Chastity Cage Sizing Guide — Find Your Perfect Fit
Chastity Cage Sizing Guide
Getting the right fit is the single most important step in safe, comfortable chastity wear. This guide walks you through everything — from measuring to choosing your ring style.
Why Sizing Matters
A chastity cage that doesn't fit correctly isn't just uncomfortable — it can be dangerous. Too tight and you risk cutting off circulation; too loose and the device won't stay secure. The right fit means you can wear your cage safely for extended periods with minimal discomfort.
- Too tight: Numbness, swelling, skin damage, restricted blood flow
- Too loose: Slipping, chafing, security issues, discomfort during movement
- Just right: Snug but comfortable, secure, hygienic, wearable for hours
What You'll Need
- A soft fabric measuring tape (or a strip of paper + ruler)
- A pen and paper to record measurements
- A relaxed, flaccid state for accurate measurements
- Good lighting
How to Measure — Step by Step
Step 1: Base Ring Diameter (Most Important)
The base ring sits behind the scrotum and around the base of the penis. Getting this right is critical.
- Wrap a soft tape measure or paper strip around the base (behind the scrotum, around the shaft base)
- Note the circumference in millimeters
- Divide by π (3.14159) to get the diameter
- Round to the nearest standard size: 40mm, 45mm, 50mm, or 55mm
Example: Circumference of 141mm ÷ 3.14 = ~45mm diameter → choose the 45mm ring
Step 2: Tube Length
Measure flaccid length from the base of the shaft to the tip. The tube should be slightly shorter than your flaccid length — this prevents erections from becoming painful while keeping the cage secure.
- Subtract 5–10mm from your flaccid length for the ideal tube length
- For sissy/feminization purposes, many prefer a shorter tube for a flatter, more feminine profile
Step 3: Tube Diameter (Internal Width)
Measure the circumference of the flaccid shaft at its widest point, then divide by π (3.14) to get the diameter. The tube should allow comfortable fit without pinching.
Ring Size Reference Chart
| Ring Size | Circumference | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40mm | ~126mm | Smaller / tighter fit | Most secure; not for beginners |
| 45mm | ~141mm | Most common starting size | Great for first-time wearers |
| 50mm | ~157mm | Average / comfortable fit | Comfortable for extended wear |
| 55mm | ~173mm | Larger / relaxed fit | More comfortable overnight |
When between sizes, always size up on the base ring for comfort. You can always size down later once you know your fit.
Arc Ring vs Round Ring — Which Should You Choose?
| Style | Shape | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Arc Ring | Oval / D-shaped | Most anatomically comfortable; recommended for beginners and extended wear |
| Round Ring | Perfect circle | More secure fit; preferred by experienced wearers |
Common Sizing Mistakes to Avoid
- Measuring while aroused — Always measure flaccid for accurate sizing
- Choosing a tube that's too long — Leaves room for unwanted arousal; go shorter for security
- Ignoring the base ring — Most discomfort comes from a poorly fitted ring, not the tube
- Not testing before extended wear — Always do a 1–2 hour test session before sleeping in a new cage
- Skipping lubricant — Always apply body-safe lube or baby oil to the base ring before wearing
✅ Sissy Lux Sizing Checklist (Print & Keep)
Use this checklist before ordering your first (or next) chastity cage:
- ☐ Measured base ring circumference (flaccid, relaxed)
- ☐ Calculated base ring diameter (circumference ÷ 3.14)
- ☐ Measured flaccid tube length
- ☐ Measured flaccid tube diameter
- ☐ Chosen ring style (Arc or Round)
- ☐ Selected cage style (Traditional / Flat / Nub / Cobra / Inverted)
- ☐ Chosen material (Stainless Steel / Resin / Silicone)
- ☐ Have body-safe lubricant ready
- ☐ Have a spare key stored safely
- ☐ Planned a short test session before extended wear