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How to Choose Lube: Water vs Silicone vs Oil

Lube is the single most underrated upgrade in the bedroom — and the wrong one can quietly ruin a good night. The good news: there are really only three families to know, and one simple rule that keeps your toys happy. Here’s how to pick with confidence.

Water-based: the everyday all-rounder

If you buy one lube, buy this. Water-based is safe with every toy material and with condoms, feels natural, and rinses off easily with no residue. It can dry out a little over a long session, but a splash of water or a reapply brings it right back. For most people, most of the time, this is the answer.

Silicone-based: long-lasting and in-water

Silicone lube is silky, lasts far longer without reapplying, and works in the shower or bath (where water-based rinses away). It’s wonderful for unhurried play — with one important exception in the next section.

Oil-based and massage oils: skin only

Oils feel gorgeous for hands-on massage, but they’re for skin and hands only. Oil breaks down latex condoms and can degrade some toy materials, so keep it away from both. Think of it as a sensual add-on, not a toy lube.

The one rule: silicone lube + silicone toys don’t mix

This is the rule worth remembering: silicone lube can slowly degrade silicone toys. So pair silicone toys with water-based lube — or, if you love silicone lube, use a condom over the toy as a barrier. Glass and stainless-steel toys are the exception: they’re compatible with any lube.

Sensitive skin and ingredients

If you’re prone to irritation, patch-test a new formula first, and look for simpler ingredient lists. Some people are sensitive to certain additives, so “fewer ingredients” is often the gentler choice. And flavoured or warming formulas are generally designed for external play — check the label before internal use.

Questions, answered

Which lube is safe with my toys?

Water-based, always — it’s compatible with every material. Silicone and oil can degrade silicone toys and latex, so save those for glass/steel toys or skin-only.

What’s best for anal play?

A thick, long-lasting water-based lube. This area doesn’t self-lubricate, so use plenty and reapply often.

Can I just use lotion or coconut oil?

Better not — lotions can contain irritants, and oils break down latex condoms and some toys. A purpose-made body-safe lube is worth it.

Are flavoured lubes safe internally?

Only if the label says so. Many flavoured and warming products are designed for external or oral play — always check, and patch-test if you’re sensitive.

Beginner-friendly picks

Where to go next

This article is general educational information, not medical advice. Everyone's body is different — if you have pain, a health condition, or specific concerns, please talk to a qualified healthcare provider.

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