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Intimate skincare products on a bedside table — postpartum lubricant guide from Blossom Pelvic Health

The Best Lubricants for Postpartum and Breastfeeding

Nobody quite prepares you for postpartum vaginal dryness. You prepare for birth, for feeding, for sleep deprivation — but the dryness, discomfort, and changes to intimacy that follow birth often come as a surprise.

If you're postpartum or breastfeeding and finding things uncomfortably dry, that sex feels different or painful, or that you simply don't feel like yourself, you're in good company. A study of 832 postpartum women found that 43% reported vaginal dryness at six months after giving birth. Among breastfeeding women, research has found that breastfeeding doubles the risk of vaginal dryness compared to non-breastfeeding women. This is hormonal, and for most women it resolves. The right lubricant helps in the meantime.

Why breastfeeding causes dryness

During pregnancy, oestrogen levels hare high. After birth, they drop sharply. If you're breastfeeding, they stay low — because prolactin, the hormone responsible for milk production, suppresses oestrogen. And oestrogen is what keeps vaginal tissue lubricated, elastic, and comfortable.

The result is that many breastfeeding women experience vaginal dryness similar in character to what happens during menopause, except it is temporary and tied directly to feeding. Once feeding reduces or stops and oestrogen levels recover, natural lubrication typically returns.

Other factors that can contribute to postpartum dryness and discomfort:

  • Physical healing from perineal tears or episiotomy
  • Pelvic floor muscle tension or scar tissue
  • Fatigue and stress (both reduce natural lubrication)
  • Being touched-out from feeding and constant physical contact with a baby

A note on postpartum pain during sex

Lubricant is a practical and helpful first step. But sex should not be significantly painful postpartum, even after you have been cleared to resume. Some initial sensitivity as healing tissue is gently stretched is normal. Ongoing or sharp pain, pain at the vaginal entrance, or pain that makes you want to avoid intimacy is worth addressing with a pelvic health physiotherapist.

Postpartum pelvic floor changes — including muscle tension, scar tissue from tears or episiotomy, and changes to the pelvic girdle are extremely common and very treatable. You don't need a GP referral to see a pelvic health physio.

Which lubricant is best postpartum?

For intimacy: start with water-based

Water-based lubricants are the recommended starting point for postpartum use. They're gentle on healing tissue, compatible with all condom types, easy to apply, and simple to clean. For women whose tissue is still tender in the early postpartum period, this is almost always the right first choice.

YES WB Water-Based Lubricant — certified organic, pH-balanced, no glycerin, no parabens. A consistently popular choice for postpartum women.

A 150ml tube of YES® WB Water-Based Lubricant by YES®, featuring a green and white label indicating it is certified organic, hormone-free, and glycerin-free. The pH balanced lubricant offers long-lasting hydration and is packaged with a white flip-top cap at the bottom.

Sliquid Organics Natural — aloe vera-based and certified organic. The aloe provides a naturally soothing quality that suits tender postpartum tissue well.

Sliquid H2O 125ml natural water-based lubricant for sensitive skin, condom safe and toy friendly – available at Blossom Pelvic Health.

Sliquid Organics Natural Gel — the thicker version of the above, good if you prefer a consistency that stays in place.

A brown bottle with a black cap labeled "Sliquid Organics Natural Gel – Thick Organic Aloe-Based Lubricant (125ml)" from Sliquid, an aloe-based, pH balanced lubricant that's 95% organic, glycerine-free, and paraben-free.

Uberlube — if water-based options don't last long enough, Uberlube's silicone formula provides extended coverage. Not compatible with silicone toys or dilators.

A clear glass bottle with a silver pump dispenses Uberlube Luxury Silicone Lubricant – Multi-Purpose & Body-Safe by Uberlube, featuring white “überlube” text and containing sensitive skin-safe, transparent silicone lubricant.

