12 Widely Believed Sperm Facts That Are Actually False - Healthline
Maybe your like
- Health Conditions
Health Conditions
All- Breast Cancer
- Cancer Care
- Caregiving for Alzheimer's Disease
- Chronic Kidney Disease
- Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
- Digestive Health
- Eye Health
- Heart Health
- Menopause
- Mental Health
- Migraine
- Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
- Parkinson’s Disease
- Psoriasis
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
- Sleep Health
- Type 2 Diabetes
- Weight Management
Condition Spotlight
All
Controlling Ulcerative Colitis
Navigating Life with Bipolar Disorder
Mastering Geographic Atrophy
Managing Type 2 Diabetes
- Wellness
Wellness Topics
All- CBD
- Fitness
- Healthy Aging
- Hearing
- Mental Well-Being
- Nutrition
- Parenthood
- Recipes
- Sexual Health
- Skin Care
- Sleep Health
- Vitamins and Supplements
- Women's Wellness
Product Reviews
All- At-Home Testing
- Men's Health
- Mental Health
- Nutrition
- Sleep
- Vitamins and Supplements
- Women's Health
Featured Programs
All
Your Guide to Glucose Health
Inflammation and Aging
Cold & Flu Season Survival Guide
She’s Good for Real
- Tools
Featured
- Video Series
- Pill Identifier
- FindCare
- Drugs A-Z
- Medicare Plans by State
Lessons
All- Crohn’s and Ulcerative Colitis Essentials
- Diabetes Nutrition
- High Cholesterol
- Taming Inflammation in Psoriasis
- Taming Inflammation in Psoriatic Arthritis
Newsletters
All- Anxiety and Depression
- Digestive Health
- Heart Health
- Migraine
- Nutrition Edition
- Type 2 Diabetes
- Wellness Wire
Lifestyle Quizzes
- Find a Diet
- Find Healthy Snacks
- Weight Management
- How Well Do You Sleep?
- Are You a Workaholic?
- Featured
Health News
All- Medicare 2026 Changes
- Can 6-6-6 Walking Workout Help You Lose Weight?
- This Couple Lost 118 Pounds Together Without Medication
- 5 Science-Backed Ways to Live a Longer Life
- Morning Coffee May Help You Live Longer
This Just In
- 5 Tips for a Healthy Lifestyle
- How to Disinfect Your House After the Flu
- Best Vegan and Plant-Based Meal Delivery for 2025
- Does Medicare Cover Pneumonia Shots?
- Chromosomes, Genetics, and Your Health
Top Reads
- Best Multivitamins for Women
- Best Multivitamins for Men
- Best Online Therapy Services
- Online Therapy That Takes Insurance
- Buy Ozempic Online
- Mounjaro Overview
Video Series
- Youth in Focus
- Healthy Harvest
- Through an Artist's Eye
- Future of Health
- Connect
Find Your Bezzy Community
Bezzy communities provide meaningful connections with others living with chronic conditions. Join Bezzy on the web or mobile app.
All
Breast Cancer
Multiple Sclerosis
Depression
Migraine
Type 2 Diabetes
Psoriasis
Follow us on social media
Can't get enough? Connect with us for all things health.
Sexual Health
- Birth control
- STIs
- HIV
- HSV
- Activity
- Relationships
Medically reviewed by Timothy J. Legg, PhD, PsyD — Written by Tim Jewell — Updated on January 26, 2024- Motility
- Fertility
- Lifespan
- Fertilization
- Aging
- Briefs vs. boxers
- Irregularities
- Pre-cum
- Volume
- Protein
- Pineapple
- Takeaway
Many of us still believe some pretty unscientific, long-standing myths about sperm, semen, and male fertility. From sperm speed to nutritional makeup, here are 12 of the most popular urban legends.
In one sentence, the biology of sex may seem even simpler than using the “birds and bees” metaphor. Sperm gets ejected from the penis, enters the vagina, and swims up the reproductive tract until reaching an egg to fertilize.
But it isn’t quite that simple.
Barely 300 years ago, it was considered a major scientific breakthrough when scientists came up with the idea that a fully formed, tiny human inhabited the head of each sperm — totally debunked and untrue.
Fortunately, as the human body has evolved over thousands of years to maximize fertility potential, so has our scientific understanding of sperm.
1. Sperm swim like Olympic athletes
The common tale is that millions — anywhere from 20 to 300 million, to be precise — of heroic sperm swim in competition with each other to be the lucky little swimmer that penetrates an egg. Nope.
