Lasting Longer

Premature ejaculation, in plain terms.

What it is, what is generally known about it, and what kinds of things doctors might discuss with you. We are not your doctor and this page is not a treatment plan.

Published 2026-05-01Last reviewed 2026-05-048 min read

Premature ejaculation, or PE, is the medical term for finishing faster than you want to, on most occasions, in a way that bothers you. It is one of the most common things men ask doctors about.

This page covers what is generally known. The detail on home practice methods like start-stop and pelvic-floor exercises lives on their own pages. For anything beyond home practice, talk to a clinician.

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5.4 min

Median time from start of sex to finishing across nine countries (Waldinger, 2005)
Common
Many men report finishing faster than they would like at some point in life
Discuss
Several treatments exist. Whether any is right for you is a doctor’s call.

Sources listed at the bottom. Click a number to read the source.

What counts as PE

The standard medical definition has three parts. You finish in under a minute of penetration on most occasions. You feel like you cannot delay it. And it bothers you or your partner.

If only one or two of those are true, you are usually outside the strict clinical line. That does not mean you cannot work on lasting longer. It does mean the picture is less serious than it can sound. The how-long-should-sex-last page covers the actual numbers.

Two main types

Doctors split PE into two patterns. They have different paths and the right path for you is something to figure out with a clinician.

01

Lifelong PE

Quick finishing has been your pattern since your first partnered experiences. Different research papers describe different approaches. Talk to a urologist about what fits your situation.

02

Acquired PE

Quick finishing started suddenly after years of normal control. There is usually a specific cause: stress, a relationship change, a new medication, or a medical issue. Finding the cause often resolves the problem. Start with a doctor visit.

03

Mixed

Some men have features of both. The right path depends on what is driving it. A urologist or sex therapist can help sort it out.

04

Outside the clinical line

If you finish at 3 to 5 minutes and just want longer, you are in the normal range. The home practice methods on this site can still help. You do not have a clinical condition.

What the research describes

What we know from research

Behavioral practice methods like stop-start and pelvic-floor training have been studied for decades. Waldinger 2005 measured median lasting time at about 5.4 minutes across nine countries, which is the most-cited reference number. Anything beyond home practice (medication, clinical evaluation) is a doctor’s call, not a website’s.

Where to start

Practice options first, professional help second. Talk to a doctor if home practice does not move the needle.

01

Home practice methods

Stop-start, pelvic-floor exercises, the squeeze technique. Each has its own page on this site. Free, takes 8 to 12 weeks, low risk.

02

Talk to a urologist

If home practice is not enough, or if PE is recent and severe, see a urologist. They can rule out medical causes and discuss whatever options fit your situation.

03

See a sex therapist

Some PE has anxiety or relationship roots. A few sessions with someone trained specifically in this can do a lot. AASECT-certified is the standard credential.

04

Discuss medication only with a doctor

Several prescription options exist for PE. They are not over-the-counter. Whether any is right for you is a clinical conversation, not something to figure out from a website.

Common questions

Will this go away on its own?
Acquired PE sometimes does, especially if the trigger goes away. Lifelong PE rarely resolves on its own without practice or treatment.
Is PE a sign of something serious?
Most of the time, no. Sudden new PE can occasionally come along with another medical issue. That is one reason a doctor visit is worth it if it is recent and severe.
Can stress cause PE?
Yes. Anxiety, work stress, relationship stress, and performance pressure are all common contributors, especially for acquired PE. Therapy, exercise, and addressing the source of stress all help.
Should I tell my partner?
You do not have to disclose home practice. If PE is affecting your relationship, the conversation is usually worth having. Both partners working on it together tends to go better than alone.

Sources

  1. Waldinger MD et al. A multinational population survey of intravaginal ejaculation latency time. J Sex Med, 2005.
  2. American Urological Association resources on premature ejaculation.
  3. AASECT directory of certified sex therapists.