Medically reviewed by Ellie Zara Ley, MD on December 16, 2024.
Phalloplasty is a gender affirming genital surgery which creates a penis using the existing genital tissue and tissue from another part of the body: often the forearm, thigh or groin. Some types of phalloplasty operations can use the nerve from another part of the body to allow for the possibility of heighted, erotic sensation in the new penis. Dr. Ley (she/her) is our board-certified gender affirming surgeon who performs phalloplasties for patients regardless of gender identity. Here we present information about the different phalloplasty options we offer, their results and why patients opt for them. Some of the topics we cover are phalloplasty scarring, urinating while standing, sensation, orgasms, penis size, penetrative sex (erections) and additional accompanying procedures that patients often solicit. Elsewhere on our website we have more information on how to prepare for and recover from a phalloplasty.
At the GCC, there are three donor zones we use to make a phallus for a patient:
During the initial phase, Dr. Ley and her team will construct the new penis. In a second phase, about 6 months after the new penis has healed, our team can conduct a urethral lengthening (so you can urinate while standing) removal of the vaginal canal (vaginectomy), and create a scrotum.. Patients are also given the option of preserving their vaginal canal and/or natal penis, which means we could leave the clitoral tissue in-tact at the base of the new penis. If a patient wishes to undergo a urethral lengthening to be able to pee from the tip of their penis, they cannot preserve their vaginal canal due to the high risk of urethral complications.
For additional stages, we can construct a glans to the head of the penis, insert an erectile device, insert testicular expanders, testicular implants. You can read more about these additional procedures, their timeline and recovery processes here.
Patients who chose a groin flap phalloplasty often do so because:
Patients who chose a forearm (RFF) or thigh (ALT) phalloplasty often do so because:
Patients who get a groin flap phalloplasty will have the most easily concealable scars. On the other hand, patients who get a forearm (RFF) or thigh (ALT) phalloplasty will have a large rectangular swath of scar tissue visible on either their forearm or outer thigh. This swath of scar tissue will be depressed and discolored compared to the surrounding skin. It can be concealed with shorts or a long-sleeved shirt. Patients can have the area repigmented by an experienced medical tattoo artist a year after it has been healed.
During the initial construction of the phalloplasty, a urethra can be built inside of the penis to allow for a patient to eventually urinate while standing up. However, to let the phalloplasty heal, the natal urethra and the urethra in the penis are not connected until 6 months afterwards. This means a patient will not be able to urinate out of the tip of their penis until then. Catheters and tubing will be used during the initial recovery process of each of these procedures.
The size and girth of a patient’s phalloplasty result from the unique plan you make with your surgeon during a free in-person consultation. Please note that an in-person consultation is required to determine candidacy for a phalloplasty operation. Generally speaking, the size of the patient’s body (specifically the skin flap donor site) can limit how large and thick the penis will be.
About six months after the penis is constructed through a phalloplasty, swelling will go down enough so that a patient should be able to see its final size.
Nerve regeneration can start as early as three weeks after surgery, but is different for every patient. As nerves regenerate, patients may experience tingling sensations in the site until they heal after a few months. Some patients experience no nerve regeneration at all.
Whether sensation is tactile or erotic (heightened), it will generally be felt equally along the entire penis. The groin flap phalloplasty has regular tactile sensation as opposed to erotic sensation. That said, if a patient opts for a urethral lengthening using a smaller skin graft from the forearm, erotic sensation can be established. The radial forearm flap (RFF) and anterolateral thigh flap (ALT) phalloplasty can give patients a heightened, erotic sensation in their penis since the nerves used in the donor site (the forearm or the outer thigh) have heightened sensation.
Some patients who undergo a clitoral burying can still stimulate the skin above where it has been buried to experience erotic sensation. Patients who preserve their clitoris or natal penis tissue will still be able to stimulate it.
If your phalloplasty involves preserving erotic sensation, orgasms are possible through stimulating the penis. Patients are recommended to wait 3-4 months (or until incisions are fully healed) before masturbating or engaging in other kinds of sexual activity with the new penis. With a completed urethral lengthening, some patients report being able to ejaculate clear fluid when they orgasm.
3-4 months after the phalloplasty is constructed (or when incisions have fully healed), a patient can begin engaging in sexual activity, alone or with partners, with their new penis. For a groin flap phalloplasty, this is about 6 months after the first surgery. For the forearm (RFF) and thigh (ALT) phalloplasties, that is about 3-4 months after the first surgery.
To have penetrative sex with a phalloplasty, a patient can use the assistance of a silicone erectile sleeve and/or a penis pump after this healing window is completed. 12 months after the phalloplasty is constructed, a patient can have an erectile device inserted: a malleable rod or a saline pump system. You can read more about these options here.
Erectile devices––whether a saline pump or malleable rod––can be inserted into the penis 12 months after the phalloplasty operation(s) is/are concluded. Erectile devices increase the girth, but not the length of the penis created from a phalloplasty.
All virtual and in-person consultations with our board-certified surgeons are free. Once you fill out this form, our patient care team will reach out and guide you through every step to get to surgery.