Training arousal control, using desensitizing aids, and pacing with a partner can extend ejaculation time during sex.
Ejaculation timing varies from person to person. If climax arrives sooner than you want, you can build control. This guide gives clear steps, tools, and practice plans that many couples use to last longer and feel closer.
Ways To Last Longer During Sex — Practical Steps
Start with habits you can try today. These require no prescription. They teach your body to recognize early signs and steer arousal more steadily.
Stop–Start Basics
Stimulate until you feel close. Stop all motion. Breathe slowly through the nose for 20–30 seconds. When the urge settles, resume. Repeat two or three cycles before letting orgasm happen. Use solo practice first, then bring the skill into partnered sex.
Squeeze Method
When you reach the point of no return, place the thumb on the underside of the glans and the index and middle fingers on top. Press for 10–15 seconds, release, and wait until the urge fades. This resets the surge and buys time.
Condoms For Less Sensation
Regular condoms lower penile sensitivity a bit, which can extend time. Thicker latex or textured options can dampen stimulation more. Pair with plenty of lube to keep friction low and comfort high.
Topical Numbing Aids
Lidocaine or lidocaine–prilocaine creams and sprays blunt surface sensation. Apply a thin layer to the glans and shaft 10–15 minutes before sex. Wipe off residue and use a condom to prevent transfer to a partner.
Pelvic Floor Strength
Strong pelvic muscles help you modulate rhythm and hold back at high arousal. Use this simple routine: tighten the muscles you use to stop urine, hold for 3 seconds, relax for 3 seconds, 10 reps, three times daily. Build to 10-second holds and quick pulses.
Breathing And Pace
Match thrusts with calm breathing. Slow the tempo when arousal spikes. Switch to shallower strokes or focus on other kinds of touch. Small breaks keep you inside a controllable zone.
Mindset And Feedback
Pressure kills control. Aim for curious practice. Agree on a light signal with your partner to pause or change motion. Celebrate small gains, such as adding 30 seconds this week.
Method Cheat Sheet
The table below condenses the most used tools and how to test them.
| Method | What It Does | How To Try |
|---|---|---|
| Stop–Start | Teaches early-urge control | Stimulate, stop 20–30s, repeat 2–3x, then finish |
| Squeeze | Short pause via pressure | Pinch glans 10–15s at peak urge, resume |
| Condom Choice | Reduces sensation | Use thicker or textured; add ample lube |
| Topical Cream/Spray | Numbs surface nerves | Apply thin coat; wait, wipe; use condom |
| Pelvic Exercises | Improves muscular control | 3 sets daily; holds and quick squeezes |
| Tempo Changes | Lowers arousal spikes | Slow strokes; add breaks; vary positions |
When A Medical Plan Helps
Many men gain control with the steps above. If distress persists or you climax within one to three minutes often, a clinician can add targeted tools. Two evidence-based options are topical anesthetics and serotonin-based medicines. A joint guideline from leading urology groups lays out these choices and safety notes; see the AUA/SMSNA guideline.
Topicals: How To Use Them Well
Over-the-counter lidocaine-based products can extend time without systemic effects. Apply sparingly. Follow the label. Wait until the mild numbness begins, then remove excess. Barrier methods reduce transfer and keep a partner comfortable. Avoid broken skin. If you or your partner feel numb beyond comfort, use less next time.
Medicines That Delay Climax
Some antidepressants slow ejaculation as a side effect. Clinicians often use daily paroxetine, sertraline, or clomipramine, or on-demand dosing such as two to three hours before sex. In several countries, dapoxetine is a short-acting option taken before sex. In the United States, no drug holds specific approval for this use, so care is off-label and requires a conversation about risks and benefits.
Fit The Plan To The Cause
When erection issues, pain, or relationship strain show up, address them first. Alcohol overuse, certain drugs, and performance pressure can shorten latency. Screening and a simple blood panel can uncover thyroid, testosterone, or prostatitis concerns that change the plan.
Practice Program For Better Control
This four-week plan blends arousal training, pelvic work, and partner pacing. Adjust to your needs.
Week 1: Solo Awareness
Practice stop–start during masturbation three times weekly. Track urges from 1 to 10. Aim to hover near 7, then drop to 4 with breath and stillness. Add one daily set of pelvic holds.
Week 2: Add The Squeeze
Keep stop–start. When a surge arrives, use the squeeze for one cycle. Note how many seconds it takes to settle. Add quick pelvic pulses: 10 fast squeezes, rest, 10 more.
