How to last longer in bed exercises? Get 10 proven workouts that build stamina and control naturally. Intimacy School – Used by 50,000+ men.
Quick Answer
Exercises to last longer in bed focus on strengthening the pelvic floor muscles and improving ejaculatory control. Kegel exercises (squeeze PC muscle for 5 seconds, 3 sets of 10 daily), reverse Kegels (push/relax PC muscle), edging practice (stop stimulation before climax 3-5 times), and deep breathing techniques build stamina. Results typically appear in 4-8 weeks with consistent daily practice, improving control by 40-60% for most men.
Introduction
You finish in 2-3 minutes and wonder why you can’t last longer. You’ve tried thinking about cricket scores, pinching yourself, or random distractions. Nothing works because you’re addressing the symptom, not the root cause. Lasting longer in bed isn’t about mental tricks—it’s about training specific muscles and building physical control.
Here’s what most men don’t know: premature ejaculation and lack of stamina are primarily muscle control issues. Just like you can train biceps at the gym, you can train the pelvic floor muscles that control ejaculation. With the right exercises done consistently, most men see dramatic improvement in 4-8 weeks.
This guide gives you 10 proven exercises to last longer in bed. These aren’t quick fixes or gimmicks. They’re legitimate physical training techniques used by sex therapists and validated by research. Whether you finish too quickly or just want better control, these exercises work if you commit to daily practice.
Understanding the Muscles That Control Ejaculation
Before starting exercises, understand what you’re actually training. Ejaculation is controlled primarily by the pubococcygeus (PC) muscle, part of your pelvic floor muscle group. This muscle group runs from your pubic bone to your tailbone, supporting bladder and bowel control as well as sexual function.
When the PC muscle is weak or you have poor control over it, ejaculation happens involuntarily at low arousal levels. Strengthening this muscle and learning to consciously control it allows you to delay ejaculation intentionally. It’s exactly like strengthening any other muscle—consistent training creates strength and control.
Most Indian men have never heard of pelvic floor exercises because sex education is virtually non-existent. You probably know how to do a bicep curl but have no idea how to exercise the muscles that control your sexual performance. That changes today.
The exercises in this guide target three areas: strengthening the PC muscle, learning to relax it on command (equally important), and building awareness of your arousal levels so you can control the point of no return.
How to Last Longer in Bed [10 Exercises]
Foundation Exercises (1-3)
1. Basic Kegel Exercise
This is the foundation of all ejaculatory control training. First, identify your PC muscle by stopping urination midstream—that squeezing sensation is your PC muscle contracting. Once you know the feeling, you can exercise it anytime.
How to do it: Squeeze your PC muscle like stopping urine, hold for 5 seconds, release completely for 5 seconds. That’s one rep. Do 3 sets of 10 reps daily. You can do these sitting, standing, or lying down. Nobody can see you doing them.
Why it works: Strengthening the PC muscle gives you physical control over ejaculation. A strong PC muscle allows you to consciously prevent ejaculation even at high arousal. Start seeing results in 3-4 weeks of daily practice.
2. Long-Hold Kegels
Once basic Kegels feel easy (usually after 2 weeks), progress to longer holds. This builds endurance in the muscle, not just strength.
How to do it: Squeeze your PC muscle and hold for 10-20 seconds at moderate intensity (about 50-70% of maximum squeeze). Rest for 10 seconds between holds. Do 5-10 long holds daily. Focus on steady, controlled contraction rather than maximum squeeze.
Why it works: Endurance allows you to maintain control during extended sexual activity. Quick squeezes build strength; long holds build stamina. Both are necessary for lasting longer during actual sex.
3. Reverse Kegels
Most men only learn to squeeze (contract) the PC muscle but never learn to relax it. Reverse Kegels teach relaxation, which is crucial because tension in this muscle accelerates ejaculation. This is possibly the most underrated exercise.
