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Porn Addiction Statistics: What the Numbers Actually Show

1,821 prose words · 23 citations · primary keyword: porn addiction statistics · meta description (148/160 chars)

You're probably here because you want real numbers — not scare statistics, not dismissive reassurances. Maybe you're trying to figure out whether your own use is unusual, or whether someone you care about is in a range that warrants concern. The honest answer is that the research is messier than most headlines suggest, and understanding why the numbers are uncertain is actually useful information in itself.

What the data do show is that problematic pornography use (PPU) — the clinical term for what most people call porn addiction — affects a real and meaningful share of people who watch pornography. It's not everyone, and it's not rare. The picture that emerges from the best available research is more nuanced than either extreme.

How common is problematic pornography use?

The most rigorous population-level data comes from the International Sex Survey, which screened 82,243 people across 42 countries using validated tools for PPU [bőthe-2024-problematic-pornography-use]. That study measured screen-positive rates — people whose responses crossed a threshold suggesting problematic use — not formal clinical diagnoses. Those two things are meaningfully different: a screen-positive result flags someone who warrants a closer look, while a diagnosis requires a clinician's full assessment.

Smaller studies fill in parts of the picture. A 2022 cross-sectional study of 450 Iranian university students found that 9.5% of all participants met criteria for PPU — 17.4% of men and 5.6% of women [1]✓ Verified knowledgePouralijan et al. (2024) — Pornography use demographic. An earlier Swedish internet-recruited sample found that 13% of men and 5% of women reported some problems with internet sexual use, with serious problems reported by 5% of men and 2% of women [2]✓ Verified knowledgeRoss et al. (2012) — Prevalence severity correlates. These figures aren't directly comparable — different scales, different samples, different thresholds — so they describe specific populations, not the general public.

What this means practically: PPU affects a meaningful minority of people who use pornography, with men consistently reporting higher rates than women [1]✓ Verified knowledgePouralijan et al. (2024) — Pornography use demographic [2]✓ Verified knowledgeRoss et al. (2012) — Prevalence severity correlates. Sexual minority men and women tend to report more PPU than their heterosexual counterparts, though the pattern isn't uniform across every measure [3]✓ Verified knowledgeBorgogna et al. (2022) — Understanding differences problematic. Standardized diagnostic criteria for pornography addiction are still lacking, which means prevalence figures across studies measure different things and can't simply be added together [erdős-2025-pornography-watching-disorder]. Any source offering a single confident percentage deserves skepticism.

Who is most at risk — and when does it typically start?

Risk isn't evenly distributed. Certain patterns show up consistently across studies, even when those studies differ in how they define the problem.

What does problematic use actually do to mental health and relationships?

The fear that pornography is quietly damaging a relationship — or feeding anxiety and depression — is one of the most common reasons people search for pages like this one. The honest answer is: it depends heavily on context, and the research is more complicated than either "porn ruins relationships" or "porn is harmless."

Mental health: linked, but the causation is murky

In a large, nationally representative US sample, PPU showed statistically significant positive correlations with anxiety, depression, and loneliness [8]✓ Verified knowledgeEngelhardt et al. (2026) — Problematic pornography use. A one-year longitudinal study added an important nuance: the link between PPU and psychological distress appears to be a stable trait-like difference between people rather than a dynamic where one reliably causes the other over time — cross-lagged paths were small and negative, meaning PPU in one period did not reliably predict worsening distress six months later [9]✓ Verified knowledgeEngelhardt et al. (2025) — Problematic pornography use. In plain terms, people who struggle with PPU and people who struggle with anxiety or depression tend to be the same people, but the data don't confirm a clean one-way causal arrow.

Perception matters as much as behavior. Feeling addicted to pornography predicted psychological distress above and beyond actual frequency of use, even after controlling for neuroticism and baseline distress [10]✓ Verified knowledgeGrubbs et al. (2015) — Perceived addiction internet. Moral disapproval compounds this: among people in committed relationships, higher moral disapproval of their own pornography use amplified both personal distress and reduced relationship satisfaction [11]✓ Verified knowledgeGuidry et al. (2020) — Exacerbating impact moral.

Relationships: discrepancy matters more than use itself

The pattern that emerges most consistently isn't "pornography use = relationship harm" — it's discrepancy between partners. Greater differences in how much each partner uses pornography were associated with lower relationship satisfaction, less stability, worse communication, and more relational aggression [12]✓ Verified knowledgeWilloughby et al. (2016) — Differences pornography use. Couples who watch together, by contrast, consistently reported higher relationship and sexual satisfaction across two cross-sectional and two longitudinal samples [13]✓ Verified knowledgeKohut et al. (2021) — But what your.

