Best Dildo for Beginners: A Compassionate, No-BS Guide
Everything you actually need to know — materials, size, safety, and how to start
I stood in a shop once, pretending to browse candles while sneaking glances at the display case across the aisle. Cheeks burning. Walked out empty-handed. If that sounds familiar, you're not weird — you're just human.

First-time buyers almost universally feel this way, and the feeling doesn't mean anything is wrong with you.
Why This Feels Hard (And Why You Shouldn't Let It Stop You)
Most of us learned about our bodies from awkward health class diagrams and whatever we accidentally stumbled across online. Neither source is particularly helpful. I genuinely believed I needed an expensive, feature-packed toy to "do this right," and that belief kept me stuck for months.
Here's what I eventually figured out: beginners usually want three things — something comfortable, something safe, and something that actually makes sense to use. That's it. The rest is marketing.
What Actually Trips People Up
Size anxiety is real. I obsessed over measurements for weeks before realizing I had no frame of reference for what any of it meant. Material safety is genuinely confusing — the toy industry isn't well-regulated, and plenty of products use vague language like "body-safe" without backing it up. Then there's the sheer volume of options. Scroll through any retailer and you'll hit decision fatigue within minutes.
What Actually Matters When You're Starting Out
Three questions worth asking before anything else:
For most beginners, that points toward medical-grade silicone — soft, hypoallergenic, holds up to repeated cleaning. ABS plastic works well for simpler vibrating options.
What to avoid: anything labeled "jelly," "rubber," or "realistic skin" without a clear material list. These can harbor bacteria and may contain phthalates, especially in cheaper products.
Specific Recommendations — And Why I Picked Them
I bought a ridged, oversized toy early on because it looked bold and confident on the product page. It lived in a drawer for four months. That mistake taught me something useful: beginners almost never need "impressive." They need approachable.
Slim Silicone Dildo
The workhorse of the beginner category. Slim shaft, gentle curve, no aggressive texture. 4.5–5.5 inch insertable range hits the right balance.
Beginner Anal Dildo
Tapered tip, flared base (non-optional — it's a safety requirement), girth no more than 3–3.5 inches. Built for this, not improvised.
Vibrating Dildo
Adds sensation without too much complexity. External vibration is informative rather than overwhelming. Good middle ground before thrusting toys.
Vibrating Thrusting Dildo
More dynamic, but adds noise and bulk. Lower settings are more natural. For most first-timers, this is the one to graduate to — not start with.
Quick Comparison
| Type | Does well | Falls short |
|---|---|---|
| Slim silicone dildo | Comfortable, easy to control, quiet | No added stimulation |
| Beginner anal dildo | Purpose-built safety, tapered entry | Limited to anal use |
| Vibrating dildo | Adds sensation without complexity | Higher price, needs charging |
| Vibrating thrusting dildo | More dynamic sensation | Louder, steeper learning curve |
For most beginners, the slim silicone dildo wins on simplicity. The vibrating thrusting option is the one to grow into, not start with.
A Practical Routine That Doesn't Feel Clinical
- Before you start: Clean the toy, wash your hands, lay out a soft towel. Put on music if silence feels weird. This isn't performance — it's practice.
- Lube: Water-based lube is non-negotiable. More than you think you need. Especially for anal play, especially with silicone toys.
- Start externally. Inner thighs, clit, perineum — get familiar with sensations before insertion. A lot of people skip this and wonder why things feel rushed.
- Insert slowly. If you hit sharp pain, stop — not pause, stop. Dull pressure is normal. Sharp pain is feedback.
- Explore pressure and stillness before you experiment with movement. Speed is almost always the last variable that matters.
- Afterward: Soap, warm water, dry fully. Store in a clean pouch away from other toys, especially if mixing silicone and non-silicone materials.
Buying and Care — The Practical Stuff
- Read the material description carefully. If it says "phthalate-free" but doesn't name the actual material, be skeptical.
- Check return policies before purchasing. Most retailers won't accept returns on opened toys — reputable shops are upfront about this.
- Replace toys showing wear. Surface cracks in silicone can trap bacteria no matter how well you clean.
- Silicone lube + silicone toy = possible surface degradation. Water-based lube is the safe default.
If You Want to Bring a Partner Into This
Keep it low-stakes: "I got something small to try on my own — curious if you'd want to explore it together sometime." That framing gives them room to be curious without pressure, and it gives you permission to say not yet. Your comfort is the baseline here, not theirs.
The toy hadn't changed anything. I had.
Frequently Asked Questions
One Last Thing
You don't need the right toy, the right setting, or the right mood to start. You need something body-safe, a little patience, and the willingness to treat this like learning anything else — imperfectly, gradually, with some trial and error along the way.
Start small. Clean it well. See what you notice.