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Independently verified · Quarterly re-audit
EU VETTED
Category 03 of 22

Private email

In short

Private email services are hosted email providers that prioritise data minimisation, strong encryption, and hosting outside US CLOUD Act jurisdiction. The key EU decision criterion is the operator's country of incorporation and whether end-to-end encryption is applied at rest. Top-rated options on EU Vetted include Mailbox.org (Germany, 5/5), Tuta (Germany, 5/5), Posteo (Germany, 5/5), and Proton Mail (Switzerland, 5/5).

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the best EU-hosted private email service?
On EU Vetted's editorial compliance score, Mailbox.org (Germany), Tuta (Germany), and Posteo (Germany) are the top-rated EU-owned and EU-hosted options, all reaching 5/5. Proton Mail (Switzerland, 5/5) is the most widely used privacy email globally. The right choice depends on your priorities: Tuta and Proton Mail use end-to-end encryption by default; Mailbox.org and Posteo support full IMAP/SMTP with standard clients; Mailbox.org and Infomaniak Mail are the strongest business options.
Is there a GDPR-compliant email service?
Yes. EU-based providers with EU-only infrastructure and published DPAs qualify as GDPR-compliant in their processing role. Mailbox.org, Tuta, Posteo (all Germany), and Mailfence (Belgium) all publish detailed DPAs. Note that GDPR compliance covers the provider's data handling, not the content of emails you exchange with non-GDPR contacts — a compliance assessment should consider both.
Does email data fall under the US CLOUD Act?
If the email service is operated or ultimately controlled by a US-incorporated company, the CLOUD Act can in principle compel it to produce data it controls regardless of where servers are located. Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo Mail are US-owned services where this applies. EU-owned providers such as Mailbox.org (Germany), Tuta (Germany), Posteo (Germany), and Mailfence (Belgium) are not subject to that direct exposure. This is an assessment of corporate structure, not a claim about any specific legal request.
What is the difference between end-to-end encrypted email and standard email encryption?
Standard hosted email is encrypted in transit (TLS) but stored in a form the provider can access — meaning a court order, data breach, or insider access can expose message content. End-to-end encryption (E2EE), as used by Tuta and Proton Mail, encrypts messages on your device before sending; only the intended recipient can decrypt them. The limitation is that E2EE applies fully only when both sender and recipient use a compatible E2EE email service or exchange a PGP key; messages to Gmail or Outlook addresses are not end-to-end encrypted.
Can I use my own domain with a European private email service?
Yes. Mailbox.org, Tuta, Proton Mail, Mailfence, and Infomaniak Mail all support custom domain hosting. Posteo is the exception — it does not support custom domains by design, positioning itself as an anonymous personal email service. For business use where your company email domain must remain consistent, Mailbox.org and Infomaniak Mail are the most complete business-ready options.
Can businesses migrate from Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 to a European email service?
Yes, though the migration complexity depends on how deeply embedded Google or Microsoft calendaring and collaboration tools are. For email-only migration, Mailbox.org and Infomaniak Mail (kSuite) both support IMAP migration and ActiveSync for mobile. Tuta does not support IMAP, which means clients must use the Tuta app or web interface. For organisations with 10+ users, a parallel-running period of 4–6 weeks is typical before full cutover.
Is Proton Mail the same as a European email provider?
Proton Mail is incorporated in Switzerland, not in the EU. Switzerland has its own data-protection law (the revised Federal Act on Data Protection, revFADP) and is not subject to EU law directly, though it is considered adequate by the EU for data transfer purposes. Switzerland is outside the EU but broadly privacy-aligned; the legal environment differs from EU member states in some enforcement specifics. On EU Vetted, Proton Mail receives an 'other' ownership signal (not EU-owned) but reaches 5/5 on compliance score due to its Swiss-law base, no-log infrastructure, and zero-access encryption architecture.