How to do it: Instead of squeezing, gently push down and out with your pelvic floor like you’re trying to urinate or have a bowel movement (but don’t actually do either). You should feel the muscle area expand and relax. Hold this relaxed, pushed-out position for 5-10 seconds. Do 10 reps after your regular Kegels.
Why it works: During sex, many men unconsciously tense their pelvic floor, which triggers faster ejaculation. Learning to consciously relax this area during intimacy dramatically improves control. This exercise trains that relaxation response.
Breathing & Control Exercises (4-6)
4. Deep Breathing Practice
Shallow, rapid breathing during sex increases arousal and speeds up ejaculation. Deep, controlled breathing does the opposite—it calms your nervous system and gives you better control.
How to do it: Practice deep belly breathing daily for 5 minutes. Breathe in slowly through your nose for 4 counts, hold for 4 counts, exhale slowly through mouth for 6 counts. Your belly should expand on inhale, not your chest. Do this until it becomes natural.
Why it works: During sex, switching to deep breathing when you feel close to ejaculation significantly delays it. This works by activating your parasympathetic nervous system, which counters the fight-or-flight response that triggers ejaculation. Practice daily so you can use it effectively during intimacy.
5. Arousal Awareness Training
Most men have no idea where they are on the arousal scale until they’ve already passed the point of no return. This exercise builds awareness so you can control before it’s too late.
How to do it: During masturbation, rate your arousal on a scale of 1-10 throughout. One is no arousal, ten is ejaculation. Practice identifying when you’re at 5, 6, 7, and especially 8 (the point where you can still stop). Slow down or pause whenever you hit 7-8, let arousal drop to 5-6, then continue. Do this practice 3-4 times per week.
Why it works: You cannot control what you’re not aware of. Once you clearly recognize your 7-8 arousal level, you can use techniques to reduce arousal before reaching the point of no return. This awareness transfers directly to partnered sex.
6. Start-Stop Technique (Edging)
This classic exercise teaches control by repeatedly bringing yourself close to orgasm and stopping. It’s frustrating initially but incredibly effective for building stamina.
How to do it: During masturbation, stimulate yourself until you’re at 7-8 arousal (close to ejaculation but not past the point of no return). Stop all stimulation completely, focus on deep breathing, let arousal drop to 5-6. Resume stimulation. Repeat this cycle 3-5 times before allowing ejaculation. Practice 2-3 times per week.
Why it works: This trains both physical control (strengthening PC muscle by holding back) and mental awareness (recognizing arousal levels). Over time, the gap between your baseline and point of no return widens, meaning you can sustain higher arousal longer. Our complete guide to lasting longer in bed expands on these techniques with additional methods.
Advanced Control Exercises (7-10)
7. Squeeze Technique
The squeeze technique is a physical intervention when you feel ejaculation approaching. It’s particularly useful during actual sex, not just practice.
How to do it: When you feel very close to ejaculation during sex or masturbation, withdraw and firmly squeeze the head of your penis where the shaft meets the head for 10-15 seconds. Use thumb on one side and two fingers on the other. Squeeze hard enough to slightly reduce erection. Wait 30 seconds, then resume.
Why it works: The physical squeeze interrupts the ejaculatory reflex. The temporary discomfort and slight loss of erection reset your arousal level. This technique can be used multiple times during sex to extend duration significantly. Partner can also learn to do this.
8. Pelvic Floor Drops
This exercise combines reverse Kegels with timing to create a specific relaxation response during sex. It’s advanced but very effective.
How to do it: During masturbation, when you feel arousal rising toward 7-8, stop movement AND simultaneously do a reverse Kegel (push down and relax the pelvic floor). Hold this relaxed state while taking 3-4 deep breaths. You should feel arousal drop noticeably. Resume once you’re at 5-6.
Why it works: This creates a trained response—high arousal triggers automatic pelvic floor relaxation. With enough practice, this happens during partnered sex without conscious thought, giving you natural lasting power.
9. Variable Speed Training
This exercise builds stamina through varied intensity rather than consistent pace. It mimics real sex better than steady masturbation.
