Best Waterproof Sex Toys

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"Waterproof" on a sex toy is one of the most abused marketing terms in the catalogue. It means almost nothing without an IP rating attached, and most products labelled "waterproof" are actually splash-proof — fine for a wet shower hand but not for being submerged. The difference matters because buying a "waterproof" toy that's actually splash-proof and using it in the bath is the fastest way to ruin a $100 vibrator. This page only lists toys with a verified IPX7 rating or higher: certified to handle full immersion in 1m of water for 30 minutes.

Below the comparison you'll find a buying guide explaining the IP rating system (it's simpler than it looks), what makes a toy genuinely submersible vs only sealed against splashes, why hygiene benefits motivate the entire category even if you'll never use it in water, and 14 of the questions we get asked most.

The honest pitch for waterproof toys: shower/bath use is fun, but the real value is cleaning. A genuinely IPX7 toy can be rinsed under the tap, soaked in soapy water, sterilised with no risk to the motor. A splash-proof one needs careful wiping around the seams. For frequent users, "easy to clean" wins more buying decisions than "shower compatible".

Buying guide

The IP rating system — decoded in 90 seconds

"IP" = Ingress Protection. The two digits after it tell you what's been tested. The first digit is dust protection (rarely matters for sex toys); the second is water protection (the one to look for):

RatingMeansUse case
IPX0 / unratedNo water protection at allWipe-clean only
IPX4Splash-resistant from any directionShower mist, sweaty hands. NOT bath/submersion.
IPX5Resistant to low-pressure water jetsQuick rinse under tap
IPX6Resistant to high-pressure water jetsStrong shower spray
IPX7Submersion 1m / 30 minutesBath, shallow pool, full submerge cleaning
IPX8Continuous submersion (manufacturer-defined depth)Pool, longer baths, deep cleaning

The threshold for "actually waterproof": IPX7 minimum. Anything below means manufacturer-tested for splash, not bath. "Waterproof" without an IP number on the box = marketing claim, not engineering claim.

What makes a toy actually IPX7

  1. Sealed USB port — the weakest point. Modern designs use magnetic charging (no exposed port) or a flush rubber cap with O-ring seal. A loose cap = no seal = water in motor.
  2. Continuous body construction — no seams between battery compartment and motor. Multi-piece bodies with screw threads are usually only IPX4-5 even if marketed otherwise.
  3. Quality silicone or sealed ABS shell — not just "rubberised plastic". Silicone covers eliminate gaps; cheap plastic shells leak through stress cracks after a few uses.
  4. Pressure-tested by manufacturer — reputable brands publish IP test certificates. If a brand can't tell you who certified the rating, treat the rating as marketing.

The hygiene case for waterproof toys (the real reason to buy)

Even if you'll never use a toy in water, IPX7 toys are categorically easier to clean. You can rinse the entire surface under running water, soak in warm soapy water for deep cleaning, sterilise with diluted bleach if shared between partners (silicone IPX7 toys only). Splash-proof toys require careful wiping around seams to avoid moisture entering — a routine that's easy to skip and slowly degrades hygiene over months.

Bath/shower use — what works and what doesn't

  • Suction-style toys (Womanizer, Satisfyer Pro): work well in water — the suction creates a partial seal even with water present. Some users find it intensifies the sensation; others find it dampens. Try in a shower first; bath if you like the result.
  • Vibrators (any shape): work but the buoyancy of warm water reduces the perceived intensity. You'll feel less than you would dry. Increase the intensity setting one notch.
  • Wand massagers: the heaviest, hardest to manoeuvre in water. Better in shower than bath. Most premium wands (Le Wand, Doxy Don) are IPX6, not IPX7 — full bath submerge can void warranty.
  • App-controlled toys: Bluetooth signal weakens significantly through water. Phone needs to be very close (under 1m through air, not water). Consider this for app-dependent control.

Common mistakes

Mistake #1: Trusting "waterproof" without IP rating

Marketing word with no enforcement. Always look for IPX7 specifically.

Mistake #2: Hot bath water (above 40°C)

Lithium batteries don't like extended exposure to high heat. Limit IPX7 toys to warm baths, not hot ones.

Mistake #3: Soap residue trapped near USB port

Even on IPX7 toys, plug-in charging requires bone-dry port. Air-dry 30 minutes after water exposure before charging.

Mistake #4: Boiling an "IPX7" toy with electronics

IPX7 = pressure resistance, not heat resistance. Boiling melts adhesives and seals. Boil only 100% silicone toys with no electronics or batteries.

Buyer profiles

Hygiene priority — won't use in water

Choose any IPX7 vibrator in your preferred type (bullet, suction, wand). The cleaning advantage is the real benefit. Spend on the type, not specifically on water-resistance specs.

Bath/shower regular user

IPX7 minimum, magnetic charging preferred (no exposed port = no leak risk). Suction toys (Womanizer, Satisfyer) work best in water; vibrators feel slightly muted by buoyancy.

Pool / outdoor enthusiast

IPX8 specifically (continuous submersion) — IPX7 is rated for 30 minutes only. Niche category, fewer options. Premium brands tend to publish IPX8 explicitly when applicable.

Couples sharing

Silicone IPX7 — sterilisable between users with diluted bleach (1:10 in water, rinse thoroughly) or simple boiling impossible due to electronics. Easier than wipe-cleaning a splash-proof model.

