
According to a survey conducted by Womanizer, a company specializing in sexual wellness research, only 38% of women said they have never faked an orgasm. This means that nearly two-thirds have done it at least once, and many do it regularly.
It’s rarely discussed, sometimes joked about, yet faking an orgasm is far more common—and far more damaging—than most people realize. Behind this seemingly harmless act lie cultural pressures, emotional mechanisms, and relationship dynamics that continue to distort society’s understanding of female sexuality.
According to a survey conducted by Womanizer, a company specializing in sexual wellness research, only 38% of women said they have never faked an orgasm. This means that nearly two-thirds have done it at least once, and many do it regularly.
Why do women fake it? How does this affect their sexual wellbeing, their self-confidence, and their relationships? And most importantly, how can we dismantle the beliefs that push women to silence their own pleasure?
This article explores the deeper realities behind this widespread but revealing behavior.
Another powerful belief is that men are responsible for women’s orgasms.
“If I didn’t climax, he must have done something wrong.”
“If I fake it, at least he’ll feel confident.”
This mindset reinforces the idea that the female orgasm is something a man “gives,” instead of something a woman experiences and participates in actively.
This perspective ignores:
Many women have never been taught how their own pleasure works. In this information gap, their partner becomes the assumed “provider” of orgasm.
Faking, then, becomes a way to protect the partner from feeling inadequate, even if it means suppressing their own needs.
Female pleasure relies primarily on clitoral stimulation, whether direct or indirect. Yet mainstream sexual culture—and heterosexual dynamics especially—continue to place penetration at the center.
This leads to ideas such as:
The issue: most women do not climax from penetration alone.
This means countless couples follow a sexual script that simply doesn’t align with female physiology.
Simulation becomes a way to:
appear sexually “compatible.”
avoid asking for what they actually need,
avoid challenging the male-centered script,

It may seem like a harmless way to avoid awkwardness.
But the consequences run deeper than expected.
If he thinks what he’s doing works, he will keep doing it.
Faking deprives the relationship of honest sexual communication.
Over time, women learn to:
Some women eventually believe they are “incapable” of orgasm.
This may cause:
Even if the partner doesn’t notice, an emotional distance forms.
The woman carries the burden of a recurring lie in a deeply intimate area.
Expressing one’s sexual needs is one of the hardest challenges in a relationship.
It requires:
But honest communication is also the only path to a healthy, satisfying sexual life.
When we deny our own feelings, we shut down the very source of vitality that allows us to experience intimacy and passion.
Rollo May
Sex should be a space where both partners can say:
Speaking up is not a complaint—it is an act of respect, for oneself and for the other.
The issue goes far beyond orgasms. It concerns the broader belief that women’s pleasure deserves:
Faking an orgasm means renouncing one’s own pleasure.
It reinforces a model where the woman is expected to play a role, rather than live an authentic experience. By contrast, acknowledging one’s needs and desires fosters a more honest, equal, and fulfilling intimate connection.
Faking is not a crime.
It is a learned behavior—cultural, emotional, often unconscious.
But continuing to fake perpetuates a cycle where:
Putting words on what we feel is a powerful act. It restores the rightful place of female pleasure in the sexual dynamic. And it gives both partners the chance to grow together, honestly and respectfully. Sex is not a performance. It is not a role to play. It is a shared language—a journey—an evolving connection. It deserves to be lived, not imitated.