Medical Disclaimer
Best Sex Positions is an adult sexual education site. We share guides about sex positions, pleasure, intimacy, communication, touch, oral sex, and better ways for adults to explore together.
Our goal is to help adults learn, talk, and explore with more confidence. But our content is not medical advice. It is not a diagnosis, treatment plan, therapy, or a replacement for care from a qualified healthcare professional.
Not Medical Advice
The information on this site is for general education only. We write about bodies, pleasure, positions, rhythm, arousal, orgasm, toys, anal sex, oral sex, and sexual technique. Some of these topics may touch on health, anatomy, pain, pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections, erectile issues, pelvic floor concerns, trauma, or other sensitive areas.
Even when we mention research, expert sources, or sexual health ideas, the content is still general information. It is not personal medical advice for your body, your partner, or your relationship.
Every Body Is Different
No single position, angle, technique, toy, rhythm, or method works for everyone. What feels amazing for one person may feel uncomfortable, boring, too intense, or simply wrong for someone else.
Your body is allowed to have its own pace. Your partner’s body is allowed to have its own needs. Good sex is not about forcing a result. It is about listening, adjusting, and staying present with each other.
Consent Comes First
All sexual activity should be between adults who clearly and freely consent. Consent should be ongoing. That means either person can slow down, change their mind, ask for something different, or stop at any time.
Never pressure, shame, trick, or force anyone into a sexual act. If your partner seems unsure, uncomfortable, silent, tense, distracted, or withdrawn, stop and check in.
A simple question can protect the moment:
- “Does this feel good?”
- “Do you want me to keep going?”
- “Softer, slower, or different?”
- “Do you want to stop?”
Stop If Something Hurts
Sex should not cause sharp pain, fear, injury, bleeding, burning, numbness, or lasting discomfort. If something hurts, stop. Do not push through pain to “make a position work.”
Some positions place more pressure on the hips, back, knees, neck, pelvis, genitals, or anus. Move slowly. Use support when needed. Change positions if something feels off.
If pain continues, happens often, or worries you, speak with a qualified healthcare professional.
Anal Sex, Deep Penetration, and Advanced Positions
Some guides on this site discuss anal sex, deep penetration, intense angles, toys, or advanced positions. These topics require extra care, patience, lubrication, communication, and trust.
Go slowly. Use plenty of appropriate lubricant. Do not rush. Do not force penetration. Stop if there is pain, bleeding, fear, or discomfort.
If you have medical concerns, pelvic pain, pregnancy concerns, recent surgery, hemorrhoids, infections, injuries, or other health issues, talk to a healthcare professional before trying intense or advanced sexual activity.
Sex Toys, Products, and Lubricants
We may discuss sex toys, lubricants, pillows, wedges, condoms, supplements, or other adult products. Product information is general and may not apply to your body or your health needs.
Always read product instructions, safety warnings, material details, and cleaning guidelines. Stop using any product that causes pain, irritation, allergic reaction, numbness, burning, or discomfort.
If you are unsure whether a product is safe for you, ask a qualified healthcare professional.
Sexual Health and STI Safety
This site does not replace professional sexual health care. If you have questions about sexually transmitted infections, testing, condoms, PrEP, pregnancy, contraception, pain, discharge, sores, bleeding, or any sexual health concern, speak with a qualified healthcare professional or visit a sexual health clinic.
Safer sex matters. Use protection when appropriate. Get tested when needed. Talk honestly with partners about sexual health, boundaries, and risks.
Pregnancy and Medical Conditions
If you are pregnant, trying to become pregnant, recovering from childbirth, healing from surgery, managing pelvic pain, living with a disability, or dealing with any medical condition, get personal advice from a qualified healthcare professional before trying new positions or intense sexual activity.
Your comfort and safety matter more than any technique.
Mental Health, Trauma, and Emotional Safety
Sex can bring up strong feelings. Pleasure, fear, shame, grief, stress, past trauma, and relationship tension can all affect how sex feels.
If sexual activity brings up distress, panic, flashbacks, fear, or emotional pain, stop and care for yourself. You may want to speak with a qualified therapist, counselor, doctor, or sexual health professional.
No Guarantees
We do not promise that any position, angle, rhythm, toy, guide, or technique will create orgasm, better sex, stronger desire, better erections, female ejaculation, squirting, deeper intimacy, or any specific result.
Our guides are meant to offer ideas, not guarantees. Real pleasure depends on the people involved, their bodies, their comfort, their trust, their communication, and the moment they are sharing.
Research and Sources
Some of our articles may mention studies, books, expert sex educators, or classic erotic texts. We use sources to help explain general ideas about anatomy, pleasure, rhythm, communication, and sexual technique.
Research can guide the conversation, but it cannot tell you exactly what will feel best for your body. Use our guides as a starting point, then listen to yourself and your partner.
When to Seek Professional Help
Please speak with a qualified healthcare professional if you have questions or concerns about:
- Pain during or after sex
- Bleeding, burning, irritation, or injury
- Sexually transmitted infections or testing
- Pregnancy, contraception, or fertility
- Erectile issues, ejaculation concerns, or orgasm difficulties
- Pelvic floor pain or pelvic health concerns
- Anal pain, tearing, bleeding, or discomfort
- Sex after surgery, childbirth, or injury
- Sexual trauma, anxiety, or emotional distress
- Any medical condition that may affect sexual activity
Use This Site Responsibly
By using Best Sex Positions, you understand that our content is for adult education only. You are responsible for your own choices, your own health, your own safety, and your own communication with your partner.
Move slowly. Ask clearly. Listen closely. Stop when needed. Pleasure should feel safe enough to open into.
Contact
If you notice an error, have a question about our content, or want to report a concern, please contact us through our Contact page.
For more about how we use sources and create content, please read our Resources page.










