Email Extractor
Extract email addresses from any text or document snippet. Paste content, find all emails as a clean list, then copy results for outreach.
Enter your Texts
RESULT:
What this does
So you have a wall of text with email addresses buried in it, and pulling them out by hand would be a chore. This does it for you. Paste the text, and the tool sweeps through it and hands back every email address it finds as a tidy list you can copy in one go. Think of it as a magnet you wave over a page to collect the addresses.
How to use it
- Paste your text into the box on the left.
- Press Get Emails, and the addresses appear in the panel on the right.
- Hit Copy to grab the whole list, or Clear to empty everything and go again.
The extraction runs in your browser and is not uploaded to EonTools. For private contact lists or sensitive documents, still use your own judgment.
What it picks up
The tool looks for the familiar shape of an email address: a name, the @ sign, a domain, and an ending like .com or .org. So [email protected] gets picked up cleanly. It handles the trimmings too, like dots in the name and the plus sign people use for tagged addresses, so something like [email protected] is caught as well. If an address follows that ordinary pattern, it will land in your list.
Good to know
A couple of honest points so the results do not surprise you. The tool lists every match it finds, and it does not weed out repeats, so if the same address shows up five times in your text, you will see it five times in the list. A quick pass to remove duplicates afterwards is worth it if you are building a clean set.
It also matches the pattern of an address rather than checking that the inbox is real. A found address looks valid, but the tool cannot tell you whether it is active or whether mail to it would actually arrive. And because it is built around the standard style of address, unusual international ones that use accented characters or non-Latin scripts may slip past it.
Using the results responsibly
Quick word on this, because it matters. Pulling addresses out of text is genuinely useful for tidying up your own contacts, gathering replies from a thread, or cleaning an export. It is not a licence to email strangers. Anti-spam rules and plain good manners mean you should only write to people who have agreed to hear from you. Use this to organise contacts you have a reason to reach, not to build a cold list, and you will stay on the right side of both the law and the people you are messaging.
Questions people ask
Does it remove duplicate addresses?
No, it shows every match, repeats included. If you need a unique list, trim the duplicates once you have copied the results out.
Does it check that the addresses are real?
No. It recognises the shape of an address but cannot confirm the inbox exists or accepts mail. Treat the list as found, not verified.
Will it find absolutely every email in my text?
It catches addresses in the standard format reliably. Unusual ones with accented or non-Latin characters can be missed, so skim the source if you suspect there are oddities.
Is my pasted text sent anywhere?
No. The whole thing happens in your browser, so nothing you paste leaves your device.
Sarayu is an Assistant Lecturer at Herald College, currently studying Masters of Engineering at KU. She is a Software engineer and educator who enjoys writing, and publishes essays and articles. She helps to review word/text utilities for clarity and usability.