Butt Plugs for Beginners: Sizes, Materials & How to Use
Butt plugs are one of the best ways into anal play: you insert them, they stay put, and they deliver a feeling of fullness that many people find intensely pleasurable. This guide covers how butt plugs work, how to choose the right size and material, how to use one safely, and which to buy.
What They Do
A plug sits inside and stays put, giving a constant feeling of fullness. The anus is packed with nerve endings, and for those with a prostate it adds indirect P-spot pressure.
Size Matters
Start small. A slim beginner plug or a graduated trainer kit lets you build up comfortably. The neck and base matter as much as the bulb.
The Golden Rule
Only ever use a plug with a wide flared base, plenty of lube, and body-safe material. No base means it can get stuck — a genuine emergency.
What Is a Butt Plug?
A butt plug is a tapered toy designed to be inserted and left in place. Its shape is deliberate: a rounded or pointed tip for easy insertion, a wider bulb that delivers the sensation of fullness, a narrow neck where the sphincter comfortably grips, and a flared base that stops it slipping all the way in.
Unlike a dildo, a plug isn't usually thrust — its job is to stay put and let you enjoy the fullness, either on its own or while you focus on other stimulation. That makes plugs a brilliant, low-effort introduction to anal play, and a versatile addition during solo or partnered sex.
Choosing the Right Size
The single most important rule for beginners: start small. The bulb diameter matters most — a slim plug around 2.5–3cm at its widest is plenty for a first plug. Just as important is the neck (which should be narrower so the sphincter can close around it comfortably) and a base wide enough to stay safely outside.
If you want to progress, a graduated trainer kit gives you several sizes so you can build up at your own pace over weeks, not minutes. There's no prize for going big fast — comfort is what makes it enjoyable.
Materials: Silicone, Glass & Metal
| Material | Feel | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Silicone | Soft, body-warm, flexible | Best for beginners; body-safe and forgiving. Use water-based lube only |
| Glass | Firm, smooth, temperature play | Body-safe, non-porous, works with any lube; warms or cools under water |
| Metal | Firm and weighty | Adds a heavier "filled" feel; great for temperature play and any lube |
Beginners usually do best with soft silicone — it's forgiving and warms to the body. Glass and metal offer a firmer, weightier sensation and unlock temperature play (warm or chill them in water first). Avoid jelly, PVC or unspecified materials, which can be porous and contain phthalates.
How to Use a Butt Plug Safely
- Relax and warm up. A warm bath helps. Start aroused — tension makes insertion harder.
- Use lots of lube. The anus doesn't self-lubricate. Use a thick water-based or anal lube on the plug and yourself, and reapply. Avoid silicone lube on silicone plugs.
- Go slow. Press the tip gently against the opening and let the muscle relax around it rather than forcing it. Ease it in until the neck sits at the sphincter.
- Let it settle. Once seated, relax and enjoy the fullness. You can leave it in during other play.
- Remove gently. Bear down slightly and ease it out slowly — never yank it. Take your time.
- Clean thoroughly. Wash with warm water and toy cleaner after every use.
Frequently Asked Questions
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