Just don’t leave your old ISP. If they allow it, figure out the minimum payment plan that they might offer in order to keep your email account active. Make sure that they allow it to be accessed from your new location and you’re set. As I mentioned, the down side is that not all ISPs will allow someone out of their service area to maintain an account and you may end up paying for two ISPs: your new one to get your connection to the internet and your old one to keep your old email account alive. Ick. Bite the bullet and change, but let’s do it in so you only need to change it once.
Option one: buy your own domain. This is really the only way to ensure that you never need to change your email address again. Go to a domain registrar (I’m partial to Simple. URL and then find and purchase an available domain name. Yes, most of the “cool” names are taken, but there are still many options.
Your last name might be available or perhaps a variation of your last name: in my case, perhaps something like The. Notenbooms. com would make for a great email domain name. This is a fine time to get creative, within reason. Remember, you’ll be telling all of your contacts to use this domain for your email from now on.
OK, that's reasonable. But Comcast was hacked recently, their mail servers were compromised.
I’ll use Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name.
Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name. com as an example of your email address. When you register your domain name, you’ll typically be given the option of choosing email services to be provided along with it, perhaps at an extra cost: Nothing. You’ll need to set up DNS and arrange for whatever email processing that you want to have happen elsewhere. Forwarding. In this case, you define an email address (you@Your.
Very. Own. Domain. Name. com) and indicate that all of the email that is sent to it should be forwarded to another email address.
You could have it sent to your new email address at your new ISP or you could have it forwarded to one of the free email services. It actually doesn’t matter that much; if you ever want to change your ISP or free email service, you simply come back to your domain registration and change the email address that you@Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name. com is forwarded to; no one else has to know or care. Hosting. This is typically an extra cost option; with email hosting, your registrar actually provides the email server and services that you would use to send and receive your email, much like your ISP has in the past. Of course, the difference is that it doesn’t matter who your ISP is.
You access your email on your domain directly from the registrar’s servers. Which approach is appropriate for you will vary based on your own needs and desires. If I was forced to make a blanket recommendation, I’d say: get a Gmail account and use the second option to forward your you@Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name. com email to your Gmail account.
Configure Gmail to send as you@Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name. com and then use Gmail as your email interface. If you ever need to change your Gmail account or change from Gmail to another provider, you’d simply change the email address that you@Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name. com is being forwarded to.
Regardless of how you do it, you@Your. Very. Own. Domain. Name. com is now your email address for as long as you choose to own the domain. It’ll be yours no matter what ISP you use or what email service you might choose to forward it to. Option two: use an ISP- independent email service. If changing ISPs is what causes your email address to change, then one obvious alternative is to choose an email service that’s not related to your ISP.
Like one of the free email services, such as Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo, or others. And yes, that’s a fine approach with one huge “gotcha”. What if you need to change that account?
What if your email account is hacked and cannot be recovered? What if the service becomes unreliable to the point you can’t use it? What if you get mistakenly booted?