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Our verdict

If "waterproof" is on your shortlist, only consider toys with explicit IPX7 (or higher) certification. Anything labelled "waterproof" without an IP number is splash-proof at best, and the difference matters as soon as the toy hits actual water. Brands that publish their IP rating clearly (Womanizer, Satisfyer, LELO, We-Vibe) are also the ones whose rating you can trust — opacity about the rating usually means there isn't one.

For most buyers, the bigger value of IPX7 isn't shower/bath use — it's cleaning. The ability to soak, rinse, and sterilise without worrying about destroying the motor extends a toy's hygiene life dramatically. If you're choosing between two similar toys and one is IPX7 and the other isn't, that alone is a fair tiebreaker even if you never plan to use it submerged.

The selection below filters to toys with verified IPX7 rating from manufacturers with published certificates. We exclude any "waterproof" claim without explicit IP rating, any product with consistent user complaints about water entering despite IP claims, and any toy whose seal depends on a screw cap that loosens over use.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between waterproof and splash-proof?

Splash-proof = handles incidental water (rain, sweat, light spray). IPX4-IPX6 ratings cover this. Waterproof = handles full immersion, IPX7 minimum. The terms are used interchangeably in marketing but mean different things to engineers. Always check for IPX7 explicitly if you want bath/submersion use.

Can I use any vibrator in the shower if I'm careful?

Probably not without risk. Splash-proof toys (most of them) handle incidental water but not direct shower spray for prolonged time. Water enters through stress cracks, around USB ports, through battery compartment seams. May work for a few uses, then suddenly fail. Save for genuine IPX7 toys.

Are app-controlled toys waterproof?

Most modern app-controlled toys (Lovense Lush 3, We-Vibe Chorus, Satisfyer Curvy 1+) are IPX7 — yes. Watch out for older models or budget alternatives where the Bluetooth chip area was sealed less well. Bluetooth signal also weakens through water — phone needs to be very close.

Can I take an IPX7 toy in the pool?

IPX7 covers 30 minutes at 1m depth. A pool typically goes deeper and the time exposure is longer — outside spec. For pool use, look for IPX8 (continuous submersion) explicitly. Also: chlorine in pool water can damage silicone over time, and pool depth pressure can compromise seals over use.

Can I boil an IPX7 toy to sterilise it?

No — IPX7 covers pressure resistance, not heat. Boiling damages adhesives, melts seals, can damage internal electronics. Boil only 100% silicone toys with no electronics or batteries. For IPX7 toys with motors: warm soapy water, brand-recommended toy cleaner spray, optional diluted bleach (1:10) for shared toys.

Why do my "waterproof" toys keep failing?

Most likely the toys were splash-proof, not IPX7. Common scenario: cheap toy marketed as "waterproof" with no IP number, used in bath, motor seizes after 3-5 uses. Investment in a verified IPX7 model from a reputable brand pays itself back in lifespan.

Does water exposure void the warranty?

For IPX7-rated products: no — water use is the expected use case, motor failure under those conditions is covered. For splash-proof or unrated products: yes, water use voids warranty. Read the fine print before submerging anything questionable.

Does the rubber USB cover affect waterproofness?

It's the weakest link. Press it firmly closed every time before water exposure. The IP rating assumes proper closure. After a few hundred uses, the rubber loses elasticity and the seal fails — that's the 2-3 year lifespan limit for waterproof toys with rubber-cap charging. Magnetic charging (no port at all) lasts longer.

Why do toys feel "less intense" in water?

Water dampens vibration transmission — physics. The vibration energy disperses through the surrounding water rather than concentrating against the body. To compensate: increase intensity setting one or two notches in water vs. dry. Suction-style toys are less affected since they work via pressure waves.

Can I use bath salts / oils with my waterproof toy?

Bath salts: usually fine. Bath oils, bubble bath with strong fragrance, anything petroleum-based: no — these can degrade silicone over time. Rinse the toy thoroughly with plain water after any oily bath. If you bath with oils regularly, treat the toy as having shorter expected lifespan.

Should I dry the toy completely before charging?

Yes always — even on IPX7 toys. The plug-in charging port (under the rubber cap, or the magnetic contact area) MUST be bone-dry when charging. Allow 20-30 minutes air-dry after water exposure. Charging while wet is the most common cause of "my IPX7 toy died after a few months" complaints.

Are wand massagers really waterproof?

Most premium wands are IPX6 (jet-resistant) but NOT IPX7 (submergible). Magic Wand Plus is one notable exception with IPX7 specifically. Doxy Don, Le Wand: IPX5/6 — fine for shower, not for full bath submersion. Always check the spec sheet before bath use.

Is silicone really required for waterproof toys?

Not strictly — sealed ABS plastic and certain composite materials achieve IPX7. Silicone is preferred because it forms a continuous bonded skin around the entire device, eliminating most seam concerns. Cheap waterproof toys in plastic often fail at the seam between two halves of the case.

When is "waterproof" the wrong feature to focus on?

If you've never used a sex toy in water and don't plan to: don't compromise on type, motor quality, or material to chase IPX7 specifically. Pick the best toy for your use case; if it happens to be IPX7, great. The hygiene benefit is real but secondary to choosing the right type of toy first.