"She squirted—so, uh, did I just get peed on?" Relax, mate—before you start Googling waterproof sheets, let’s clear something up—SQUIRTING IS NOT PEE.
Nope. Science says PSA = squirt fluid, not urine. The real question is—why aren’t you fully enjoying making her squirt? Now keep reading—because once you know the truth, you’ll never stress over wet sheets again.
In this article, we'll cover:
Is Squirting Pee? Here’s the Truth
No, squirting is not pee—but let’s break it down so you never second-guess it again.
During intense sexual arousal, some women experience squirting, a massive fluid emission expelled from the urethra. And yes, that sounds a lot like voluntary urination, but here’s the key difference: biochemical analysis from the Journal of Sexual Medicine shows squirting fluid contains prostatic secretions—PSA, glucose, and other compounds not found in standard urine.
So, what’s actually happening?
Breaking Down the Process—How Squirting Works
For some women, squirting feels like an intense release; for others, it’s more of a sensation of pressure followed by relaxation. Either way, squirting remains controversial only because people confuse it with coital incontinence when, in reality, it's a natural orgasmic response.
Besides, if squirting were just pee, scientists wouldn’t be running lab tests on it—yet here we are.
Let’s see what the research actually says.
Research and Studies On Squirting Liquid
If squirting were just pee, why did researchers feel the need to strap women to MRI scanners mid-orgasm to figure it out?
That alone should settle the debate. But since myths die hard, let’s go deeper into the science.
Key Finding #1 - Squirting Fluid Contains Unique Biomarkers Not Found in Urine
In the 2014 study, "Ultrasonographic Bladder Monitoring During Female Squirting," researchers tested the biochemical makeup of the fluid expelled during squirting. The results were clear—this was not urine.
One of the strongest pieces of evidence was the presence of PSA or prostate-specific antigen. PSA is a biomarker secreted by the Skene’s glands (often referred to as the female prostate) and is also found in male ejaculate. Regular urine does not contain PSA.
The conclusion was simple. If squirting were just pee, PSA wouldn’t be there. The fact that it is present proves squirting is a unique secretion, not involuntary urination.
Key Finding #2 - Chemical Composition of Squirting Fluid Proves It’s Not Urine
A separate 2022 study published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine, titled "Biochemical Analysis of Female Squirting," took things further by breaking down the chemical composition of squirt fluid. This was a direct response to skeptics who still insisted squirting was a form of urinary incontinence.
The researchers analyzed squirt samples and found:
This study proved that while the bladder temporarily holds squirt fluid, the kidneys filter and produce it differently than urine.
Key Finding #3 - MRI and Ultrasound Studies Prove Squirting Is Not Urination
Bladder involvement is why people assume squirting is just uncontrolled peeing, but a 2020 study in Sexual Medicine Reviews titled "The Role of the Bladder in Female Squirting: Insights from Imaging Studies" used MRI scans and ultrasound imaging to prove otherwise.
The study monitored what happened inside the body during sexual arousal and the act of squirting. Researchers observed that:
The key takeaway here? The bladder is a reservoir in this process, not a filtration system for waste. The way the body processes and expels this liquid is entirely different from urination.
Key Finding #4 - Fluid Variability Confirms Squirting Is a Unique Process
A 2013 study published in the International Journal of Women’s Health, "Female Ejaculation Orgasm vs. Coital Incontinence: A Systematic Review," addressed another reason people get confused—squirting doesn’t look or feel the same for every woman. The study found that:
This is why some conflicting reports exist—because not all squirt fluid is chemically identical. But saying "some squirting fluid has a little urea" and concluding "squirting is pee" is like saying "some honey has pollen" and deciding it’s just a flower.
Key Finding #5 - Squirting & Female Ejaculation Are NOT The Same
One of the biggest misconceptions comes from studies that incorrectly group squirting and female ejaculation together, which is why a 2023 study published in Sexual Medicine Reviews, "Differentiating Female Ejaculation and Squirting: A Biochemical Perspective," set out to separate the two. Here’s the distinction the study confirmed:
The problem? Many older studies failed to differentiate between squirting and female ejaculation, which has led to ongoing confusion. Mixing up the two is bad science. It’s like saying saliva and sweat are the same because they’re both liquid.
If squirting were just urine, then these sexual medicine reviews and studies wouldn’t exist. Squirting is a natural physiological response, not waste elimination, not bladder leakage, and definitely not urine.
So, if you’re still asking, "Is squirting pee?" the real question is: Why are we still debating this when the science is this clear?
At this point, the science is settled—but the myths? Those refuse to die. Look, I get it—some guys hear “fluid” and “bladder” in the same sentence and immediately think, "Uggh, that's gross!".
Let’s break down the biggest squirting myths so you can stop overthinking and start enjoying the show.
Andrew’s Expert View on Squirting vs. Pee—Why This Myth Refuses to Die
If I had a dollar for every time a guy asked, “But isn’t squirting just pee?” I’d have enough to fund another international online survey proving it’s not.
