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Valentine’s Day Gifts That Support Sexual Wellness (Especially over 40)

smiling face, sex therapist, sex educator, sexologist
Vanessa Tarfon

1 Feb 2026 – 4 min read

red wine in glass on bed with a champagne bottle lying on the white bed.

Valentine’s Day is often filled with flowers, chocolates and grand romantic gestures but rarely with conversations about sexual wellbeing. And yet, sexual health is a core part of overall health, particularly as our bodies, hormones and relationships change with age.

 

Sexual wellness isn’t about performance, frequency or “spicing things up.” Because we all know Valentine’s Day spice doesn’t last…it’s a one and done deal for the year!

 

Sexual Wellness is about comfort, confidence, connection and pleasure that feels safe and sustainable especially during perimenopause, menopause and midlife.

 

Thoughtful Valentine’s gifts can support all of this without pressure, expectation or assumptions about what intimacy “should” look like. We’re not all 20-year-old gymnasts and athletes!

 

If you’re looking for a Valentine’s gift that genuinely supports wellbeing, here are options that go beyond romance and actually care for the body and the relationship.

What Are Sexual Wellness Gifts?

1. High-Quality Lubricants: Comfort Is Care

Why lubricant matters for sexual health

Lube is Life!

 

Reduced lubrication is common with hormonal changes, menopause and ageing, and it’s one of the most searched reasons sex becomes uncomfortable. A high-quality (sorry not supermarket ones) lubricant can reduce friction, ease discomfort and help the body relax into sensation.

 

When the body feels safe, pleasure is far more accessible.

 

What to look for in a body-safe lubricant:

  • pH-balanced and vulva-friendly
  • Free from fragrances or harsh additives
  • Designed for sensitive or menopausal tissue

 

Gifting a lubricant isn’t unromantic, it’s practical and deeply caring, acknowledging that comfort matters.

 

Recommended Brands:

 

2. External Vibrators: Supporting Arousal  Without Pressure

Are vibrators good for sexual wellness?

Yes! Especially external vibrators.

 

External vibrators support blood flow to genital tissue, nerve stimulation and arousal all of which are important for sexual health as we age.

 

For many women, especially those experiencing hormonal changes, arousal doesn’t happen spontaneously (surprise!). Gentle external stimulation can help the body warm up without pressure or expectation and they can be used anywhere on the external body (don’t restrict yourself please!).

 

What to look for when gifting a vibrator

  • External rather than internal designs (although internal ones can also be used externally)
  • Simple, discreet shape
  • Quiet, non-intimidating options (loud rumbling/whirring sounds is a turn off, especially if you’re nervous kids will wake up and ask, “what’s that noise?”).

 

This isn’t about “fixing” desire it’s about supporting the body’s natural response.

 

Recommended Options:

 

3. Sensual Massage Oils: Touch Without Expectation

Massage oils create opportunities for intimacy that aren’t goal-oriented. Touch without expectation can calm the nervous system, increase connection and rebuild trust in physical closeness.

 

How to use massage for connection (not pressure)

  • Frame it as relaxation, not foreplay
  • Remove expectations of sex afterwards
  • Focus on presence, not outcome

 

For many long-term couples, this type of touch feels more nourishing than sexual activity itself.

 

Recommended Brands:

 

4. Books and Conversation Tools: Intimacy Beyond the Body

Intimacy doesn’t start in the bedroom.

Books and tools can:

  • Normalise changing desire and pleasure
  • Support conversations about menopause and sex
  • Reduce shame and confusion around intimacy

 

Thoughtful sexual wellness gift ideas

  • Books on women’s sexual health or midlife intimacy
  • Card decks or guided conversation tools
  • A session with a qualified Sex Therapist

 

These gifts say: I care about how you experience intimacy, not just what we do.

 

Recommendations:

  • Come Together by Emily Nagoski – perfect for curious minds who want to understand desire, arousal and intimacy on a deeper psychological level.
  • Marypause by Mary Coustas – funny, relatable and informative, this book naturally opens menopause conversations. Research shows that when both partners understand and hold a positive mindset around menopause, the experience and symptoms can feel far more manageable.
  • The Adventure Challenge (connection-focused date ideas)

 

5. How You Gift Matters More Than What You Gift

A sexual wellness gift should never come with pressure. The most important part of giving is how it’s framed.

 

Supportive language sounds like:

  • “I thought this might support your comfort.”
  • “There’s no expectation, just something to explore if and when you want.”
  • “This is about care and connection, not obligation.”

 

When gifts feel safe, they’re far more likely to be received with openness rather than anxiety.

A Valentine’s Day Reframe: Sexual Wellness is Healthcare

Sexual wellness is healthcare. It’s not indulgent, selfish or unnecessary it’s a foundation for comfort, confidence and connection at every stage of life.

 

This Valentine’s Day, romance doesn’t have to mean roses and rules. It can mean understanding how your body works now, respecting its needs, and choosing intimacy that feels supportive rather than pressured.

 

Because the most meaningful gift isn’t something that promises passion it’s something that honours wellbeing.

 

When wellbeing is supported, passion often follows naturally!

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smiling face, sex therapist, sex educator, sexologist
Vanessa Tarfon

Sex Therapist, owner of Authentic Awareness

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