The Condom Size Chart: Every Brand, Every Size, One Table

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ 10 min read
Condom brands use meaningless terms like "regular," "large," and "XL" โ€” and the sizes vary wildly between brands. A Durex "Regular" is a different width than a Trojan "Regular." This chart cuts through the marketing and gives you the actual measurements so you can find a condom that genuinely fits. Because bad fit is the #1 reason condoms fail.

Step 1: Measure Your Girth

Wrap a string or flexible tape measure around the thickest part of your erect penis. That number (in inches or mm) is your circumference/girth. This is the measurement that matters most for condom fit โ€” not length.

Quick conversion: Divide your girth circumference by 2 to get the flat-width equivalent. Or just use the girth column below.

The Master Chart

Sorted by nominal width (the flat width of the condom when laid flat, which determines how tight or loose it fits). Your girth รท 2 โ‰ˆ the nominal width you need, with a little stretch room built in.

Brand & Name Category Width (mm) Length (mm) Best for Girth
MyOne 49 Snug 49 Various 3.5-4.0"
Glyde Slim Snug 49 170 3.5-4.0"
Iron Grip Snug 49 178 3.5-4.0"
Trojan ENZ Standard 52 197 4.0-4.5"
Durex Classic Standard 52 195 4.0-4.5"
Skyn Original Standard 53 178 4.0-4.7"
ONE Regular Standard 52 180 4.0-4.5"
Trojan Ultra Thin Standard 52 197 4.0-4.5"
Trojan Magnum Large 54 205 4.5-5.1"
Durex XXL Large 56 220 4.8-5.3"
Skyn Large Large 56 190 4.8-5.3"
ONE Legend Large 55 200 4.7-5.2"
Trojan Magnum XL XL 56 213 5.0-5.5"
MyOne 60 XL 60 Various 5.3-5.8"
MyOne 64 XL+ 64 Various 5.6-6.2"
MyOne 69 XXL 69 Various 6.0+"

Note: Trojan Magnum is only 2mm wider than a standard Trojan. It's marketed as "large" but it's barely bigger. Most men who think they need Magnums actually fit standard condoms perfectly. Read the full breakdown here.

How to Read This Chart

The most important column is width (nominal width in mm). This is the flat width of the condom โ€” the measurement that determines how tight or loose it feels. Here's how to match it to your girth:

The Most Important Takeaway: Average girth is 4.59 inches. A standard 52mm condom fits most men. If standard condoms feel fine โ€” not too tight, not slipping โ€” you're in the right size. You don't need Magnums to have a good time.

Why Fit Matters More Than Brand

A condom that's too tight restricts blood flow, reduces sensation, and is more likely to break. A condom that's too loose can slip off during sex. Both scenarios compromise protection. The right fit should feel snug but not constricting โ€” like a properly fitted glove.

The Custom Sizing Option

If nothing in the standard retail sizes works for you โ€” particularly if you're on the extremes (under 4" or over 5.5" girth) โ€” MyOne (formerly TheyFit) offers custom-sized condoms in 60+ sizes. You measure, enter your dimensions on their site, and they ship condoms manufactured to your exact specifications.

This isn't a luxury product โ€” it's how condoms should have always worked. One-size-fits-most is a compromise that leaves roughly 30% of men in a suboptimal fit.

Free Condoms

If cost is a barrier, many organizations provide free condoms by mail. Check our complete guide to getting free condoms shipped to your door.

For free or reduced-cost PrEP (HIV prevention medication), visit freeprep.org. And for confidential STI testing, check stdtestingquick.com.

Know Your Girth First

Can't find a tape measure? Our calculator tells you your girth percentile and suggests the right condom category.

Check Your Fit

๐Ÿ“š Notes

Measurements sourced from manufacturer specifications and verified packaging data. Nominal widths may vary slightly between production batches. Width is the flat-width (lay-flat) measurement per ISO 4074 standard.

Girth recommendations are guidelines โ€” personal comfort preferences vary. When in doubt, try a sample pack of adjacent sizes.