Loviux Report 2026 Data from 30 March to 28 June 2026 · 20 markets

Europe's Pleasure Map 2026

Britain is the continent's men's lingerie capital, Romania searches for vibrators the most, and Portugal leads Europe on sex dolls. Every European country looks for pleasure in its own way, and for the first time there is hard data to map it.

The Loviux Demand Report 2026 analysed 13,940 real Google search queries across 20 European markets over 90 days, and the picture is anything but uniform. Britons search for men's lingerie more than for almost anything else. Swedes go straight for the G-spot and for glass. The Spanish look for erotic board games at nearly three times the European average. And while in Slovakia four in ten searches are for a brand name, in the UK almost nobody searches by brand: they search by product.

2026

In 30 seconds

  • Britain shops for men's lingerie: its top query nationally is literally "mens lingerie", ahead of any vibrator.
  • Sweden is the most specific market: it does not search for "vibrator", it searches for the G-spot vibrator, plus the glass dildo.
  • Romania is Europe's vibrator country: almost four in ten product searches (39.8%) are for vibrators.
  • Portugal leads Europe on both BDSM and sex dolls, two records that share nothing.
  • Two brand Europes: in Slovakia 40% of searches are a brand name; in the UK, only 1.3%.

How it was done

This is not a survey, it is real behaviour. Loviux runs a country-specific store in 25 European markets. The study groups the queries those stores appeared for on Google between 30 March and 28 June 2026 and sorts them into product categories using a 16-language dictionary. The metric is impressions, that is, captured search visibility. The full method, including the caveats, is at the end.

The continent's podium

The big picture first. Across the markets with solid data, Europe's most-searched category is vibrators and suction toys (18.2% of product demand), followed by toys for him (16.1%) and lubricants and cosmetics (15.6%). Then come BDSM (11.8%), dildos (11.1%), lingerie (9.7%) and anal (8.5%). Erotic games close the group at 7.0%, and that is where the first national surprise shows up.

Category European average share
Vibrators and suction toys18.2%
Toys for him16.1%
Lubricants and cosmetics15.6%
BDSM and fetish11.8%
Dildos11.1%
Lingerie9.7%
Anal8.5%
Erotic games7.0%
Couples2.1%

Britain and Italy: it's all about lingerie

The UK stands out for something unexpected. Its top query nationally, ahead of any vibrator or lubricant, is literally "mens lingerie" (562 impressions), and lingerie as a whole is 16.0% of British product demand, well above the 9.7% European average. The same men's lingerie pattern shows up in Italy, which posts the second-highest lingerie share in Europe (23.2%), driven by "lingerie uomo" and "intimo uomo". Finland tops the table at 26.2%. Men's lingerie, it turns out, is a British and Italian story.

Sweden goes for the G-spot and the glass

If there is a most technical, most specific market in Europe, it is Sweden. Swedes do not search for "vibrator", they search for the G-spot vibrator: variants of "g punkts vibrator" dominate their query list and lift the category to 28.0%. To that anatomical precision they add a second obsession, the glass dildo (17.1% versus an 11.1% average). No other market is so exact about what it wants.

Vibrators rule the east; games rule Spain

Romania is Europe's vibrator country: almost four in ten Romanian product searches (39.8%) are for vibrators, more than double the European average, with a clear taste for "luxury", "smart" and remote-controlled models. Spain, by contrast, enters the category through play. Erotic games are 19.6% of Spanish demand, nearly three times the European average, and the single most-searched query in the whole country is "dados sexuales" (sex dice), with 845 impressions.

Anal and male toys: the anglosphere leads

When you measure anal intent across every category (including anal-specific lube), the map sorts itself: the United States (16.6%), the United Kingdom (15.1%) and Sweden (14.7%) lead Europe. The Swedish case comes with a caveat: more than half of those searches (962 of 1,816 impressions) are for anal lubricant, not toys. At the other end, Portugal, Romania and France barely reach 2 to 3%.

For toys for him, the leaders are the United States (27.0%) and France (25.4%), well above the 16.1% European figure. In both, the engine is the cock ring: "vibrating rings" and "erection rings" in the US, "anneau vibrant" in France.

Portugal: two records that share nothing

Portugal takes two European firsts that are hard to picture together. BDSM and fetish are 24.1% of its product demand, twice the average, pulled by handcuffs ("algemas") and whips ("chicote"). And it is the country that searches most for sex dolls in all of Europe: "boneca sexual" and its variants add up to 10.7% of the country's entire demand (1,270 impressions), ahead of any vibrator.

Small national quirks, real numbers

In Greece, the top query nationally is the Greek word for dildo, "ντιλντο" (205 impressions). In Germany, flavoured condoms ("kondome mit geschmack") and erotic card games weigh more than anywhere else. And in Italy, the report's most endearing find: the rubber-duck-shaped vibrator ("papera sex toy", "vibratore paperella") shows up with volume of its own.

Brand versus product: two Europes

The last contrast is not about category, it is about how people search. In Slovakia, 40.0% of searches are a brand name outright (Lelo, Satisfyer), and in France 20.6%. At the other extreme, only 1.3% of UK searches and 3.4% of Spanish ones go by brand: they look for the product category, not the maker. One Europe already arrives with a brand in mind, another still arrives by the generic term. For any manufacturer in the sector, it is a map of where brand equity already exists and where it does not.

Contrast summary

Country Strongest over-index Share vs EU average
SpainErotic games19.6% vs 7.0% (x2.8)
RomaniaVibrators39.8% vs 18.2% (x2.2)
SwedenG-spot vibrator + glass dildo28.0% and 17.1%
IrelandDildos36.0% vs 11.1% (x3.2)
PortugalBDSM and sex dolls24.1% (x2.0) and 10.7% of total
United StatesMale toys and anal27.0% and 16.6%
FinlandLingerie26.2% vs 9.7% (x2.7)
ItalyLingerie (much of it men's)23.2% vs 9.7% (x2.4)
FranceLubricants and brand search26.3% and 20.6%
SlovakiaBrand search40.0% of total

Methodology in brief

Google Search Console data from Loviux's 25 national stores, window 30 March to 28 June 2026. The top of up to 1,000 queries per market was analysed: 13,940 queries and 118,216 impressions across 20 domains with volume. Comparisons use the 17 markets with a solid sample (at least 280 analysed queries), and no headline rests on fewer than 500 impressions. The metric is impressions, that is, search demand captured by Loviux, not total market demand or absolute search volume: it reflects both what people search for and where Loviux appears.

Classification is automatic, using a root dictionary in 16 languages, and each query falls into a single product category. To compare countries cleanly, the product share uses the sum of the 9 product categories as its denominator (generics, brands and unclassified queries are excluded). The index versus the European average divides a country's share by the average across the 17 robust markets: an index of 2.0 means that country searches the category twice as much as the average.

Honest limitations

  • This is captured demand, not market demand: it reflects both what people search for and where Loviux ranks.
  • Catalogue bias: a single well-ranked product can inflate a category. We flag it where it happens.
  • Impressions are not total country searches, they are Loviux visibility.
  • Only the top of up to 1,000 queries per market: the long tail is out.
  • Language inheritance: the United States and Ireland inherit the British English catalogue, which can carry signals across markets.
  • Automatic classification: accurate but not perfect. The script and the dictionary are reproducible and auditable.

The report is repeatable every quarter with a fresh snapshot, which allows a historical series to be built.

Data citable with a link to the source.