The female orgasm.
Most women come reliably alone but not reliably with a partner. The gap is technique and time, not biology.
Most women come reliably during solo sex. Many do not come reliably during partnered sex. The gap is real and well-documented.
It is also fixable.
Sources at the bottom.
What female orgasm is
Physically, an orgasm is a series of rhythmic contractions of the pelvic-floor muscles, with shifts in heart rate, breathing, and blood flow. The same kind of event in solo and partnered sex.
The orgasm gap is not biology. The same body capable of solo orgasm is capable of partnered orgasm given the right conditions.
Four conditions that close the gap
These show up over and over in research.
Direct clitoral stimulation
Solo sex includes this. Partnered sex often does not. Adding it is the biggest single change.
Enough time
Solo orgasm often takes 10 minutes. Partnered with full clitoral attention often takes 15 to 25.
Low pressure
Performance pressure measurably impairs arousal.
What we know from research
Herbenick 2018 found that orgasm rates went up sharply when direct clitoral stimulation, longer foreplay, and explicit communication were present.
If you are not coming with a partner
If you come reliably alone but not with a partner, the gap is procedural.
Add direct clitoral stimulation
Vibrator, oral, manual, or position-based. The biggest single change.
Plan for 25 minutes
Treat 25 minutes as the floor for partnered sessions, not the ceiling.
Talk explicitly about what works
Once a week, 90 seconds, post-sex.
Take the pressure off
Decouple partnered orgasm from partnered satisfaction.