The question sounds simple: what are the best condoms in the UK? The honest answer is slightly more nuanced. There is no single best condom in the UK — there's the best one for your body, your sensitivity preferences, and whether you or your partner has a latex sensitivity. A condom that fits correctly and feels comfortable will always outperform a "premium" condom that's the wrong size or material for you.
This guide cuts through the marketing noise. We'll cover what the material differences actually mean in practice, how to think about sizing (it's a measurement, not a statement), and which condoms are genuinely worth trying — across latex, non-latex, and vegan options at Naughty Nest.
What actually makes a condom the best?
Four things matter more than brand name when choosing a condom: material, fit, thickness preference, and lubrication level. Get these right and the brand becomes almost irrelevant.
- Material: Latex is the standard — strong, reliable, and well-studied. Polyisoprene (SKYN) is the main non-latex alternative, with a softer, warmer feel and no latex proteins. Vegan options (like Glyde) replace casein — the milk protein used in standard latex manufacturing — with plant-derived alternatives. Polyurethane is thinner but less elastic; it's found in some speciality condoms but not in the ranges at Naughty Nest.
- Fit (nominal width): This is the single most underrated factor. A condom that's too loose will slip; one that's too tight increases breakage risk and kills sensation. Standard UK width is 53mm. King Size / Large is typically 56mm. Snug/conform fits start around 50mm. Measure once, choose correctly.
- Thickness: Standard is around 0.06–0.07mm. Ultra-thin (0.045–0.05mm) increases sensitivity significantly; extra-strong (0.09mm+) is for specific uses. Most people are happiest somewhere in the standard-to-thin range.
- Lubrication: All condoms come pre-lubricated, but the amount varies. Extra-lubricated variants are helpful for longer sessions, drier skin types, and anal use. A separate water-based lubricant can always be added to any condom for additional comfort.
Best latex condoms at Naughty Nest
For those without latex sensitivities, the Mates classic latex range covers the two most useful everyday options cleanly and affordably.
Mates Natural — the reliable everyday standard
The Mates Natural Condoms 3 Pack is the straightforward choice: standard 53mm width, light lubrication, CE-marked, and trusted by NHS sexual health services in clinic bulk format. At £2.99 for three, it's an accessible entry point — and if you've never used Mates before, a 3-pack is the sensible way to confirm the fit before buying in larger quantities.
Mates King Size — for a more comfortable fit at 56mm
If standard 53mm condoms feel constrictive — reducing sensation, causing discomfort, or leaving marks — the Mates King Size 14 Pack is the practical upgrade. At 56mm nominal width, it's one of the most widely stocked large-fit latex condoms in the UK. The 14-pack at £8.99 makes it genuinely cost-effective for regular use.
Best non-latex condoms: the Mates SKYN range
SKYN uses SKYNFEEL polyisoprene — a synthetic material manufactured in a facility that doesn't process natural rubber latex at all. This matters for two groups: those with confirmed latex allergies (for whom SKYN is a genuinely safe alternative providing equivalent 98% protection), and those without any allergy who simply prefer the softer, warmer, more skin-like texture that polyisoprene delivers. Notably, SKYN condoms conduct body heat more naturally than latex, which many users describe as making them feel closer to bare.
Mates SKYN Original — the best starting point
The Mates SKYN Original 10 Pack is the right first purchase for anyone exploring non-latex condoms. Standard 53mm, well-lubricated, and the benchmark against which every other SKYN variant is measured. At £9.99 for ten, it's competitive with comparable latex condoms.
Mates SKYN Elite — ultra-thin at 0.045mm
The Mates SKYN Elite is 0.045mm — the thinnest variant in the SKYN range. If maximum sensitivity is your priority and you're already comfortable with the SKYN Original feel, the Elite is the natural step up. The difference is noticeable.
Mates SKYN Large — 56mm non-latex
The Mates SKYN Large brings the SKYN polyisoprene feel to a 56mm width — useful for anyone who needs the King Size fit but also wants the non-latex material. One of the more practical products in the range, at £9.99 for ten.
Not sure which SKYN to try first? The Selection Pack
The Mates SKYN Selection 9 Pack includes a mix of SKYN variants — Original, Elite, Intense Feel, and Extra Lubricated — in one box. At £14.99, it's the most cost-effective way to find your preference before committing to a larger single pack. If you're new to SKYN, start here.
