Is There an Ideal Penis Size? What the Data Actually Says
There isn’t one. That’s the whole answer, but it’s a lousy place to stop. If you’ve ever typed “ideal penis size” into a search bar at 1am, you deserve more than a flat denial. So here’s the rest. We’ve got thousands of clinician measurements and a study that handed people 3D-printed models to see what partners actually reach for. Put those two side by side and the fog burns off. The “ideal” most men carry around is a number borrowed from porn, locker-room math, or a half-remembered stat. The ideal the evidence points to is startlingly ordinary. And it isn’t only about length.
What “average” actually means before we talk “ideal”
You can’t judge “ideal” without a baseline, and most baselines online are garbage. They’re self-reported, which means inflated, often by a lot. The only number worth trusting comes from Veale and colleagues (2015, BJU International): 15,521 men measured by clinicians, not by the men themselves. That one detail outweighs everything else on this page.
Here’s what that dataset found, erect:
- Average erect length: 13.12 cm (5.16 in)
- Average erect girth: 11.66 cm (4.59 in)
- Average flaccid length: 9.16 cm (3.6 in)
- Average stretched length: 13.24 cm (5.21 in)
So the typical erect penis runs a touch over five inches long and a touch under four and a half around. Lower than the figure in your head? That figure was probably reported by strangers with every incentive to round up. Our penis size statistics page lays out the full dataset if you want the receipts.
The percentile picture: where most men actually land
Averages hide the spread, and the spread is where the reassurance lives. Run the erect-length distribution and you get this:
| Percentile | Erect length |
|---|---|
| 5th | 10.4 cm (4.1 in) |
| 10th | 11.0 cm (4.3 in) |
| 25th | 12.0 cm (4.7 in) |
| 50th (median) | 13.1 cm (5.2 in) |
| 75th | 14.2 cm (5.6 in) |
| 90th | 15.2 cm (6.0 in) |
| 95th | 15.9 cm (6.2 in) |
| 99th | 17.0 cm (6.7 in) |
Roughly 90% of men land between 10.4 and 15.9 cm erect. Read that again. The entire crowd, from “noticeably below average” to “noticeably above,” packs into about two inches. Most men cluster tight around five and a quarter inches, and the gaps people lie awake over are often a centimeter or less.
In the inches people actually search for: four inches sits near the 4th percentile, five inches around the 40th, five and a half around the 70th, and six inches at roughly the 90th — one man in ten. Seven inches is rarer than 1 in 400. Eight inches is rarer than 1 in 10,000, which means it lives in fiction and on websites that are flat-out lying to you. Curious where you land? The calculator does the math in a second, and is 5 inches normal? tackles the single most-Googled version of this worry. If you want the odds in plain terms, how rare is my size spells them out.
Now the part everyone actually wants: what do partners prefer?
This is where “ideal” gets interesting, because preference can be measured instead of guessed at. Prause and colleagues (2015) handed women a set of 3D-printed penis models and told them to choose. Not describe. Choose, physically, holding the thing.
For a long-term partner, the average preference landed around 16.0 cm in length and 12.2 cm in girth. Hold that against the population averages — 13.12 cm length, 11.66 cm girth — and two things hit you.
First, the preferred size is above average, but barely. It sits roughly around the 90th percentile for length, not in some mythical stratosphere. The “ideal” isn’t enormous. It’s a modest step up from typical, the kind of gap that’s a rounding error in conversation.
Second, and this is the part that always gets buried: girth moved proportionally more than length. The length preference ran about 22% above the population average; the girth preference, about 5%. Yet in the model-picking task, girth carried at least as much weight as length in driving the choice. Women weren’t grabbing the longest model. They were grabbing the one that felt substantial in the hand, and circumference did much of that work. We dig into why in girth vs length.
The headline finding, though — the one that should outlive everything else here — is that most women in this and related research report being satisfied with their actual partner’s size. An “ideal” picked in a lab, in isolation, from a tray of silicone, is not the bar a real relationship gets graded against. Does size matter? is the honest, unflinching version of that conversation, and what women prefer gathers the rest of the evidence.