Science has already settled this. Yet, here we are, still explaining why a woman’s natural orgasm response isn’t just her bladder giving up mid-sex.
So let’s do this once and for all—with hard facts that will make you rethink everything you thought you knew about squirting in female sexuality.
Myth #1: Squirting Is Just the Female Version of Male Peeing
I’ve heard this take before: “Well, guys can control their bladder, so why can’t women just ‘hold it in’?”
Let’s flip that around. If you can ejaculate during an orgasm without pissing yourself, why wouldn’t women have their own version of that?
The Truth
This was confirmed in multiple J Sex Med studies, showing that female ejaculate and squirt contain biochemical markers unique to orgasmic fluid—not waste.
So, if squirting were pee, it wouldn’t have the same signature compounds as male ejaculation.
Myth #2: Women Who Squirt Just Have Weak Bladder Control
I don’t know who started this nonsense, but let’s set the record straight: if anything, women who squirt actually have stronger pelvic floor muscles and control.
The Truth
This isn’t sexual incontinence—it’s a sign of high sexual responsiveness.
A narrative review in Sex Med even noted that women who experience squirting consistently during orgasm often have better sexual health, heightened sensitivity, and improved partners’ sexual lives.
So if your partner squirts? That’s her body flexing its sexual fitness, not “losing control.”
Myth #3: The Liquid Release During Squirting & Female Ejaculation Feel Exactly The Same For Women
People mix these up all the time, and I get why—it’s easy to assume all orgasmic fluid releases feel exactly the same. But they’re completely different experiences.
The Truth
Squirting is normal. Squirting is real. Squirting feels f*cking amazing. It’s a natural orgasmic response—one that every woman can experience under the right conditions.
So, if you’re still debating this instead of mastering it, you’re asking the wrong questions. Instead of “Is squirting pee?” try:👉 “How do I get better at making her squirt?”
Because—once you’ve made a woman soak the sheets with pleasure, you won’t care about the science anymore.
And if you’re ready to stop guessing and start mastering the skill? My Squirting Triggers course will show you exactly how to make it happen. Step-by-step, real demonstrations, and two female perspectives.
Still overthinking it? Let’s clear up the last few doubts and get you fully in the know.
Frequently Asked Questions
If you’re still confused about the nature and origin of squirting, let’s clear up the last of those nagging doubts once and for all.
Because that’s where it has to come out—and that makes squirting normal. This is exactly why scientists initially mislabeled squirting as something called coital incontinence—because they assumed any liquid coming from the urethra had to be urine.
But ultrasound studies on seven women who underwent provoked sexual arousal proved otherwise. The fluid is stored in the bladder, but its composition is different from urine, with markers like PSA (prostate-specific antigen)—which comes from the Skene’s glands, aka the female prostate.
Most of the time, it’s chemically distinct, but here’s where things get interesting: studies have shown that squirt fluid can contain trace amounts of urea. So, does that make it urine? No.
Biochemical analysis of emitted fluid found that squirt samples contained significantly lower urea concentrations than actual urine. It’s not everyone’s experience, but sometimes a tiny bit of residual urine can mix in since the fluid is stored in the bladder and expelled through the urethra.
Absolutely. Ask any woman who’s experienced squirting or female ejaculation, and she’ll tell you: it doesn’t feel like using the bathroom.
Peeing is a relaxation of the bladder muscles; squirting is an involuntary contraction of pelvic floor muscles. Think about it this way—when you orgasm, your body doesn’t just “release” the way it does when you go to the bathroom. It builds tension, reaches a peak, then releases explosively.
Women report that squirting feels like an intense surge of pleasure, often paired with deep pelvic contractions. Some describe it as a wave-like pressure followed by relief, others as a gush that amplifies the orgasm.
First off, urine is mostly water too, so that’s a weird argument. But here’s the difference: urine contains waste products filtered by the kidneys—urea, creatinine, and other byproducts that the body needs to expel.
Squirt fluid, on the other hand, is mostly water mixed with prostatic secretions and glucose, with minimal waste compounds. The term squirting has stuck because this isn’t just passive leakage—it’s an active sexual response, just like male ejaculation.
The biggest biochemical distinction? The presence of PSA (prostate-specific antigen) and glucose, neither of which belong in urine. That’s why the study on squirting and female ejaculation serves as a differentiator from urine-based fluid expulsion—because the body produces them for a reason, not by accident.
Yes. And if you’re really that curious, you already know the answer.
Urine contains ammonia, urea, and other metabolic byproducts that give it its strong, distinct smell. Squirt fluid, on the other hand, is described as neutral, slightly sweet, or even odorless—a result of its glucose content.
As for taste? Again, urine is acidic and often has a strong, salty profile. Squirt fluid is closer to diluted coconut water than anything else. That’s why, in controlled studies where people squirt under monitored conditions, the chemical breakdown consistently sets it apart from urine.
If you still can’t tell the difference, maybe the real question is—why are you still sniffing it?
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