First, sperm don’t really swim straight — for the most part. Often, sperm movement ability, known as motility, is classified into one of three groups:
- Progressive motility: Sperm actively move in straight lines or large circles
- Non-progressive motility: Sperm move in any other pattern except forward
- Immotile: Sperm do not move
In an essay for Aeon, Robert D. Martin described the route as “more like a challenging military obstacle course” and less of a standard race.
And even then, sperm require more than a little boost from the female reproductive system to reach the finish line. In fact, most of the motility work is done by the uterus muscles. It coaxes the sperm along to the fallopian tubes toward an egg.
2. Thicker sperm is more fertile sperm
Thicker semen doesn’t necessarily mean thicker sperm. Usually, it means there’s a high sperm concentration or a high number of irregularly shaped sperm.
Sperm that enters a vagina comes into contact with cervical mucus. The cervical mucus does two things: protects and rejects.
It protects sperm from the vagina’s acidity as well as rejects sperm of a certain shape and size (morphology) or motility that would otherwise prevent sperm from reaching an egg.
How the female reproductive system helps sperm:
- The cervix — the tissue between the vagina and uterus — walls widen.
- Crypts, or cervix glands, grow in number and increase in size to store more sperm.
- The cervix’s mucus barrier thins out, so it’s easier for sperm to pass through.
3. Sperm only live for a short time after release
Not always! Lifespan depends on where sperm land after ejaculation.
Sperm that make it into the vagina after ejaculation can live up to 5 days. This is due to the protective effects of cervical mucus and cervical crypts.
But if sperm have a chance to dry out, they basically die. Ejaculated sperm that land on cold, dry objects may die after a few minutes — although very rarely, sperm may last a whole 30 minutes.
Sperm may die even faster in a hot bath or a hot tub due to the heat or chemicals in the water.
4. Sperm entering the vaginal canal swim straight up to an egg
It’s a pretty long journey to an egg. During penis-in-vagina sex, sperm don’t leave the penis and head straight to the uterus.
Some sperm attach to oviduct epithelial cells in the fallopian tubes or get stored in tiny chambers called crypts until fertilization primetime: ovulation.
The path to fertilization: where sperm need to pass before reaching an egg
- Vaginal canal: The first and outermost portion, which is about 2–4 inches (7–10 centimeters) long
- Cervix: A small, cylindrical canal that connects the vagina to the uterus
- Uterus: Where a pregnancy develops
- Fallopian tubes: Two tubes that connect the uterus to the ovaries, allowing sperm to move toward egg cells and fertilized eggs to move into the uterus
- Ovaries: Two organs that produce egg cells that can be fertilized
5. Sperm stay fertile and healthy throughout your life
One of the oldest persisting myths is that while there are a limited number of eggs (which is true), sperm is available in a lifetime supply. Not so fast.
Sperm production, or spermatogenesis, does take place indefinitely, but the quality and motility of sperm decline with age.
Older males are also more likely to pass genetic mutations onto their children, about four times faster than a female would, according to an Icelandic study.
A 2017 study of 1.4 million people in Sweden found a consistent linear relationship between a male’s age and the likelihood that their children would be born with a genetic mutation that neither parent has.
6. Briefs are bad for your sperm count
Supposedly, tight undies decrease sperm count, while loose boxers keep everything at just the right temperature for sperm production. But underwear has (almost) no effect on sperm.
A 2016 study found little difference in sperm count based on underwear choice. But a 2018 study made scientific waves when it found that people who wore boxers had 17% more sperm than people in briefs.
However, the 2018 study authors warned that their results didn’t account for other factors that affect sperm production, such as the type of pants or what fabric undies are made of.
And get this: The body may compensate for extra testicle heat by releasing a little extra sperm-producing follicle-stimulating hormone.
So, boxers are only a little bit more sperm-friendly. Wear what makes you comfortable.
8. Every sperm is healthy and viable
Far from it. Most sperm never make it to an egg for a number of reasons. To be considered fertile, not even 100% of sperm need to be moving — as long as 40% are motile, you’re fertile!
And not all 40% will make it to an egg during penis-in-vagina sex.
The shape has a lot of say in success. Having multiple heads, weirdly shaped tails, or missing parts can make sperm simply unfit for the journey through the female reproductive tract.
And even healthy sperm don’t always make it through the competition. Sperm can pass through the oviduct and end up in interstitial fluid surrounding the internal reproductive organs.
That’s right, sperm may literally float around in the body, never to fertilize.
