🚧 PLATFORM UNDER CONSTRUCTION – 2026

A referência global para tamanho do pênis.

Access real clinical statistics, global averages and biometric comparison tools based on peer‑reviewed urology research.

Calculator

Percentile Calculator

Compare your measurement to global clinical averages.

Methodology

Clinical Data Sources

Review studies, regional aggregates and references used by SizeReport.

Biometrics

Girth & Volume

Percentile analysis of width and average girth. Understand where you fall on the global distribution curve. A girth of about 4.6–4.7 inches (≈11.6 cm) is commonly reported.

Physiology

Flaccid to erect: how much you grow

Why flaccid length does not reliably predict erect length (“grower” vs “shower” patterns). Tissue elasticity and individual variability from clinical cohorts.

Data Insights · FAQ

On the aggregated statistics SizeReport uses, mean erect length is about 13.8 cm with the ruler pressed to the pubic bone, and about 12.2 cm when measured along the penis without that pressure — the protocol changes the reference. SizeReport will break these numbers down by region.

The flaccid average is about 3.6 inches (≈9.2 cm), but this varies widely with temperature, stress and other transient factors. Flaccid size alone is a poor predictor of erect length.

Average erect girth is about 4.6–4.7 inches (≈11.6 cm). For a reliable measurement, use a flexible measuring tape around the mid‑shaft at full erection. Girth is statistically as important as length for perceived size.

A percentile describes where you sit relative to the population. The 50th percentile means you are right at the global average; the 90th means you are longer than 90% of men in the dataset.

Scientific studies are clear: there is no strong, clinically useful correlation between hand size, foot size, overall height and genital dimensions.

Typical vaginal depth ranges roughly from 3–4.7 inches (≈7–12 cm) at rest, with additional capacity during arousal. SizeReport integrates these values into realistic compatibility tools.

After puberty, anatomical length is generally stable. However, cardiovascular health and erectile quality can affect functional length and perceived size over time.