How to do it: During practice, alternate between fast stimulation for 20-30 seconds and very slow stimulation for 20-30 seconds. Change speeds unpredictably. The goal is to maintain arousal at 6-7 regardless of speed. Practice handling intense stimulation without ejaculating. Do this for 10-15 minutes, 2-3 times weekly.
Why it works: Real sex has varied pace and intensity. Training at one steady pace doesn’t prepare you for actual intimacy. Variable speed practice builds control across different stimulation levels, making you more adaptable during partnered sex.
10. Mind-Body Connection Exercise
This advanced exercise integrates mental focus with physical control for maximum effectiveness.
How to do it: During masturbation practice, instead of distracting yourself from arousal, focus completely on the physical sensations. Notice where tension builds in your body. When arousal rises, consciously relax your pelvic floor, thighs, glutes, and jaw (these all tense unconsciously). Continue stimulation while maintaining this relaxed state. Practice staying at 7 arousal while completely relaxed physically.
Why it works: Most men unconsciously tense their entire body as arousal builds, which accelerates ejaculation. Learning to stay physically relaxed at high arousal is advanced control that translates to dramatically longer-lasting sex. This separates arousal (mental) from tension (physical).
Creating Your Exercise Routine
Week 1-2: Foundation Phase
- Basic Kegels: 3 sets of 10 reps daily
- Deep breathing: 5 minutes daily
- Arousal awareness: during any masturbation
- Total time: 10-15 minutes daily
Week 3-4: Building Control
- Basic Kegels: 3 sets of 10 reps daily
- Long-hold Kegels: 5-10 holds daily
- Reverse Kegels: 10 reps daily
- Start-Stop practice: 2-3 times weekly
- Deep breathing: 5 minutes daily
- Total time: 15-20 minutes daily
Week 5-6: Advanced Integration
- Long-hold Kegels: 10 holds daily
- Reverse Kegels: 15 reps daily
- Pelvic floor drops: during practice sessions
- Variable speed training: 2-3 times weekly
- Deep breathing: integrated throughout day
- Total time: 20-25 minutes daily
Week 7-8: Mastery Phase
- Continue all exercises
- Add squeeze technique during practice
- Mind-body connection work
- Practice with partner if comfortable
- Total time: 20-30 minutes daily
How to Practice Safely and Effectively
Consistency Matters More Than Intensity
Doing exercises daily for 10 minutes beats doing them intensely for an hour once a week. These are muscle training—consistency builds results. Set a daily reminder and stick to it without exceptions.
Don’t Overdo It Initially
Starting with 100 Kegels daily because you’re eager will just make you sore and discouraged. Start with recommended reps and increase gradually. Muscle soreness in the pelvic area is uncomfortable and counterproductive.
Track Your Progress
Keep simple notes on how long you last during practice sessions. Week 1 might be 2-3 minutes before reaching point of no return. Week 4 might be 5-7 minutes. Tracking shows progress even when it feels slow.
Use Practice Sessions Purposefully
Masturbation becomes training when done intentionally with these techniques. This isn’t about quick release—it’s deliberate practice building specific skills. Allocate 15-20 minutes for focused training.
Don’t Practice During Actual Sex Initially
Learn techniques during solo practice first. Once you have good control during masturbation (can last 10+ minutes using techniques), then apply gradually during partnered sex. Trying to learn new techniques during actual sex creates performance pressure.
Integrating Exercises into Partnered Sex
Start with Communication
Tell your partner you’re working on lasting longer through specific exercises. This reduces pressure because she knows you’re actively addressing it. She can support by being patient as you practice techniques during sex.
Use Techniques Gradually
Don’t try to implement all ten techniques during one sexual encounter. Start by using deep breathing and arousal awareness during sex. Once those feel natural, add the squeeze technique or pelvic floor relaxation. Build gradually.
