Kegel Exercisers & Orgasm Balls
Choosing a kegel exerciser
Passive training vs active training
The most important distinction in this range. Passive training means inserting a weighted ball and going about your day — walking, standing, light housework. The muscles engage automatically to hold the weight in place. Active training means consciously squeezing and releasing around the exerciser, treating it more like a workout. Both work; they just ask different things of you. Weighted balls without any added function are passive tools. App-connected trainers guide you through active exercises with real-time feedback.
Progressive weight sets
Most people start here. A set includes multiple balls at increasing weights — you begin with the lightest, train until holding it feels easy, then move up. The progression matters because jumping too heavy too soon leads to fatigue and discourages consistency. Sets typically run from around 40g up to 120g+, with the heaviest options in this range reaching 150g. Start light regardless of your starting fitness level; pelvic floor muscles respond well to gradual load.
Smart and app-connected trainers
The LELO Smart Bead and Magic Motion Kegel Coach use pressure sensors to measure how hard you're squeezing and adjust resistance or guided exercises accordingly. OhMiBod's Krush tracks squeeze strength over time so you can see progress. These suit anyone who wants structured training with measurable results — they remove the guesswork from how hard to squeeze and when to rest. They cost more than a simple weighted set but function like a proper fitness tool, not a passive weight.
Vibrating kegel exercisers
Some exercisers here add a motor alongside the weight. The vibration creates additional muscle response — the pelvic floor contracts reflexively around it, which adds to the training effect while also making the experience more enjoyable. Remote-controlled vibrating options let a partner take over the controls, which shifts the purpose considerably. If that appeals, remote controlled vibrators and panty vibrators occupy the same territory and are worth browsing alongside.
Metal and jade options
Stainless steel balls are heavier than silicone at the same diameter, making them a more demanding passive weight. They're non-porous, easy to clean, and temperature-responsive — run under warm water before use. Jade yoni eggs are a different tradition entirely, rooted in ancient practice; the set here includes three graduated sizes with drilled holes for threading cord. Both are for experienced users who are already comfortable with standard silicone balls.
Single balls vs duo balls vs interchangeable systems
A single ball is easier to hold in place and the right starting point for most people. Duo balls require more muscle engagement to retain both, which increases the training load. Interchangeable systems (like the Bswish Bfit and LELO Beads range) let you swap balls in and out of a shared harness, giving you a wide weight range without buying multiple complete sets.
Who kegel exercisers are for
The pelvic floor weakens with age, pregnancy, childbirth and hormonal changes — all very common reasons people come to this category. Stronger pelvic floor muscles improve bladder control, support pelvic organ positioning, and increase the intensity of orgasms. Many people use them as a daily habit, 15–30 minutes of passive wear during morning routine. Others incorporate them into a more deliberate training schedule with rest days between each. A little water-based lube on the exerciser makes insertion more comfortable and reduces friction during wear.
Anyone postpartum should wait until they have medical clearance before starting — usually six weeks minimum, more after complications. Those with prolapse, pelvic pain, vaginismus or other pelvic conditions should speak with a physiotherapist or GP before using any kegel device.
Kegel exercisers vs love eggs
The overlap is real — some products in this range vibrate, connect to apps and are remote-controlled, which puts them squarely in love eggs territory too. The practical difference is purpose: kegel exercisers are primarily training tools, chosen for their weight progression and muscle engagement. Love eggs are primarily pleasure devices, chosen for vibration patterns and remote control. The vibrating kegel options here bridge both — training effect plus everything a love egg offers.
Trusted brands, plain packaging
Brands here include LELO, California Exotic, Je Joue, Satisfyer, Svakom, Rimba and others — body-safe silicone and medical-grade materials throughout. Orders placed before 14:00 (Mon–Fri) go out the same day in plain packaging with no external branding. Free delivery on orders over £50, with a 1-year warranty on all products.
FAQs
Still deciding?
Browse everything from the homepage, or find answers fast in the Help Centre.