Not all condoms are made of the same stuff, and the difference matters. Latex, polyisoprene and polyurethane condoms all reduce the risk of STIs when used correctly. Lambskin condoms do not, because the natural membrane is porous enough to let viruses through. Here is how the materials and features compare.
Condom materials compared
| Material | STI protection | Allergy notes | Oil-lube safe | Vegan notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latex | Yes, used correctly | Not for latex-allergic users | No, oil damages latex | Plant-derived, but not always vegan if casein or other animal-derived aids are used. Check the pack. |
| Polyisoprene | Yes, used correctly | Good latex-free option | Follow the pack; generally treat like latex | Usually vegan if no animal aids. Check the pack. |
| Polyurethane | Yes, used correctly | Good latex-free option | Less oil-sensitive than latex, but follow the pack | Usually vegan if no animal aids. Check the pack. |
| Lambskin (natural membrane) | No, does not block STIs | Not a latex issue; it is animal tissue | STI risk is the bigger limitation | Not vegan; it is animal-derived. |
Types and features
| Feature | What it does | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Ribbed / dotted | Adds texture for sensation | Mostly a pleasure claim, not a proven medical benefit |
| Ultra-thin | Aims to increase sensation | No evidence that quality-tested thin condoms break more easily |
| Flavoured | Made for oral sex | Do not assume they suit other intercourse unless the pack says so |
| Warming / tingling | Lubricant that creates a sensation | A sensation claim; extra ingredients may irritate some people |
| Delay | Adds a numbing agent such as benzocaine or lidocaine | Can help delay ejaculation; not a treatment for underlying issues |
| Spermicidal | Adds spermicide, often nonoxynol-9 | Generally no advantage; spermicide can irritate tissue and adds nothing to STI protection |
| Large / snug | Changes the fit | Genuinely relevant: fit affects comfort, breakage and whether it stays on |
| Glow / novelty | Cosmetic or novelty | About preference, not protection |
Myth versus fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| Thinner condoms are weaker. | Not if they meet quality standards. Thinness alone does not mean more breakage. |
| Lambskin is the safest, most natural option. | Lambskin does not protect against STIs. It is porous to viruses. |
| Any condom works with oil-based lube. | Oil-based lubricant can weaken latex and cause splitting. Use water- or silicone-based instead. |
| Non-latex condoms are second-rate. | Polyisoprene and polyurethane are legitimate latex-free options for allergic users. |
| Spermicidal condoms give better protection. | Added spermicide does not improve STI protection and can irritate tissue. |
| Latex is purely synthetic. | Latex comes from rubber tree sap, though some condoms still are not vegan because of processing aids. |
UK rules and standards
In the UK, condoms should carry a CE or UKCA mark, which shows they have been tested to recognised safety standards. The relevant standard, ISO 4074:2026, sets requirements and test methods for natural rubber latex condoms, including stability testing to estimate shelf life before a design goes on sale. NHS guidance puts condoms at up to 98% effective at preventing pregnancy when used correctly every time, and advises checking the use-by date before use.
Picking the right one
If you want to go deeper, our guides on how to choose a condom, whether condoms are vegan and how effective condoms are cover the practical decisions. And if you would rather have fun with the wrapper, browse our funny condoms or design your own.
Frequently asked questions
Which condom materials protect against STIs?
What should latex-allergic users choose?
Is latex plant-derived?
Are latex condoms vegan?
Do lambskin condoms prevent STIs?
Is oil-based lube safe with condoms?
Do ultra-thin condoms break more often?
What does a delay condom do?
Sources: NHS, “Condoms”; ISO 4074:2026, natural rubber latex male condoms (requirements and test methods); BSI, condom certification; Vegan Society guidance on latex and casein. General health information, not medical advice.
Related guides