9. Pre-cum can’t lead to pregnancy
False! Mostly. Biologically speaking, pre-cum shouldn’t contain sperm — but sperm left over in the urethra, the tube through which both urine and semen are ejected, can get mixed in.
Sure, there aren’t as many as in new semen, but a 2011 study showed that nearly 37% of pre-cum samples collected from 27 subjects contained a significant amount of healthy, motile sperm.
A 2016 study of 42 participants found that at least 17% of pre-cum samples were full of active, mobile sperm.
So even if you’re using the pull-out method, there’s a small chance that some sperm can get loose and cause a pregnancy.
10. More sperm is better when trying to get pregnant
Having a high semen volume, which counts sperm in a single ejaculation, is good — but there’s a point where the returns start diminishing. The higher the sperm concentration, the more likely multiple sperm may fertilize an egg.
Normally, only a single one-celled sperm cell is allowed to fertilize one egg cell, resulting in the development of an embryo. After the first sperm breaks through a layer of proteins around an egg, this layer blocks more sperm from getting through.
But if too many sperm reach an egg, two — or more, in rare cases — sperm can break through this layer and fertilize it. This is called polyspermy.
Delivering extra genetic material to an egg increases the risk of DNA mutations, brain conditions such as Down syndrome, or potentially fatal defects in the heart, spine, and skull.
Consider this if you or a partner use in vitro fertilization (IVF) to get pregnant. Because IVF bypasses many reproductive functions that limit how many sperm get to an egg, semen doesn’t need to have millions of sperm to be fertile.
11. Sperm is a protein powerhouse
This is a popular myth that’s probably been joked about constantly. But you’d have to ingest more than 100 ejaculates to see any nutritional benefit from it.
While it’s true that semen is composed of ingredients like vitamin C, zinc, protein compounds, cholesterol, and sodium, claiming sperm contributes to your daily nutritional value is false advertising.
Plus, some people actually have allergic reactions to semen, so ingesting it isn’t always recommended.
12. Pineapple makes semen taste amazing
It’s not just pineapples that people say are supposedly good for semen flavor, but none of the tales are based on science.
The first thing to learn here is that semen scent and taste, like many bodily fluids, are influenced by overall genetics, diet, and lifestyle. Just like everyone’s breath smells different, everyone’s cum has its unique aroma.
The second thing is that while no foods or liquids may noticeably alter semen scent, following a diet rich in nutrients like vitamin C and vitamin B12 can positively affect sperm count, morphology, and motility.
The bottom line
Some of these myths go way back to (false) notions of sperm exceptionalism, but many of them also obscure the fact that conception, like sex, is much more of an active partnership.
Believing these myths can also lead to many inaccurate or toxic presumptions. For example:
- False portrayals of women as being passive receptacles of sperm rather than equal collaborators in penis-in-vagina sex
- Feelings of inadequacy for having a low sperm count
- Blaming a partner for not “pulling their weight” when trying to have a baby when so many other factors must be considered
Sex and conception aren’t a competition or a feat of strength: They’re a team activity in which all participants have equal footing, regardless of whether you contribute sperm, eggs, or surrogacy.
How we reviewed this article:
SourcesHistoryHealthline has strict sourcing guidelines and relies on peer-reviewed studies, academic research institutions, and medical journals and associations. We only use quality, credible sources to ensure content accuracy and integrity. You can learn more about how we ensure our content is accurate and current by reading our editorial policy.- Arslan RC, et al. (2017). Older fathers’ children have lower evolutionary fitness across four centuries and in four populations.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2017.1562
- Beltrame FL, et al. (2019). Vitamin B12 prevents cimetidine-induced androgenic failure and damage to sperm quality in rats.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fendo.2019.00309/full
- Bühler N. (2022). The making of ‘old eggs’: the science of reproductive ageing between fertility and anti-ageing technologies.https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405661821000253
- Dubin JM, et al. (2022). Rethinking the role of sperm morphology in clinical practice.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9250117/
- Evans JP. (2020). Preventing polyspermy in mammalian eggs—Contributions of the membrane block and other mechanisms.https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/mrd.23331
- Gold JM, et al. (2023). Physiology, vaginal.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK545147/
- Hajjar T, et al. (2020). Protective effect of vitamin C and zinc as an antioxidant against chemotherapy-induced male reproductive toxicity.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7378338/