Have “Practice” Sessions Together
Frame some intimate time as practice rather than performance. This removes pressure. You can practice techniques, she can learn to help with squeeze technique, you both learn your patterns. Make it collaborative, not pressured.
Communicate During Sex
Simple phrases like “let me slow down for a moment” or “let’s try a different position” allow you to manage arousal without stopping completely. She’ll understand you’re using control techniques, not losing interest.
Celebrate Small Wins
If you last 5 minutes when you previously lasted 2, that’s significant progress. Acknowledge improvements together. Building stamina is gradual—every minute gained is success worth recognizing.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Only Doing Kegels, Ignoring Reverse Kegels
Many men strengthen PC muscle but never learn to relax it. Both contraction AND relaxation are essential. Overdeveloped, tense PC muscle actually worsens premature ejaculation. Balance is critical.
Mistake 2: Holding Breath During Exercise
Some men unconsciously hold their breath while doing Kegels or during arousal control. This increases tension and defeats the purpose. Always breathe normally or practice deep breathing during exercises.
Mistake 3: Giving Up Too Soon
Most men quit after 1-2 weeks when they don’t see dramatic results. Real improvement takes 4-8 weeks of consistent practice. The first 2-3 weeks build foundation; results accelerate after that. Patience is essential.
Mistake 4: Using Exercises Only When Having Sex
These are training exercises, not just in-the-moment techniques. The strengthening happens through daily practice over weeks, not during sex. Daily Kegels build the muscle strength you’ll use during intimacy.
Mistake 5: Skipping Practice Sessions
Solo practice with edging and arousal awareness is where you learn control in low-pressure environment. Skipping this and trying to learn during partnered sex adds performance anxiety that sabotages progress.
Mistake 6: Expecting Perfection Immediately
Even after 8 weeks of practice, you won’t have perfect control every time. Stress, fatigue, or high excitement still affect performance. The goal is significant improvement, not perfection. Progress is non-linear.
Mistake 7: Doing Kegels Wrong
Many men squeeze their abs, glutes, or thighs instead of isolating PC muscle. You should be able to do Kegels while keeping everything else relaxed. Practice proper isolation from the beginning to build correct muscle memory.
Additional Strategies That Enhance Exercise Results
Reduce Performance Anxiety
Anxiety about lasting longer ironically makes you finish faster. The exercises work better when you’re relaxed. Address underlying anxiety through communication, reducing pressure, and reframing sex as mutual pleasure rather than performance test.
Improve Overall Fitness
General cardiovascular fitness improves sexual stamina. Men who exercise regularly have better endurance and control. Even 20-30 minutes of cardio 3-4 times weekly enhances results from pelvic floor exercises.
Address Lifestyle Factors
Excessive alcohol, poor sleep, high stress, and poor diet all worsen ejaculatory control. These exercises work best alongside healthy lifestyle. Adequate sleep particularly impacts sexual performance significantly.
Consider Mindfulness Practice
General mindfulness meditation improves body awareness and stress management, both beneficial for sexual control. Even 5-10 minutes daily meditation enhances the mind-body connection exercises.
Use These Foods Strategically
Certain foods improve stamina naturally. Our complete guide to foods that increase stamina lists specific Indian foods that support better sexual endurance when combined with exercise training.
Realistic Timeline and Expectations
Weeks 1-2: Building Foundation
You’re learning the exercises and building basic awareness. You might not notice performance changes yet. Some men report feeling more “connected” to their pelvic area. Focus on consistency and proper technique.
Weeks 3-4: First Improvements
Many men start noticing they can last 30-60 seconds longer during practice sessions. The point of no return becomes slightly more recognizable. Arousal awareness improves noticeably. Keep expectations modest—these are early results.
Weeks 5-6: Meaningful Progress
Most men experience significant improvement around week 5-6. Practice sessions extend to 8-10 minutes. During partnered sex, you might last 2-3 minutes longer than baseline. Control feels more conscious, less purely reflexive.
