This is the clearest question with the clearest answer: no. Circumcision removes foreskin — it doesn't remove erectile tissue, shorten the shaft, or alter the internal structures that determine penile dimensions.
A 2022 systematic review and meta-analysis (Yang et al.) examining studies across multiple countries found no statistically significant difference in erect penile length between circumcised and uncircumcised men. The small variations observed in individual studies were within normal measurement error and showed no consistent direction.
What about flaccid size? There may be a minor visual difference: the uncircumcised penis sometimes appears slightly longer when flaccid because the foreskin extends beyond the glans. But this is a soft-tissue draping effect, not an actual size difference. Erect measurements — which are what matter clinically — show no meaningful difference.
Bottom Line on Size: Whether you're circumcised or not, your erect penis size is determined by the corpus cavernosum (erectile tissue), which circumcision doesn't touch. The foreskin is skin, not erectile tissue. Removing it doesn't change your measurements.
This is where things get genuinely complicated. The foreskin contains nerve endings — that's not debated. The question is whether removing those nerve endings results in a clinically meaningful reduction in sexual pleasure. The research is mixed, and both sides of the debate cite studies that support their position.
Three large randomized controlled trials conducted in Africa (conducted for HIV prevention research) assessed sexual satisfaction and function before and after adult circumcision. All three found no significant decrease in sexual satisfaction or function after circumcision. Some participants actually reported improved satisfaction. These are the highest-quality studies available because they measured the same men before and after, eliminating individual variation.
This meta-analysis of 36 studies concluded that circumcision was unlikely to adversely affect penile sensitivity, sexual satisfaction, or overall sexual function. The authors found that the quality of evidence was moderate and that results were broadly reassuring.
Studies using quantitative sensory testing (measuring the lightest touch that can be detected) have found that the foreskin — particularly the ridged band and frenulum — has higher fine-touch sensitivity than many other penile regions. The glans of circumcised men has shown slightly reduced sensitivity to light touch in some (but not all) studies, possibly due to keratinization (thickening of the exposed glans skin over time).
Some large-scale surveys of men circumcised as adults report a mix of outcomes: some report no change, some report reduced sensitivity (especially of the glans), and some report improved sensitivity or satisfaction. Self-reported data is inherently limited by expectation bias and recall accuracy.
The Honest Assessment: The foreskin contains nerve endings — removing it removes those nerve endings. However, whether this translates to a meaningful reduction in sexual pleasure is genuinely unresolved. The best-controlled studies (RCTs measuring the same men before/after) mostly show no significant change in satisfaction. Studies measuring fine-touch thresholds show some sensitivity differences. These findings aren't necessarily contradictory — it's possible that reduced fine-touch sensitivity doesn't meaningfully affect overall sexual pleasure, which involves much more than touch-threshold detection.
Separate from sensitivity, research has examined broader measures of sexual function in circumcised vs. uncircumcised men:
This topic attracts extreme positions. Here's where each side overreaches:
There's nothing wrong with your penis, and the data shows your sexual function and satisfaction are not meaningfully compromised. If you're happy with your sex life, the circumcision debate is academic.
If you do feel you've lost sensitivity, some practical steps that may help:
There's nothing wrong with your penis either. Proper hygiene (regular cleaning under the foreskin) prevents the few medical issues associated with intact foreskin. You don't need circumcision for any reason unless a specific medical condition (phimosis, recurrent balanitis) warrants it.
Circumcision doesn't change your penis size. It may have a subtle effect on fine-touch sensitivity, but controlled studies show no significant impact on sexual satisfaction or function. Whether you're circumcised or not, your penis works the way it's supposed to, and the evidence says your sex life isn't compromised either way.
The decision about circumcision involves medical, cultural, religious, and ethical considerations that go far beyond the scope of this article. What we can contribute is this: size and sexual function should not be your primary concern, because the data shows neither is meaningfully affected.
Your circumcision status doesn't change your percentile. See where you stand based on 15,521 clinical measurements.
Get Your PercentileTian Y, et al. (2013). "Effects of Circumcision on Male Sexual Functions: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis." Asian Journal of Andrology, 15(5):662-666.
Yang D, et al. (2022). "The Effect of Male Circumcision on Sexuality." World Journal of Men's Health, 40(3):379-388.
Kigozi G, et al. (2008). "Foreskin Surface Area and HIV Acquisition in Rakai, Uganda." AIDS, 22(16):2209-2213.
Krieger JN, et al. (2008). "Adult Male Circumcision: Effects on Sexual Function and Sexual Satisfaction in Kisumu, Kenya." Journal of Sexual Medicine, 5(11):2610-2622.