 credentials, which is everything needed to read the mailbox somewhere else. Log in at Google directly in a browser, or connect the account to a mail client or your own script. If your main reason for buying was reading codes on this site without any setup, the Microsoft products are the ones that do that, and they cost a fraction of the price as well.
How do I pay, and do I need to give card details?
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Cryptocurrency only, and no. Payment goes through a Plisio checkout that accepts USDT on TRC20, Litecoin and Tron. There is no card form and no identity step, because the store never handles that kind of data in the first place. The flow is a top-up rather than a per-order payment: you send crypto once, it lands as a balance on your account, and every purchase after that just draws down the balance. That makes buying a single Gmail as quick as clicking a button, and it is the same balance the API spends when you order from a script. If you have never paid with crypto before, USDT on TRC20 is usually the easiest of the three to send.
What happens if the account does not work?
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Contact support with the order reference and it gets replaced. The guarantee covers login on first use: if the credentials you were given do not get you into the account, that is on us and you get another one. Test the accounts when they arrive rather than months later, because that is when the guarantee is straightforward to apply. What it does not cover is the account later getting locked or recovered by someone else, since access after delivery is genuinely outside our control. Each account is sold to a single buyer and is not resold, so nothing else is competing for it. Changing the password as soon as you receive an account you plan to keep removes most of the ways it can go wrong afterwards.
Can I buy Gmail accounts in bulk from a script?
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Yes. The API covers live stock, balance and purchasing, so a script can do the whole thing without a browser. Fund the balance once through the normal checkout, get your key from the API page, and from then on ordering is a request. The purchase response contains the credentials, which means a script can buy an account and use it in the same run. Both the modern query format and the legacy path format are accepted, so older integrations do not need rewriting to keep working. Keys can be rotated from the API page if one leaks or you just want a fresh one. The practical limit on bulk is how many are in stock at that moment, so check the live count before firing off a large order.
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