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How Do I Talk to My Partner About Trying a Prostate Toy?
At a Glance
- Why it feels hard: Prostate stimulation carries more stigma than it deserves. The actual conversation usually goes better than people expect.
- When to bring it up: Outside the bedroom, when you're both relaxed. Not right before or during sex.
- How to frame it: Share your curiosity as an invitation, not a request. Let your partner ask questions.
- If they say no: That's a valid answer. A no given freely is healthier than a yes given under pressure.
- What helps: Explore together if they're open to it. Let your partner get comfortable at their own pace.
Bringing up a prostate massager with your partner takes some nerve. Not because there's anything wrong with wanting to try it–prostate stimulation is backed by real physiology, prostate orgasms are well-documented, and a lot of people are curious about this kind of pleasure. The hesitation is almost always about the conversation itself, not the idea.
Here's what's worth knowing: it usually goes better than you've been imagining. And having the conversation at all, regardless of how your partner responds, tends to do something good for the relationship.
Pick the Right Moment
Bringing up something new during or right before sex puts pressure on both of you. Your partner is more likely to feel put on the spot, and you're more likely to read hesitation as rejection when it isn't.
Bring it up when you're both relaxed, and there's no agenda. A walk, cooking together, watching something. Somewhere low-stakes. You don't need a full pitch.
Something like:
"Hey, I've been curious about something. Would you be open to talking about it?"
Still, it's worth flagging that you're about to bring up something sex-related; some people prefer a heads-up rather than having it surface out of nowhere.

Lead with Curiosity
How you frame it matters. "I want to try this" lands differently from "I've been curious about this." One sounds like a decision already made, while the other sounds like an invitation to think together.
Your partner doesn't need to immediately agree. They might not agree at all, and that's okay, too. Leave the door open–let them respond however they respond. Your job in this moment is to share what's on your mind, not to land on any particular answer.
Make It About Connection
A lot of people receive this kind of conversation better when it includes them. Prostate stimulation can be solo or partnered, but framing it as something you might explore together (if they're interested) shifts the tone from "I want something" to "we could try something."
"I thought it could be fun to talk about. I'd rather ask than just wonder."
This isn't spin–external prostate massage is something a partner can be involved in without much learning curve, if that's what you both want. Many couples find that conversations like this one–ones about desire, curiosity, what each person actually wants–do more for their sex life than any toy by itself.
What to Do If They're Hesitant
Give them room. Asking questions, going quiet, or saying "I'm not sure" isn't a no. It's someone who needs time with something unfamiliar.
Don't push. Don't over-explain. Don't present statistics about prostate orgasms as a counter-argument. Let the conversation breathe and come back to it later if needed.
And if they say no, that's a valid answer. A no given freely is healthier than a yes given under pressure, and worth more, too. The relationship is bigger than any single thing you want to try. Removing the pressure is the most useful thing you can do, both for this conversation and for the relationship in general.
Hesitation often comes from unfamiliarity rather than genuine discomfort. A lot of people simply haven't thought much about prostate stimulation before. That's not resistance to you. It's just an unfamiliar topic.
Offer to Explore Together
If your partner is curious but unsure, suggest learning about it together. Read about how prostate stimulation actually works. There's a lot of misinformation out there, and getting to the basics tends to reduce uncertainty.
That kind of context helps. A lot of partners become more comfortable once the conversation moves from abstract to practical.

The Bottom Line
Wanting to explore prostate pleasure is normal. Feeling a little nervous about bringing it up is also normal. Both can be true at once.
The best version of this conversation is relaxed, honest, and low-pressure. You share what you're curious about. Your partner gets to respond on their own terms. Whatever they say, you're better off for having had it.
If you're both ready to take the next step, GIDDI's award-winning prostate massagers are built with medical-grade silicone and hands-free operation that works for solo or partnered play.