Attachment style also moderates the picture: anxious attachment pushed men and women in opposite directions when pornography use increased [14]✓ Verified knowledgeMaas et al. (2018) — Dyadic approach pornography. The effect on sexual satisfaction, pooled across 41 studies totaling over 70,000 participants, was a statistically significant but small negative correlation (r = −0.06 overall; −0.07 for men, −0.04 for women) [15]✓ Verified knowledgeAbdi et al. (2025) — Effect pornography use. Small doesn't mean unimportant for any individual, but the population-level signal is modest.

If distress, loneliness, or relationship friction is present alongside heavy pornography use, those experiences are real and worth addressing — but the mechanism is rarely as simple as "the pornography caused it."

Why do some people lose control while others don't?

Most people who watch pornography never develop a problem with it. What separates those who do is one of the more honest questions in this field — and the science, while still developing, points to a few converging factors.

What does the treatment research actually show?

Formal treatment research for PPU is still young — there is no widely accepted, evidence-based, standardized protocol yet [19]✓ Verified knowledgeZwielewski et al. (2026) — Cognitive behavioral therapy. That's an honest answer, not a discouraging one: the trials that do exist show meaningful reductions in use, and the field is moving quickly.

Study / Approach Design Key Finding Caveat
Online PPU program (MI, CBT, mindfulness) 6-week RCT vs. waitlist PPU severity d = 1.32; use frequency d = 1.65 among completers [bőthe-2021-hands-off-feasibility] 89.4% dropout in intervention arm; 34.5% overall follow-up
Imaginal retraining 6-week RCT Significant PPU reduction in per-protocol analysis [20]✓ Verified knowledgeBaumeister et al. (2024) — Reducing problematic pornography Intention-to-treat analysis did not reach significance; 51.7% retention
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Small RCT, n = 28 93% reduction in viewing vs. 21% in waitlist; 54% cessation at post-treatment [21]✓ Verified knowledgeCrosby et al. (2016) — Acceptance commitment therapy Nearly all participants from one religious community — limits generalizability
CBT-based protocols (scoping review) 11 studies, 2019–2024 Varied approaches (CBT, ACT, mindfulness, combinations) show promise [19]✓ Verified knowledgeZwielewski et al. (2026) — Cognitive behavioral therapy No single dominant protocol; evidence base still thin

What this means practically: structured programs can genuinely help people who engage with them, but engagement itself is a real obstacle. A manualized short-term treatment called PornLoS, for example, combines 24 individual sessions, 6 group sessions, a mobile app, self-help group access, and couple counseling — built around CBT techniques including cue exposure, impulse control, cognitive restructuring, and relapse management [22]✓ Verified knowledgeStark et al. (2024) — Pornlos treatment program. Programs like this represent the direction the field is moving, even if the evidence base is still catching up.

For some people, distress comes less from the behavior itself and more from a conflict between their pornography use and their personal or moral values — sometimes called moral incongruence — and addressing that underlying tension directly can resolve the presenting complaint [23]✓ Verified knowledgeSmaniotto et al. (2022) — Pornography addiction elements. A good clinician will explore that rather than assume one path fits everyone.

What to expect if you decide to look for help

Most people who struggle with pornography use have never told anyone. That hesitation is common: in a treatment-seeking sample of 589 people, 78.9% had no prior treatment history before their first contact with a healthcare provider [6]✓ Verified knowledgeGokani et al. (2025) — Clinical demographic correlates. If this is a first step, it's a significant one.

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the most studied approach for PPU, with a 2024 scoping review identifying 11 CBT-based protocols published between 2019 and 2024 [19]✓ Verified knowledgeZwielewski et al. (2026) — Cognitive behavioral therapy. Online self-help programs have been developed specifically to lower cost and access barriers [bőthe-2020-hands-off-study], which matter — unaffordable or unavailable in-person treatment keeps many people from seeking help at all.

Comorbidities matter too. Among those who sought treatment, sexual difficulties such as erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation were frequently present alongside pornography-related concerns [6]✓ Verified knowledgeGokani et al. (2025) — Clinical demographic correlates. A thorough assessment — not just a single-focus intervention — is usually the more useful starting point. The goal isn't to fit your situation into a predetermined box; it's to understand what's actually driving the problem for you.

