First things first: there is no right or wrong age to lose your virginity. The only factors that matter when it comes to having sex for the first time is that both YOU and your partner are ready, and you're using protection. And while what you see on TV and in the movies might tell you otherwise, everyone's first time is SO different. Don't let anybody — your friends or characters on the big screen — dictate what's normal or not normal.

12 YouTubers Get Real About Losing Their Virginity



Watching Virgins Lose it on TV Is as Awkward as You'd Expect
Now she tells what it was like going through with a deal made virtually. So, perhaps in an attempt to prove how significant computing is in modern life, she auctioned her virginity on a German Web site. The bidder, a year-old Italian man, came through at the last minute by doubling the leading price. Which was charming of him, so much so that Alina has now chosen to reveal details of how the deal enjoyed closure. You will be moved to hear that she did, indeed, enjoy it. She was flown to Venice to meet her fairly decent proposal.


Later-in-life virgins – ‘At my age, it becomes a red flag’
Of course there are those who will lose it before then and those who will lose it later on, but the majority of people lose their virginity in their teens, with only five percent of both men and women, between the ages of 25 and 29, still being virgins in that age bracket. That percentage continues to drop with age, and by the time people have reached 40, the percentage of those who are still virgins between 40 and 44 is a very minute 0. But whether you lose your virginity at 15 or lose it at 35, there are fun and hard truths that come with it, and here are seven of them. But first, check out our video on sex positions for small penises:.




The National Survey of Family Growth has recently released data on the ages Americans were when they lost their virginity. The figures themselves might not come as a surprise, but when represented graphically, they may cause you to see the occurrence of the life event in a whole new way. The group administering the survey was overseen by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and was based on — public use data files. The big caveat here is that this only covers heterosexual subjects.