- Jónsson H, et al. (2017). Parental influence on human germline de novo mutations in 1,548 trios from Iceland.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28959963/
- Killick SR, et al. (2011). Sperm content of pre-ejaculatory fluid.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3564677/
- Kölle S. (2022). Sperm‐oviduct interactions: Key factors for sperm survival and maintenance of sperm fertilizing capacity.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9321146/
- Kovavisarach E, et al. (2016). Presence of sperm in pre-ejaculatory fluid of healthy males.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27266214
- Leslie SW, et al. (2023). Male infertility.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK562258/
- Lykke MR, et al. (2021). Vaginal, cervical and uterine pH in women with normal and abnormal vaginal microbiota.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7909242/
- MacQueen H. (2020). The science of sperm.https://www.open.edu/openlearn/body-mind/health/health-sciences/the-science-sperm
- Mai H, et al. (2023). Association of diet and lifestyle factors with semen quality in male partners of Chinese couples preparing for pregnancy.https://reproductive-health-journal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12978-023-01718-5
- Miller DJ. (2022). The epic journey of sperm through the female reproductive tract.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9556260/
- Mínguez-Alarcón L, et al. (2018). Type of underwear worn and markers of testicular function among men attending a fertility center.https://academic.oup.com/humrep/article/33/9/1749/5066758
- Sapra KJ, et al. (2016). Choice of underwear and male fecundity in a preconception cohort of couples.https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/andr.12163
- Siu KK, et al. (2021). The cell biology of fertilization: Gamete attachment and fusion.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34459848/
- Suede SH, et al. (2023). Histology, spermatogenesis.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK553142/
Share this article
Medically reviewed by Timothy J. Legg, PhD, PsyD — Written by Tim Jewell — Updated on January 26, 2024Read this next
- Does Penis Size Actually Matter?Medically reviewed by Janet Brito, Ph.D., LCSW, CST-S
Being good in bed isn’t about penis size, but how you handle it. Here's what you need to know about pleasure, pain, and everything in between.
READ MORE - Everything You Need to Know About Penis HealthMedically reviewed by Stacy Sampson, D.O.
When most people think about penis health, they think about sexually transmitted infections and erectile dysfunction. While these conditions can…
READ MORE - What to Know About Expedited Partner Therapy (EPT)
Expedited partner therapy (EPT) is a way for someone to get STI treatment for both themselves and their sexual partner. Learn more about how it works.
READ MORE - How to Talk to a Doctor About Your Sexual Health
Talking with a doctor about sexual health can lead to more informed choices, better outcomes, and a stronger connection to your body. Here's how to…
READ MORE - Could I Be Pregnant If I Have Light Spotting After Sex?
Light spotting after sex doesn’t necessarily mean you’re pregnant. There are several possible causes, and while pregnancy is one, it isn't the only…
READ MORE - What Causes Bleeding During Sex?
Bleeding during sexual activity can happen for many reasons, from temporary irritation to sexually transmitted infections and other underlying…
READ MORE - What Is a Honey Pack and Is It Dangerous?
Honey packs are unregulated supplements that claim to enhance sexual performance. They may cause serious side effects if consumed.
READ MORE - What Happens If You Vape During Pregnancy?
There’s a lot we still don’t know about the effects of vaping on pregnancy and nursing, but current research suggests it should be avoided as much as…
READ MORE - Alabama Governor Signs Bill Into Law to Protect IVF After Frozen Embryo Ruling
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signed a bill into law that would protect IVF providers from prosecution after the state's Supreme Court ruled that frozen…
READ MORE - Sex AddictionMedically reviewed by Timothy J. Legg, PhD, PsyD
Sex addiction can be a highly dangerous and destructive condition. Like drug or alcohol dependence, it affects a person’s mental health, personal…
READ MORE
Tag » Can You Feel When Sperm Enters
-
How To Confirm Whether Sperm Went Inside - Bodywise
-
How To Confirm Whether Sperm Went Inside Your Partner
-
Can Women Feel Sperm Go Inside Their Vaginas? - Quora
-
How Does A Woman Feel When Sperm ... - Discover Health Tips
-
How Does A Woman Feel When Sperm Enters The Body?
-
How Does A Woman Feel When Sperm Enters The Body?
-
Can You Feel It When You Pre-cum? - Planned Parenthood
-
Can Ejaculate Inside Your Vagina Cause Cramps? - Healthline
-
How Does A Woman Feel When Sperm Enters The Body
-
How Soon After Sex Do You Get Pregnant? - Verywell Family
-
How Fertilization Happens - Getting Pregnant - What To Expect
-
How Do You Feel When Sperm Enters The Female Body? - EmojiCut
-
How Does It Feel When Sperm Enters The Female Body? - EmojiCut
-
10 Totally Normal Things That Can Happen To Your Body After Having Sex