Guides

Kegels, for men.

A short, daily exercise that helps with lasting longer, erection quality, and orgasm strength.

Published 2026-05-01Last reviewed 2026-05-045 min read

Kegels train a small group of muscles between your legs. Those muscles play a role in finishing during sex, in erection quality, and in orgasm strength. The detailed pelvic-floor page goes deeper.

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10 min
Per session, three times a week
8 to 12
Weeks is the typical timeline to see clear change
Strong

Research base for both lasting time and erection quality

Click a stat to read the source.

Where the muscle is

The muscle you would use to stop urine mid-stream is your pelvic floor. Use that once to feel where the muscle is.

The goal is to squeeze it without using your butt, abs, or thighs.

12-week program

Three sessions a week.

01

Weeks 1 to 3

Three sets of 10 squeezes. Hold each for 3 seconds. Rest 5 seconds between.

02

Weeks 4 to 8

Three sets of 10 squeezes, hold each for 5 seconds. Add 5 quick squeezes at the end.

03

Weeks 9 to 12

During partnered sex, contract the muscle when arousal hits 7.

04

After week 12

Two sessions a week is enough to maintain.

What the research describes

What we know from research

Research consistently finds that pelvic-floor training helps men with premature ejaculation after 8 to 12 weeks of consistent practice.

Common mistakes

If you are not seeing change, one of these is usually why.

01

Squeezing the wrong muscle

If your butt, abs, or thighs are clenching, you are not working the pelvic floor.

02

Not enough rest

These muscles tire fast.

03

Doing too many

Overtraining can make the floor too tight.

04

Stopping at week 3

The change usually arrives between week 4 and 8.

Common questions

Is this the same as kegels?
Yes. Same exercise, same idea.
Can I do too many?
Yes. Stop and see a pelvic-floor PT if you have pelvic pain after starting.
Will it help with erections?
Often, yes.
How do I know I am doing it right?
A single visit to a pelvic-floor physical therapist confirms it.

Sources

  1. Pastore AL et al. Pelvic floor muscle rehabilitation. Therapeutic Adv Urol, 2014.