Masturbation is normal — and that matters to say directly
Sexual health organisations spend significant effort stating this plainly, because the cultural record on masturbation is long and inconsistent. Masturbation has been falsely linked to physical illness, mental illness, and moral failure in medical and popular literature for most of the past two centuries. None of those claims have been supported by evidence.
What research does show is simple: masturbation is a normal, common human sexual behaviour, practiced across genders, ages, and relationship statuses throughout the lifespan. Planned Parenthood, the NHS, and AASECT — the professional association for sexuality educators and therapists in the United States — are consistent on this point. The behaviour itself is not a health problem.
The more useful question is what the research suggests it might actually do for you.
What happens in the body during masturbation and orgasm
Orgasm triggers a recognisable hormonal and neurochemical sequence:
- Dopamine — the brain's reward signal — rises during sexual arousal and peaks at orgasm, producing a short-term sense of satisfaction and mood improvement.
- Oxytocin — released during orgasm and in the minutes that follow — is associated with feelings of calm and a reduction in perceived stress.
- Endorphins — the body's natural pain-modulating compounds — are also released, contributing to the sense of physical ease that follows orgasm.
- Prolactin rises post-orgasm, and some research suggests this contributes to drowsiness and the improved sleep onset many people associate with orgasm before bed.
None of this is unique to masturbation — the same cascade occurs during partnered sex. The source of the stimulus does not change the physiological outcome.
What the research associates with masturbation
A few patterns appear consistently enough across sexual health research to be worth noting — with the caveat that most of this literature is observational rather than experimental:
Stress reduction. The oxytocin and endorphin release associated with orgasm appears to reduce self-reported stress in the short term. The physiology is plausible, though orgasm is not a treatment for clinical anxiety or stress disorders.
Mood. The dopamine peak at orgasm is a reliable short-term mood signal. Whether this translates to longer-term mood effects depends on individual baseline and context.
Sleep. The post-orgasm hormonal environment — elevated oxytocin, rising prolactin — is associated with relaxation and drowsiness. Some people find masturbation before sleep reliably improves sleep onset. The effect varies by individual.
Menstrual discomfort. Some people report reduced cramping around or after orgasm during menstruation. The proposed mechanism is that uterine contractions during orgasm may help expel uterine lining, and the endorphin release can temporarily reduce pain perception. Evidence is limited but physiologically consistent.
Sexual self-knowledge. This is perhaps the most consistently cited benefit in clinical sexual health literature. Understanding what feels good for you is independently useful for sexual wellbeing — and that knowledge develops through personal experience, not external information alone.
Common concerns addressed honestly
Can you masturbate too much? Frequency alone is not a measure of harm. What matters is whether the behaviour is distressing, intrusive, or inconsistent with a person's own values. AASECT and most sexual health authorities distinguish carefully between high-frequency behaviour and compulsive sexual behaviour that causes distress — they are not the same thing.
Is it normal to feel conflicted about it? Yes. Cultural and personal values around masturbation vary widely, and those values are not something a health guide can adjudicate. What can be said plainly is that masturbation does not cause the physical or psychological harms it has historically been claimed to cause.
Is it safe during pregnancy? For uncomplicated pregnancies without specific risk factors, masturbation is generally considered safe. Anyone with a high-risk pregnancy or concerns should speak with their obstetrician directly.
A note on tools
Many people choose to use a vibrator as part of sexual self-exploration. When made from body-safe silicone, vibrators are widely available, medically unremarkable, and safe for regular use. The Freya vibrating razor is one option — a 5-blade premium razor with a built-in vibrator made from body-safe silicone, designed so that the second function is yours to discover privately. Clean it after each use with warm water and mild soap, as detailed in our vibrator care guide.
Further reading
- How to use a vibrator for the first time — technique, settings, and starting without pressure
- Pelvic floor health: what Kegels actually do — NHS and IUGA grounded; the physical side of sexual wellness
- How to clean a vibrator: the safe method — warm water, mild soap, and what not to use
This guide is informational and not a substitute for medical or psychological advice. If you have concerns about your sexual health or behaviour patterns, consult a board-certified sexual health provider or AASECT-certified therapist.
Written by the Freya Editorial Team. Published under CC BY 4.0 — free to share and adapt with attribution. Last updated June 2026.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is masturbation good for your health?
Major sexual health organisations — including Planned Parenthood, AASECT, and the NHS — consistently describe masturbation as a normal and healthy sexual behaviour. Research literature associates it with stress reduction, improved mood, and better sleep, mediated by the release of dopamine, oxytocin, and endorphins during orgasm. There are no established physical health harms from masturbation in people who do not find it distressing or compulsive.
How does masturbation affect mood?
Orgasm triggers the release of dopamine (the brain's reward signal), oxytocin (associated with feelings of calm), and endorphins (the body's natural pain-modulating compounds). The combination produces a short-term improvement in mood and a reduction in stress that many people find comparable to other pleasurable physical activities. These are the same physiological mechanisms that occur during partnered sex — the source of the stimulus does not change the biochemistry.
Can masturbation help with sleep?
Some research suggests that orgasm before sleep is associated with improved sleep onset. The likely mechanism is the release of oxytocin and prolactin post-orgasm, both of which are associated with relaxation and drowsiness. The effect varies between individuals, but it is physiologically plausible and consistent with what is known about the post-orgasm hormonal environment.
How often is it normal to masturbate?
There is no medically defined normal frequency. Sexual health research, including studies from the Kinsey Institute, has found wide variation in masturbation frequency across individuals, ages, and life stages. What matters is whether the behaviour feels comfortable and consistent with a person's own values — not whether it matches an external standard. AASECT and Planned Parenthood are consistent on this point: frequency alone does not define healthy or unhealthy sexual behaviour.
Is masturbation safe during menstruation?
Yes. Masturbation is generally considered safe during menstruation for people without specific reproductive health risk factors. Some people find that orgasm provides temporary relief from menstrual cramping, likely because uterine contractions during orgasm can help expel the uterine lining and the endorphin release can reduce pain perception. Anyone with concerns specific to their reproductive health should speak with their provider directly.