Why your measurement might be lying to you
Before you stack yourself against any of these numbers, make sure you’re measuring the same thing the researchers did. This trips up nearly everyone.
The Veale data — and essentially all serious research — uses bone-pressed measurement: the ruler pushed firmly against the pubic bone, compressing the fat pad in front of it. That’s bone-pressed erect length, or BPEL. Lay a ruler on top and measure from where the skin starts and you’ve taken a non-bone-pressed measurement (NBPEL), which reads about 1 to 2 cm shorter depending on the padding.
That gap is the single biggest reason men think they’re below average when they aren’t. They compare a casual NBPEL number against a research BPEL average and come up short on paper for no real reason. A heavier man can “lose” a full inch this way with nothing different about his anatomy. Girth, mercifully, doesn’t care — you measure around the shaft the same way regardless. The how to measure guide walks through doing it right, and our methodology page spells out which convention the numbers on this site follow.
Flaccid size, growers, and why “ideal” gets murkier
Flaccid length is the worst possible predictor of erect length, and it’s exactly what men quietly compare in changing rooms. A recipe for needless panic. Some men are “showers,” hanging long when soft and gaining little when erect. Others are “growers,” modest when flaccid and expanding dramatically. Both wind up in the same erect range. The flaccid average sits around 9.16 cm, and it tells you almost nothing about the erect number that actually matters. Flaccid vs erect and the grower vs shower tool cover the gap between the two states.
There’s also a real clinical threshold worth knowing, if only so you can stop fearing it. Micropenis is defined as a stretched length under roughly 9.3 cm, and it affects about 0.6% of men — roughly 1 in 170. It’s specific, it’s rare, and the overwhelming majority of men who fear they “might have” one simply don’t. What is a micropenis? lays out the actual definition.
So is there an ideal? Sort of — and you’re probably near it
Stack the evidence up and “ideal” stops looking like a target and starts looking like fog. Partner preference centers slightly above average, weights girth at least as heavily as length, and doesn’t curdle into dissatisfaction with real partners who fall short of the lab pick. The population is bunched so tight that 90% of men sit inside a two-inch band. And half the men convinced they’re small are just measuring with a different ruler convention than the studies they’re comparing against.
One practical takeaway: stop chasing length. The thing worth attention is fit, not maximization — which is partly about you and partly about logistics, like getting the right condom size so things stay comfortable and reliable. The numbers that ruin sex aren’t the ones on the ruler.
One more thing, plainly. Size is essentially fixed once puberty wraps up, somewhere around 17 to 19. It doesn’t creep up or down across your adult decades, and any chart promising a different average “by single year of adult age” is fabricated. There’s no real data behind those curves. If you’ve seen one, treat it like a horoscope. (More on that in average penis size by age.)
The honest answer to the title: “ideal” is mostly a myth — a number that shrinks the moment you measure it properly and look at what people actually prefer rather than what they brag about. The real ideal, if we have to name one, is “somewhere comfortably normal.” Statistically, that’s almost certainly you.
FAQ
What is the ideal penis size according to research? There isn’t a single ideal, but the closest thing comes from Prause et al. (2015), where women selecting 3D models preferred roughly 16.0 cm in length and 12.2 cm in girth for a long-term partner — slightly above the population average of 13.12 cm length and 11.66 cm girth. Girth mattered at least as much as length, and most women report being satisfied with their actual partner’s size regardless of these lab preferences.
Does girth or length matter more for an ideal size? The Prause model data suggests girth carries at least as much weight as length in partner preference — arguably more, since the girth women reached for was proportionally closer to the realistic range than the length they picked. Length tends to dominate men’s own anxiety, but it’s not where the evidence points. Girth vs length covers this in detail.
Is 6 inches a good or ideal size? Six inches erect (about 15.2 cm) sits around the 90th percentile — larger than roughly 9 in 10 men, and right in the neighborhood of the partner-preferred length from the model studies. By any reasonable reading of the data it’s well above average and comfortably within what people prefer. You can check any specific measurement against the full distribution with our calculator.