Pillar · Lasting Longer

Lasting longer.

If you finish faster than you’d like, you’re not alone. This is the LoveQuarters guide to lasting longer in bed. We cover what is generally known and where to start. We are not your doctor.

Published 2026-05-01Last reviewed 2026-05-0410 min read

Most men want to last longer than they do. That is normal. Lasting longer is mostly a skill you can learn at home, with practice.

This page is the starting line. We link out to the practice methods plus a guide on what is actually normal so you know if you have a problem at all.

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5.4 min

Median time from start of sex to finishing across countries (Waldinger 2005)
Common
Many men report finishing faster than they would like at some point
8 to 12
Weeks is the typical timeline for home practice to make a noticeable change

Click a stat to read the source. All sources at the bottom.

What lasting longer really means

The clinical word for finishing too fast is premature ejaculation. The standard cutoff is finishing in under a minute of penetration on most occasions, when you do not want to.

Most men aren’t there. Most men just want a few extra minutes. The path is mostly the same: learn to notice your arousal level, and learn to back off when you get close to the edge.

Before you train, ask four questions

Different patterns need different approaches.

01

Has this been true your whole life, or did it start recently?

Sudden onset usually has a clear cause that a doctor can identify. Lifelong pattern often responds to home practice.

02

How long are you actually lasting?

Use a timer for a few sessions. The how-long-should-sex-last page covers what is normal.

03

Where in the act are you finishing?

First contact, mid-thrust, or close to finishing? Each pattern points to a different practice approach.

04

Solo versus partnered: any difference?

If you last much longer solo than with a partner, the issue is mostly mental, not physical.

What the research describes

What we know from research

Waldinger 2005 measured the actual time across countries. The median was 5.4 minutes. The number people imagine is often much higher than the real number.

Where to start

Each has its own page. Read in order if you are new to this.

01

Stop-start method

The oldest behavioral practice. Read more →

02

Squeeze technique

A physical brake to add to stop-start. Read more →

03

Pelvic floor (kegels)

Trains the muscles that play a role in finishing. Read more →

04

What’s actually normal

The page on how long sex should last.

Common questions

How long does it take to see results from training?
Most men who train consistently see some change in 4 to 6 weeks. Bigger gains usually arrive between weeks 8 and 12. If nothing has changed after 12 weeks of real practice, it is worth talking to a doctor.
Is medication an option?
Several prescription options exist. Whether any is right for you is a doctor’s call, not a website’s. Talk to a urologist.
Will my partner notice if I’m training?
Most early training is solo. Partnered training comes later, and you can do it without explaining.
What if nothing helps?
It is worth seeing a urologist or sex therapist. Sometimes there is a medical cause that home practice cannot fix.

Sources

  1. Waldinger MD et al. A multinational population survey of intravaginal ejaculation latency time. J Sex Med, 2005.
  2. American Urological Association resources.