COMPANY · AMAZON
Amazon Email Format
Amazon uses the userid@amazon.com format. Example: schen@amazon.com. Below: alternates, hiring-domain context, and a free generator to build candidate addresses against amazon.com.
Format pattern, examples, and an address generator tuned for amazon.com.
Primary format
userid@amazon.com
Example
schen@amazon.com
Alternates seen in the wild
- · first.last@amazon.com (less common, post-2020 hires)
- · first.last@aws.com (AWS division)
How Amazon email is structured
Amazon famously uses login-style userid emails — typically initial + last name + occasional digits (e.g., schen, schen2). Not first.last like most enterprises.
Hiring and recruiter domains
Amazon recruiters use @amazon.com for personal but candidates also receive @amazon.jobs and @hire.amazon.com for ATS.
Use a generator to build candidates
If you have a name and need the most likely Amazon address, run it through the professional email address generator with amazon.com as the custom domain. Verify the top candidates with any standard email-verification service before sending in volume — guessing right doesn't guarantee delivery.
Why format guessing works
Most large companies pick one convention and apply it consistently. Knowing one employee's address gives you every other employee's — the unlocking signal is the pattern, not the person. See the long-form piece on email formats for the six patterns that cover 95% of professional inboxes.
Other company formats
Frequently asked questions
Everything people ask before using the tool.