Sexual Wellness
On this Sexual Wellness category page, items move in and out as partner retailers rotate stock and update listings, so the same size, scent, or colour can look different from one day to the next. You’ll notice overlaps between sexual wellness products such as condoms, lubricants, toys, and pelvic health items, with variations split by pack size (3, 6, 12), bottle volume (50ml vs 100ml), and material notes like silicone or latex. Some ranges appear as single items, while others show as shade or flavour variants under separate tiles. It’s a practical category. A few lines change quickly, especially when new barcodes replace older packaging.
Read on for how Sexual Wellness listings vary by type, format, sizing and features
Primary product groupings you’ll encounter
Most ranges break out into condoms, lubricants, and toys, with pregnancy tests or intimate washes sometimes appearing alongside them as separate tiles. Packs are not consistent. One partner publishes a 12-pack as a standalone listing while another groups 3/6/12 under a single variant selector—small detail, big difference. With Boots, you’ll also see product names that foreground latex vs non-latex, plus sizing like “regular” or “large” and textures such as ribbed or dotted. It’s not uniform. Check the pack count and any “water-based” or “silicone-based” note when scanning condoms and protection.
Formats, bundles, and how variants are handled
Some partners publish sets as bundles (toy + cleanser, or toy + storage bag), while others split accessories into separate lines with their own SKUs. Multipacks show up in mixed ways: a “2 x 100ml” lubricant twin pack might be a single listing, but elsewhere it appears as two individual 100ml bottles. Superdrug listings frequently separate “travel” 30–50ml sizes from 100–250ml bottles, and flavour or scent can be a different tile rather than a dropdown. Expect duplication. When browsing intimate lubricants, watch for applicator vs squeeze-tube formats and whether “single-use sachets” are sold as a 5 or 10 pack.
Sizing, fit, and spec differences between partners
Specs can be published as measurements, or not at all. That matters. Condoms may show nominal width (for example 52mm or 56mm) and length, while other listings only state “regular fit” with no numbers; similarly, toys might include length and insertable length as separate fields, or just “small/medium/large”. Some partners place battery type (AAA vs rechargeable) in the title, others bury it in the description. It’s messy. For personal massagers, look for dimensions in mm/cm, charging method (USB cable vs dock), and whether the listing states waterproofing for bath/shower use.
Materials, build details, and functional features
Material labels change the experience. Silicone, ABS plastic, and TPE are all presented differently across retailers, and the same item can be tagged “body-safe silicone” in one place and just “silicone” in another. With LloydsPharmacy, you’ll sometimes see clearer notes on latex content, phthalate-free claims, and whether a product is compatible with water-based lubricant. Keep it concrete. Pay attention to closures and construction details too: a bullet vibe might specify one-button control with 10 modes, while a couples ring lists stretch diameter and a separate remote. For sex toys for couples, check vibration patterns, remote vs app control, and whether the item is rechargeable or takes coin-cell batteries.
Practical checks people make while browsing
Pack size is the first filter in reality. For condoms, confirm latex vs non-latex, nominal width (e.g. 52mm/56mm), and whether it’s lubricated, ribbed, or ultra-thin; those labels are not applied consistently across partners. For lubricants, check base (water/silicone), bottle volume (50ml/100ml/250ml), and if it’s “warming” or “sensitive” before assuming it’s like-for-like. For toys, look for material (silicone/ABS), charging (USB vs battery), and stated noise level or waterproof rating if provided. Some listings are sparse. If you’re scanning anal play toys, confirm a flared base, insertable length, and whether a storage pouch is included or sold separately.
How Discount Promo Codes Can Reduce the Cost of Sexual Wellness Shopping
Discount codes relate to reduced cost when buying Sexual Wellness items by applying a retailer’s code at checkout, rather than changing the product specification itself. Links to partner retailers’ discount code pages may appear alongside product listings, and Discount Promo Codes provides access to discount codes for those partners as part of how the platform is set up. The mechanics sit next to the product detail—not inside it—so a 100ml water-based lubricant and a 12-pack of condoms remain the same listing even when code availability changes. This is operational, not editorial. Separately, using the platform supports a monthly charity donation, with 20% of profits donated, and that runs regardless of whether you’re viewing sexual wellness products in single items, multipacks, or bundled sets.