Names
Professional Email Username Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A professional email username generator takes your first and last name and produces 15+ clean, workplace-ready variations in seconds. When alex.morgan is already claimed on Gmail or your company domain, most people fall back on ugly number strings that undercut first impressions. This tool shows every credible format side by side — from the classic firstname.lastname and initial-based a.morgan to reversed and compact variants — so you can compare and pick before you even check availability. Enter your first name, last name, and an optional domain like gmail.com or yourcompany.com, and every suggestion renders as a complete, copy-ready address. Freelancers, job seekers, and small-team admins use it to nail a format that looks deliberate the moment a client or recruiter reads it.
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Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter your first name and last name into the two text fields — use the name you want recipients to see.
- Type your email domain (e.g., gmail.com or yourcompany.com) into the domain field, or leave it blank to see usernames only.
- Click Generate to instantly produce 15+ professional email username variations displayed as complete addresses.
- Scan the list for the format that reads most clearly with your specific name, prioritizing shorter options near the top.
- Copy your preferred email address directly from the results and use it when creating your account or mailbox.
Use Cases
- •Picking a Gmail format for job applications before recruiters see your address
- •Previewing how alex.morgan looks on a custom domain in Google Workspace before creating the mailbox
- •Standardizing a single naming convention across new hires in a small company
- •Choosing a contact email for a portfolio site that pairs cleanly with your LinkedIn name
- •Finding a short, dictation-friendly format when your full name exceeds 20 characters
Tips
- →If your name is very common, run the generator with a middle initial added to your first name field (e.g., 'Alex J') to get initial-inclusive formats that are more likely to be available.
- →Test your chosen format by saying it aloud — if you have to spell it out every time, pick a simpler variation from the list.
- →For freelance or personal brand emails, prefer formats that match your name on LinkedIn exactly so clients can connect the two without friction.
- →Avoid appending the current year as a number — it dates the address and signals the good usernames were already taken.
- →If you're setting up a team, decide on one format before running names through the tool; consistency across employees looks more credible to clients than a mix of styles.
- →For custom domains, shorter usernames matter less since the domain itself signals professionalism — focus on readability rather than uniqueness.
FAQ
what is the most professional email username format
firstname.lastname is the gold standard — readable, unambiguous, and expected in most business contexts. If that's taken, f.lastname or lastnamefirstname are strong fallbacks. Avoid random numbers and nicknames; they make the address look like an afterthought.
can I use this for a custom business domain email, not just Gmail
Yes. Enter your domain (e.g., yourbusiness.com) in the domain field and every suggestion displays as a complete address on that domain. It's an easy way to evaluate formats before you create the mailbox in Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, or your hosting panel.
does the generator work for hyphenated or compound last names
Yes — enter your last name exactly as you write it. For hyphenated names, try both smith-jones and smithjones separately to see which produces cleaner options, since some older email systems don't accept hyphens in usernames.