And just like that, the encrypted letters kept flowing — faster, safer, and straight from the Windows taskbar. Proton Mail doesn't have an official Windows desktop app yet — but you can use their Proton Mail desktop app via Proton Bridge + an email client (like Outlook or Thunderbird), or simply access it through a browser. They recently released a beta desktop app for some users, so a full Windows version may come soon.

She woke up to an email. Not a dream. "Proton Mail desktop app now available for Windows — beta access granted." Elena downloaded the .exe, installed it in seconds, and logged in. There it was: end-to-end encryption, offline support, and a sleek interface that felt like it belonged. She composed her first message from the new app — to her whistleblower contact in Oslo.

Elena stared at her Windows desktop, the rain tapping softly against her Berlin apartment window. Her old ProtonMail tab was still open — but the web interface felt slow, cluttered with bookmarks and extensions.

"I wish there was a real Windows app," she muttered.

Two days later, her contact replied: "App works perfectly. Even my tech-paranoid cat couldn't intercept this one."

"Finally," she whispered. "Security without the hassle."

That night, she dreamed of a clean, dark-themed application: . No browser tabs. Native notifications. Offline drafts that synced the moment Wi-Fi returned. It even had a system tray icon — a locked envelope that turned green when a new encrypted message arrived.

Protonmail For - Windows

And just like that, the encrypted letters kept flowing — faster, safer, and straight from the Windows taskbar. Proton Mail doesn't have an official Windows desktop app yet — but you can use their Proton Mail desktop app via Proton Bridge + an email client (like Outlook or Thunderbird), or simply access it through a browser. They recently released a beta desktop app for some users, so a full Windows version may come soon.

She woke up to an email. Not a dream. "Proton Mail desktop app now available for Windows — beta access granted." Elena downloaded the .exe, installed it in seconds, and logged in. There it was: end-to-end encryption, offline support, and a sleek interface that felt like it belonged. She composed her first message from the new app — to her whistleblower contact in Oslo. protonmail for windows

Elena stared at her Windows desktop, the rain tapping softly against her Berlin apartment window. Her old ProtonMail tab was still open — but the web interface felt slow, cluttered with bookmarks and extensions. And just like that, the encrypted letters kept

"I wish there was a real Windows app," she muttered. She woke up to an email

Two days later, her contact replied: "App works perfectly. Even my tech-paranoid cat couldn't intercept this one."

"Finally," she whispered. "Security without the hassle."

That night, she dreamed of a clean, dark-themed application: . No browser tabs. Native notifications. Offline drafts that synced the moment Wi-Fi returned. It even had a system tray icon — a locked envelope that turned green when a new encrypted message arrived.