Weeks 7-8: Consolidated Improvement
By week 8, consistent practitioners usually last 40-60% longer than baseline. The techniques feel more natural. You recognize arousal levels clearly and can manage them actively. Some men report lasting 10-15 minutes compared to initial 2-3 minutes.
Beyond 8 Weeks: Ongoing Refinement
After initial 8 weeks, continue 3-4 times weekly maintenance practice. Skills continue improving with ongoing use. Many men maintain improvement indefinitely with occasional practice sessions. The control becomes more natural over time.
When Exercises Alone Aren’t Enough
For some men, premature ejaculation has psychological components that exercises alone won’t fully address. If you’ve practiced consistently for 8-12 weeks with minimal improvement, consider these additional approaches:
Sex Therapy
A qualified sex therapist can address psychological factors like performance anxiety, relationship issues, or trauma that affect ejaculatory control. Combining therapy with exercises often produces better results than either alone.
Medical Evaluation
Rarely, premature ejaculation has medical causes like hormonal imbalances or hypersensitivity. If exercises and behavioral techniques don’t help after 3 months, consulting a urologist or sexual medicine doctor makes sense.
Relationship Counseling
Sometimes lasting longer is less about physical control and more about relationship dynamics, pressure, or communication issues. Couples counseling can address these underlying factors affecting sexual performance.
Desensitizing Products
Topical delay sprays or condoms with desensitizing agents can complement exercises but shouldn’t replace them. Use these as training wheels while building natural control through exercises, not as permanent crutches.
For Different Situations
Complete Beginners
If you’ve never done pelvic floor exercises, start with just basic Kegels and arousal awareness for the first 2 weeks. Master the foundation before adding complexity. Patience now prevents confusion later.
Men Who’ve Tried Before and Quit
If you attempted these exercises previously but stopped, you’re not alone. Restart with realistic expectations and commitment to 8 weeks minimum. Past attempts taught you what doesn’t work; use that knowledge for better consistency this time.
Older Men
These exercises work regardless of age. Older men might see slightly slower progress but equally substantial end results. Focus on consistent practice rather than comparing to younger benchmarks.
Men with Performance Anxiety
Combine exercises with anxiety management. The physical training helps, but addressing the mental component through conversation with partner, reducing pressure, and reframing expectations accelerates progress significantly.
Men in New Relationships
New relationship excitement often worsens premature ejaculation. Be honest with your partner about working on control. Practice techniques become easier once initial excitement stabilizes after a few months together.
Final Thoughts
How to last longer in bed exercises work, but they require the same commitment as any fitness goal. You wouldn’t expect six-pack abs from one week of sit-ups, and you shouldn’t expect perfect ejaculatory control from one week of Kegels. Real improvement takes consistent practice over 6-8 weeks minimum.
The good news: unlike many sexual performance issues, this one is directly under your control. You don’t need pills, equipment, or expensive treatments. Just 15-20 minutes daily practicing specific exercises creates measurable improvement. Most men who commit fully to the program see substantial results.
Your stamina in bed isn’t fixed or genetic. It’s trainable. The PC muscle strengthens like any muscle. Arousal awareness improves with practice. Control develops through repetition. Every man who lasts 15-20 minutes built that capacity through consistent training—they weren’t born with it.
Start today with basic Kegels. Do 3 sets of 10 while reading this, waiting for tea, or sitting in traffic. Nobody can see you doing them. That’s your first training session. Tomorrow, do it again. In 8 weeks, you’ll wonder why you didn’t start sooner.
Track your progress, celebrate small improvements, and maintain perspective. The goal isn’t becoming a marathon man; it’s having enough control to ensure both partners enjoy sex fully. For most couples, 8-12 minutes of actual intercourse is plenty when combined with proper foreplay and attention to her pleasure.
Combine these exercises with the techniques in our 28 Days to All-Night Stamina program for a complete system covering physical training, mental control, and practical strategies for lasting as long as you want.
Remember: every man who lasts long enough to satisfy his partner got there through practice, not luck. You’re capable of the same results with committed effort.