References (Page Sources meta-box)

  1. Pouralijan, Zeinab, Bőthe, Beáta, Farnam, Farnaz (2024). Pornography use, demographic and sexual health characteristics among university students: a gender-based comparative study of non-users, non-problematic users, and problematic users.. Reproductive health. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-024-01841-x
  2. Ross, Michael W, Månsson, Sven-Axel, Daneback, Kristian (2012). Prevalence, severity, and correlates of problematic sexual Internet use in Swedish men and women.. Archives of sexual behavior. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-011-9762-0
  3. Borgogna, Nicholas C, Griffin, Kaelyn R, Grubbs, Joshua B, Kraus, Shane W (2022). Understanding Differences in Problematic Pornography Use: Considerations for Gender and Sexual Orientation.. The journal of sexual medicine. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsxm.2022.05.144
  4. Lim, Megan S C, Agius, Paul A, Carrotte, Elise R, Vella, Alyce M, et al. (2017). Young Australians' use of pornography and associations with sexual risk behaviours.. Australian and New Zealand journal of public health. https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.12678
  5. Noel, Jonathan K, Jacob, Sharon, Swanberg, Jennifer E, Rosenthal, Samantha R (2023). Pornography: A Concealed Behavior with Serious Consequences.. Rhode Island medical journal (2013). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36989095/
  6. Gokani, Nikunj, Gowande, Tanha, Sahore, Ashima, Deshpande, Sandip (2025). Clinical and Demographic Correlates of Pornography Addiction: A Cross-sectional Study from India.. Indian journal of psychological medicine. https://doi.org/10.1177/02537176251381219
  7. Mestre-Bach, Gemma, Potenza, Marc N (2025). Adolescents, Pornography Use, and Problematic Pornography Use: A Rapid Systematic Review of Longitudinal Studies.. Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.5765/jkacap.250015
  8. Engelhardt, Robin, Maes, Jürgen, Grubbs, Joshua B, Trommer, Dominik, et al. (2026). Problematic Pornography Use and Psychological Distress in the USA: A Nationally Representative Study.. Archives of sexual behavior. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-025-03266-4
  9. Engelhardt, Robin, Geppert, Rahel, Grubbs, Joshua B, von Oertzen, Timo, et al. (2025). Problematic pornography use and psychological distress: A longitudinal study in a large US sample.. Addictive behaviors. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2025.108398
  10. Grubbs, Joshua B, Stauner, Nicholas, Exline, Julie J, Pargament, Kenneth I, et al. (2015). Perceived addiction to Internet pornography and psychological distress: Examining relationships concurrently and over time.. Psychology of addictive behaviors : journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors. https://doi.org/10.1037/adb0000114
  11. Guidry, Raquel, Floyd, Christopher G, Volk, Fred, Moen, Carolyn E (2020). The Exacerbating Impact of Moral Disapproval on the Relationship Between Pornography Use and Depression, Anxiety, and Relationship Satisfaction.. Journal of sex & marital therapy. https://doi.org/10.1080/0092623x.2019.1654579
  12. Willoughby, Brian J, Carroll, Jason S, Busby, Dean M, Brown, Cameron C (2016). Differences in Pornography Use Among Couples: Associations with Satisfaction, Stability, and Relationship Processes.. Archives of sexual behavior. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-015-0562-9
  13. Kohut, Taylor, Dobson, Kiersten A, Balzarini, Rhonda N, Rogge, Ronald D, et al. (2021). But What's Your Partner Up to? Associations Between Relationship Quality and Pornography Use Depend on Contextual Patterns of Use Within the Couple.. Frontiers in psychology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.661347
  14. Maas, Megan K, Vasilenko, Sara A, Willoughby, Brian J (2018). A Dyadic Approach to Pornography Use and Relationship Satisfaction Among Heterosexual Couples: The Role of Pornography Acceptance and Anxious Attachment.. Journal of sex research. https://doi.org/10.1080/00224499.2018.1440281
  15. Abdi, Fatemeh, Pakzad, Reza, Alidost, Farzaneh, Aghapour, Ehsan, et al. (2025). Effect of pornography use on the sexual satisfaction: a systematic review and meta-analysis.. Journal of addictive diseases. https://doi.org/10.1080/10550887.2024.2401680
  16. Gola, Mateusz, Wordecha, Małgorzata, Sescousse, Guillaume, Lew-Starowicz, Michał, et al. (2017). Can Pornography be Addictive? An fMRI Study of Men Seeking Treatment for Problematic Pornography Use.. Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. https://doi.org/10.1038/npp.2017.78
  17. Love, Todd, Laier, Christian, Brand, Matthias, Hatch, Linda, et al. (2015). Neuroscience of Internet Pornography Addiction: A Review and Update.. Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland). https://doi.org/10.3390/bs5030388
  18. Prantner, Sabine, Espino-Payá, Alejandro, Pastor, M Carmen, Giménez-García, Cristina, et al. (2024). Magnetoencephalographic correlates of pornography consumption: Associations with indicators of compulsive sexual behaviors.. International journal of clinical and health psychology : IJCHP. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijchp.2024.100524
  19. Zwielewski, Graziele, Machado, Valter, Fiamoncini, Andreia A, Quinta-Gomes, Ana Luísa, et al. (2026). Cognitive behavioral therapy-based interventions for problematic pornography use: a scoping review.. Sexual medicine reviews. https://doi.org/10.1093/sxmrev/qeag027
  20. Baumeister, Anna, Gehlenborg, Josefine, Schuurmans, Lea, Moritz, Steffen, et al. (2024). Reducing problematic pornography use with imaginal retraining-A randomized controlled trial.. Journal of behavioral addictions. https://doi.org/10.1556/2006.2024.00018
  21. Crosby, Jesse M, Twohig, Michael P (2016). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Problematic Internet Pornography Use: A Randomized Trial.. Behavior therapy. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beth.2016.02.001
  22. Stark, Rudolf, Markert, Charlotte, Golder, Sarah, Psarros, Rhea, et al. (2024). The PornLoS Treatment Program: Study protocol of a new psychotherapeutic approach for treating pornography use disorder.. Journal of behavioral addictions. https://doi.org/10.1556/2006.2024.00046
  23. Smaniotto, Barbara, Le Bigot, Jeanne, Camps, François-David (2022). "Pornography Addiction": Elements for Discussion of a Case Report.. Archives of sexual behavior. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-021-02133-2

FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions repeater)

What percentage of people are addicted to porn?

There's no single reliable figure because studies use different definitions and measurement tools. The best large-scale research screens for 'problematic pornography use' (PPU) rather than formal addiction diagnoses. Smaller studies suggest roughly 5–17% of men and 2–6% of women may meet criteria for PPU depending on the sample and scale used — but these numbers aren't directly comparable across studies. What's consistent is that PPU affects a meaningful minority of people who watch pornography, with men reporting higher rates than women across virtually every study.

At what age do most people first watch pornography?

Research on young Australians aged 15–29 found the median age of first pornography viewing was 13 for men and 16 for women. Earlier first exposure was associated with male gender, younger current age, non-heterosexual identity, and recent mental health problems. This means for many men, patterns of use are established well before adulthood — which has implications for how and when prevention conversations need to happen.

Does porn use cause depression and anxiety?

Problematic pornography use is consistently linked to higher rates of anxiety, depression, and loneliness in research — but the causal direction isn't clear. A one-year longitudinal study found that PPU in one period didn't reliably predict worsening distress six months later, suggesting the two tend to co-occur in the same people rather than one straightforwardly causing the other. Feeling out of control with pornography use can itself cause distress, independent of how often someone actually watches.

Does pornography use hurt relationships?

The research suggests the biggest relationship risk isn't porn use itself but discrepancy between partners — when one person uses pornography significantly more than the other, studies find lower satisfaction, worse communication, and more conflict. Couples who watch together actually report higher relationship and sexual satisfaction on average. The overall effect of pornography use on sexual satisfaction, pooled across 41 studies and 70,000+ participants, was a small negative correlation (r = −0.06) — real but modest at the population level.

What treatments work for porn addiction?

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the most studied approach, and structured programs using CBT, mindfulness, and motivational interviewing have shown meaningful reductions in problematic use in randomized controlled trials. However, no single gold-standard protocol exists yet, and dropout rates in trials have been high — suggesting that engagement is as much a challenge as the treatment itself. Online self-help programs have been developed to lower access and cost barriers, and the field is advancing quickly even if the evidence base is still maturing.

Is porn addiction more common in men?

Yes, consistently across studies. Men report higher rates of problematic pornography use than women in every major study, and men make up the vast majority of people who seek treatment — one Indian treatment-seeking sample found 98.98% of 589 patients were male. In a US survey of young adults, heterosexual cisgender males had 13.4 times the odds of meeting addiction criteria compared to other groups. The reasons likely involve a combination of biological, social, and behavioral factors, though research is still working to untangle them.

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1. PPU prevalence comparison across studies

What it shows: A side-by-side visual comparing PPU rates reported in major studies, broken down by sex, with annotations explaining why the numbers differ (different scales, different samples, screen-positive vs. diagnosis).

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2. Brain reward circuit and anticipatory craving

What it shows: A simplified diagram of the ventral striatum and reward pathway highlighting how anticipatory 'wanting' responses differ from in-the-moment pleasure responses, illustrating the neuroimaging findings in men with PPU.

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What it shows: A visual summary of the RCT results table — effect sizes, retention rates, and intervention types — helping readers quickly compare what the evidence shows across different treatment approaches.

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