How to find your condom size
Condom sizing is based on nominal width — the flat width of the condom when laid out. It corresponds to the circumference of the penis divided by two. To find yours: measure the circumference of the erect penis at its widest point using a tape measure or a strip of paper, then divide by 2.
| Circumference | Nominal width to try | Mates option |
|---|---|---|
| Under 10cm | ~49–50mm (snug/conform) | Mates Conform (clinic packs) |
| 10–11.5cm | 53mm (standard) | Mates Natural, SKYN Original, SKYN Elite |
| 11.5–13cm | 56mm (large) | Mates King Size, SKYN Large |
A condom that fits correctly stays in place, doesn't restrict sensation, and won't leave a ring mark after use. If you currently find condoms uncomfortable without being sure why, try measuring before you next buy — the answer is usually size, not brand.
Best vegan condoms: Glyde
Standard latex condoms use casein — a milk protein — as a smoothing agent during manufacturing. Most people never think about this, and it doesn't affect performance. But for those who want to avoid animal-derived ingredients entirely, Glyde is the answer. The brand replaced casein with thistle extract in 2006, when it became the first condom brand certified by The Vegan Society (Reg. No. #019955). It has renewed that certification every year since.
The Glyde Ultra Vegan Condoms 100 Bulk Pack is the standard 53mm variant — identical CE-marked protection, casein-free, non-GMO latex, and free from parabens, talc, and spermicides. At £84.99 for 100, it's primarily suited to bulk or clinic use, but it's the same product supplied to healthcare organisations across Europe.
Don't forget dental dams
If you're here for a complete safe sex toolkit, dental dams are the oral sex equivalent of a condom — a thin barrier placed over the vulva or anus during oral sex. Glyde makes the most widely available vegan dental dam in the UK. The Glyde Vegan Dams Mixed Flavour 4 Pack includes four flavours at £9.99 — an accessible entry point for couples who want to include oral sex in safe sex practice without interrupting the mood with improvised alternatives. For more on using barriers with sex toys as well as partners, our guide to sharing sex toys safely covers the full hygiene picture.
Frequently asked questions
What are the best condoms in the UK for sensitivity?
For maximum sensitivity, the Mates SKYN Elite is the standout option — at 0.045mm it's one of the thinnest condoms available in the UK while maintaining full CE-marked protection. If you prefer latex, ultra-thin latex condoms (not currently stocked at Naughty Nest) are the equivalent path. The more important factor for most people, however, is correct sizing — a well-fitting standard condom will feel better than an ultra-thin one that's the wrong width.
Are SKYN condoms safe for people with latex allergies?
Yes. SKYN polyisoprene condoms contain no natural rubber latex proteins and are manufactured in a dedicated latex-free facility. They carry the same CE mark as latex condoms and provide equivalent 98% protection against pregnancy and STIs when used correctly. If you have a confirmed latex allergy, SKYN is the most widely available and clinically established non-latex option in the UK.
What does nominal width mean and how does it relate to size?
Nominal width is the flat width of the condom when pressed against a surface — it corresponds to half the circumference of the penis at its widest point. A 53mm nominal width suits a circumference of roughly 10–11.5cm; 56mm suits 11.5–13cm. If you've ever found condoms uncomfortable, too loose, or prone to slipping, it's worth measuring before your next purchase — the right width makes a significant difference to both comfort and reliability.
Are vegan condoms as effective as standard condoms?
Yes, identically. Glyde vegan condoms are CE-marked and manufactured to the same standards as conventional latex condoms. The difference is in one processing ingredient — casein (a milk protein) — which Glyde replaces with thistle extract. Effectiveness is not affected: 98% protection against pregnancy and STIs with correct use, the same as any other CE-marked condom.
Can I use lubricant with condoms?
Yes, and it's often recommended for comfort. Use a water-based lubricant with latex, polyisoprene, or polyurethane condoms — oil-based lubricants degrade latex and polyisoprene and compromise protection. The Mates SKYN All Night Long lubricant is silicone-based and safe to use with all condom materials. Browse the full safe sex collection at Naughty Nest, including condoms and compatible lubricants, with free delivery on orders over £50.
The right condom is the one you'll actually use — correctly, consistently, and without it getting in the way. Start with Mates Natural for everyday latex, SKYN Original for non-latex, and Glyde Ultra if vegan certification matters to you. If you're unsure which fits best, the SKYN Selection Pack gives you four variants to try before committing. Browse the Mates collection and the Glyde range at Naughty Nest — all in discreet packaging, free delivery on orders over £50.