Week 3: Bring In A Partner
Use oral or manual touch first. Pause at a pre-agreed signal. Shift attention to kissing or bodies pressed together to lower the wave. Try a snug condom. Slow thrusts and shallow depth during penetration.
Week 4: Extend Stamina
Stack skills: stop–start, breath, tempo changes, and pelvic tension-release. Add a topical cream on one session this week and compare timing. Keep notes to see what gives the best control with the least trade-offs.
Safety And Sexual Health
Condoms reduce pregnancy risk and cut STI transmission. That protection matters while you test sprays or creams and while you learn new pacing. See the WHO condom fact sheet for correct use and care tips.
Communication That Lowers Pressure
Agree on a simple script: “pause,” “slower,” “change.” Take turns leading. Share a goal for the session that is not tied to penetration alone, such as hands-only or mutual massage. This keeps connection strong while you retrain arousal patterns.
Measure Progress With IELT
Intravaginal ejaculatory latency time (IELT) tracks minutes from penetration to climax. Many men with lifelong rapid timing sit near one minute; acquired cases often land under three. Timing sessions for a month shows real change and guides next steps.
Second Table: Medicated And Device Aids
Use this snapshot to compare options you might add with a clinician.
| Option | How It Works | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Lidocaine Spray/Cream | Local nerve dampening | Apply, wait, wipe; condom to avoid transfer |
| Paroxetine/Sertraline | Serotonin reuptake block | Daily or timed dosing; off-label in the U.S. |
| Dapoxetine | Short-acting SSRI | On-demand in some countries |
| Clomipramine | Serotonergic TCA | Daily or on-demand; discuss side effects |
| Thicker Condom | Sensation reduction | Pair with water-based lube |
| Vibrating Ring | Shifts focus of sensation | Choose low settings to avoid overload |
Position And Motion Tweaks
Shallower angles lower stimulation to the glans. Positions with more control, such as partner-on-top or side-lying, make it easier to pause and reset. Gentle circles or stop-and-rock patterns help you stay below peak.
Lube Choices
Friction ramps arousal. A slick, water-based lube reduces heat and drag. Reapply mid-session as needed. Oil products can weaken latex; pick latex-safe formulas unless using non-latex barriers.
When Anxiety Shows Up
Racing thoughts feed urgency. Ground with a 4-6 breath pattern: inhale four counts, exhale six. Relax the jaw and shoulders. If worry loops persist, short-term sex therapy can blend skills practice with stress tools and often pairs well with the plan above.
Lifestyle Factors That Help Timing
Body state affects arousal thresholds. Small shifts add up. Aim for steady sleep, regular movement, and less stimulant load before intimacy.
Sleep And Recovery
Short nights raise baseline stress and make urges spike. A simple target of 7–9 hours sets a calmer platform for arousal control. Naps help on rough weeks.
Exercise And Blood Flow
Two or three brisk sessions per week improve mood, circulation, and body awareness. Add one strength day that includes core and hips. Many men notice better rhythm and confidence in bed after a month of steady activity.
Alcohol And Stimulants
Heavy drinking can dull sensation yet make control erratic. Caffeine late in the day can make nerves jumpy. Keep both in a moderate range when you plan a longer session.
Porn And Arousal Patterns
Fast, high-intensity viewing trains quick peaks. Slowing scrolls or taking short breaks from porn can reset sensitivity. Pair that with the stop–start routine to reinforce new timing.
When To Seek Care
Reach out to a clinician if rapid timing causes ongoing distress, if pain or bleeding occurs, or if erection changes appear. A urologist, family doctor, or sex therapist can tailor the mix of exercises, topicals, and medicines and screen for medical causes. Treatment pathways and dose ranges in major references align with national guidance and urology society consensus.
Quick Troubleshooting
If Numbing Is Too Strong
Use less product, wait longer before sex, and wipe thoroughly. Try a different strength next time.
If You Lose Erection With A Thick Condom
Switch to a snugger fit, add more lube, and slow the thrust rhythm. A thin condom with topical cream can balance sensation.
If Stop–Start Feels Awkward
Practice solo first. Add a playful pause cue with your partner. Shorten the stop to 10–15 seconds and repeat more cycles.
What Real Progress Looks Like
Most men see gains in two to four weeks when they practice a few times weekly. Wins include longer IELT, fewer rushed orgasms, and a calmer, steadier feel during penetration. Keep the tools that fit your body and your relationship, and adjust the mix as you learn what works. Stay patient and keep practice sessions short and regular weekly.