What are professional email address examples for brands?

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One brand lists contact@yourbrand.com on its website. Another lists jsmith1987@yourbrand.com. Both use a custom domain, but only one looks like a business that expects customer mail. The prefix before the @ makes that difference.

Professional email address examples for brands follow predictable patterns. Customers know what hello@ or support@ means before they open the message. Here are the prefixes that work and how to pick the right ones for your brand.

Common professional email address examples

Most brands start with a small set of general-purpose addresses. These cover the majority of customer and partner interactions without overcomplicating your setup.

1. General contact addresses

hello@yourbrand.com, contact@yourbrand.com, and info@yourbrand.com are the most widely used. They tell people exactly where to reach you without guessing a person's name.

2. Department or function addresses

sales@yourbrand.com, support@yourbrand.com, and billing@yourbrand.com route messages to the right team. Customers know which address to use based on their question.

3. Named addresses for key people

firstname@yourbrand.com or firstname.lastname@yourbrand.com works for founders and account managers who build direct relationships. Use these alongside general addresses, not instead of them.

Examples by business type

A freelance designer might use hello@ and projects@. A small shop might add orders@ and returns@. A service business might use bookings@ and quotes@. The pattern stays the same: short, clear, and easy to remember.

Avoid clever or confusing prefixes. Addresses like theboss@ or emailme@ look unprofessional and make your brand harder to reach. Keep prefixes simple and functional.

Write your chosen addresses on a sticky note or in a shared doc before you create them. Seeing the full list together helps you spot duplicates, confusing overlaps, or prefixes that do not match how customers think about your brand.

What makes an example professional

A professional email address example has two traits. The domain matches your brand. The prefix tells people what to expect when they write to you. Both parts work together to build trust.

For guidance on picking the right prefix, read the chapter on how to choose the right email prefix for your brand. To see why consistency matters across your brand, see email consistency across your brand.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best professional email address for a new brand?

Should I use my personal name or a generic prefix?

Can I use numbers in a professional email address?

How many example addresses should a small brand start with?

Do professional email examples differ for B2B and B2C brands?

Can WEMASY help me set up standard business email addresses?