For daily comfort: oil-based as a moisturiser

For breastfeeding women experiencing ongoing dryness throughout the day, using a lubricating cream regularly (not only before sex) is one of the most effective strategies. Oil-based products nourish and protect tissue over time.

Olive & Bee Intimate Cream — two ingredients: olive oil and beeswax. Developed by a women's health physiotherapist, preservative-free and free from synthetic chemicals. Very well-tolerated by sensitive postpartum skin. A pea-sized amount applied to the vaginal area a few times a week maintains day-to-day comfort.

A vertical tube of YES® Olive & Bee Intimate Cream with a beige and green label, stating "100% Natural" and "55ml" in white text. The cap is dark brown, and the overall design is clean and minimalist. This chemical-free moisturizer is perfect for sensitive skin hydration.

YES VM Vaginal Moisturiser — a dedicated vaginal moisturiser for regular use. Available in gel form and pre-filled applicators for internal use when dryness is more pronounced.

A 100ml tube of YES® VM Vaginal Moisturiser Gel by YES®, featuring a purple label, white cap, and text on supporting natural vaginal health with certified organic ingredients. Hormone- and glycerine-free.

Note: oil-based products are not safe with latex or polyisoprene condoms. If you're relying on condoms for contraception, use water-based lubricant for intimacy instead.

Ingredients to avoid postpartum

Postpartum tissue is healing and often more sensitive than usual. The following ingredients are worth avoiding — none are present in any product Blossom stocks:

  • Glycerin — can feed yeast organisms. Postpartum hormonal changes can increase susceptibility to thrush.
  • Parabens — synthetic preservatives that research has shown can inhibit beneficial Lactobacillus bacteria in the vagina.
  • Fragrances and warming or tingling agents — common irritants that are particularly problematic on postpartum tissue.
  • Chlorhexidine gluconate — an antibacterial preservative that kills beneficial vaginal bacteria.

Practical tips for postpartum intimacy

Apply lubricant proactively, not reactively. Hormonal dryness means natural lubrication may not build even with arousal. Applying lubricant before intimacy makes the experience more comfortable for both of you.

Use more than you expect to need. Particularly in the early postpartum period, generous application makes a real difference. You can always wipe away any excess.

Use lubricant outside of sex too. Dryness is uncomfortable throughout the day. Applying Olive & Bee or YES VM regularly keeps tissue more comfortable overall.

Take your time. There's no timeline for feeling ready for sex postpartum. Every body, every birth, and every experience is different.

Natural intimate cream on bathroom sink — postpartum care routine for vaginal dryness

Shop all lubricants and vaginal moisturisers

Shop the postpartum collection

If you're using vaginal dilators as part of postpartum pelvic floor therapy, see our dilator lubricant guide for which type to use and how to apply it.

For a full breakdown of every lubricant type, see our complete lubricant guide.

If pelvic floor concerns, pain during sex, or other postpartum symptoms aren't improving, a pelvic health physiotherapist can help. These are some of the most common and most effectively treated conditions in women's health.

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Frequently asked questions

For non-breastfeeding women, dryness often improves within weeks as hormones recover and periods return. For breastfeeding women, it can persist throughout the nursing period. Most women notice improvement as feeding frequency reduces. If dryness persists beyond weaning or is causing significant discomfort, a conversation with your GP is worthwhile.

Yes. Lubricants used vaginally don't enter the bloodstream in meaningful amounts and have no impact on breast milk. All the products we recommend are free from any ingredients that would be a concern during breastfeeding. Check with your GP or midwife if you have specific concerns.

Many women who never needed lubricant before find that they do postpartum. It's a reflection of your hormonal state, not a permanent change to your body. Think of it as a temporary tool to use while oestrogen levels recover.

See a pelvic health physiotherapist. Postpartum pelvic floor changes, scar tissue from tears or episiotomy, and muscle tension are all common causes of postpartum discomfort that lubricant alone won't address. These are among the most effectively treated conditions in women's health.

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