Robyn Exton, Jill O'Sullivan, Mook Phanpinit
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.
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Robyn Exton, Jill O'Sullivan, Mook Phanpinit
Feb 05, 2026
Sexual health in sapphic life starts with feeling at home in your body and being informed about how it works. It’s about care, consent, and knowing what supports your pleasure- not about being scared or doing something “wrong.”
With that grounding in place, let’s name the basics clearly and kindly. The short answer to a common question is yes: lesbians can get STIs (sexually transmitted infections), even if you don’t have sex with cis men. STIs can be passed through oral, genital, and some skin-to-skin contact, and many don’t show symptoms right away. Risk is shaped by what you do, not just who you date, which is why testing and safer sex practices matter for everyone in our community.
Chlamydia and gonorrhea are unfortunately still common among young women, with almost half of chlamydia cases in the U.S. occurring among people aged 15–24, according to the U.S. STI Plan. Centering pleasure and safety together is an act of self-trust, and this guide is here to support you with testing info, prevention tools, and affirming care.
Yes. Lesbians and queer women can absolutely get STIs: even if you don’t have sex with cis men. STIs are infections passed from one person to another through sexual contact, including oral, genital, and sometimes skin-to-skin contact. Identity-based assumptions miss the real risk: large U.S. data show that STI risk is better predicted by sexual practices and partners than by labels like “lesbian” or “bisexual” alone, so ask about exposures, not orientation alone (see this national study of women’s STI risk by behavior).
Rates matter here. Chlamydia is the most commonly reported bacterial STI in the U.S., and young women 15–24 account for roughly 44% of diagnoses. Many infections are silent at first, making regular screening important so that you can catch it early, and before potentially spreading it to a partner (STI National Strategic Plan 2021–2025).
What counts as “sex” in the sapphic community can be a little more blurry to define. When it comes to safe sex for lesbians and sapphics, we’re talking about:
Try and remember, sexual health is about care, boundaries, and pleasure: not panic.
Transmission just means how an infection passes from one person to another. Between women, STIs can spread through contact with vaginal fluids, blood, saliva/mucous membranes, skin-to-skin rubbing, and via shared toys. That means mutual masturbation, oral sex, and toy sharing can be relevant routes, depending on the infection and the exposure site. Many infections are asymptomatic (that is, they don’t present any symptoms or flags of feeling sick), so it’s smart to get tested routinely and not rely on symptoms alone (U.S. STI Plan).
Here’s a quick, easy-to-glance view of activities and their relative risk patterns based on public health guidance for women who have sex with women:
| Activity | Higher-risk for | Lower-risk for | Notes |
| Oral–genital (mouth on vulva/vagina) | HPV, herpes (HSV-1/2), gonorrhea, chlamydia, syphilis | HIV | Use dental dams or cut-open condoms; oral sores increase risk (see CDC on oral sex). |
| Oral–anal (rimming) | Hepatitis A, HPV, HSV, syphilis, gonorrhea | HIV | Barriers help; avoid when there are sores or GI illness. |
| Fingering/hand play | HPV, HSV (skin-to-skin), bacterial vaginosis shifts | HIV | Gloves help if cuts are present; wash hands between partners/sites (CDC WSW guidance). |
| Sharing insertive toys | Chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomoniasis, HPV, HSV | HIV (still very low unless blood exposure) | Use condoms on toys; clean between partners/sites; avoid sharing porous toys. |
| Skin-to-skin/genital rubbing | HPV, HSV, syphilis (if sores/lesions) | Chlamydia/gonorrhea (unless fluids are exchanged) | Barriers reduce friction and risk; avoid contact with active sores. |
Assumptions based on identity can lead to missed screenings; care based on practices and exposure is more accurate (CDC guidance for women who have sex with women and the national behavior-based study). When it comes to identity or who you’re attracted to, anyone can develop an STI, regardless of genitals or attraction.
A quick tour, without any of the scare tactics. Just facts you can use to help keep yourself (and your partners) safe:
Common STIs quick reference guide:
| STI | Main transmission routes | Common signs (often none) | Key prevention tips |
| Chlamydia | Vaginal/rectal/oral exposure; shared toys | Often none; discharge, pain | Condoms on toys, test regularly, treat partners |
| Gonorrhea | Vaginal/rectal/throat exposure; toys | Often none; sore throat, discharge | Site-specific testing (throat, vaginal, rectal) |
| HPV | Skin-to-skin, oral-genital | Often none; warts, abnormal Pap | HPV vaccine, barriers for oral/skin contact |
| Herpes (HSV) | Skin-to-skin, oral-genital | Blisters/sores, tingling—often silent | Avoid contact during outbreaks, barriers |
| Trichomoniasis | Vaginal fluids; toys | Discharge, odor, itching | Condom on toys, screening and treatment |
| Syphilis | Contact with sores; oral/genital | Painless sore, rash—often missed | Testing; avoid contact with lesions |
| HIV | Blood, certain mucosal exposures | Often none early | Testing, avoid blood-to-blood contact |
For a deeper dive on transmission and screening tailored to WSW, see CDC’s guidance for women who have sex with women. For general STI basics, WHO’s STI fact sheet and U.S. Women’s Health resources are solid primers.
Yes, but the overall risk varies by infection. Oral-genital transmission means passing an infection through mouth-to-genital or mouth-to-anus contact. HPV, herpes, syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia can spread via oral sex. The HIV risk via oral routes is low but not zero, especially if there are sores or bleeding gums in the mix. The CDC details which STIs spread through oral sex and how to lower risk.
Most likely via oral sex:
Less likely:
Dental dams and other barriers reduce risk, but unfortunately, many of us were never taught to use them; surveys report persistent gaps in vulvar and safer sex education among women and AFAB folks (see this 2026 “State of the Vagina” report on systemic gaps). Remember: most infections start without symptoms, so safer sex is care for you and your partners.
Think “safer and sexy”, not abstinence. You’ve got options to help keep sex fun while being proactive about your health.
Prevention strategies include:
Mini-checklist for new hookups or evolving relationships:
For more real-world scripts and tips, see HER’s guide on advocating for your sexual health.
A behavior-based plan keeps it simple and accurate.
Your screening checklist:
We’ve got some handy keywords to know when you’re scheduling to help you keep the plot: lesbian STI screening, queer Pap smear guide, throat swab STI test for women.
Unfortunately, stigma and discrimination can keep many LGBTQ people from care, which worsens outcomes (U.S. STI Plan). You deserve providers who make you feel safe and seen, so that you can be treated before it becomes a way bigger problem.
How to spot affirming care:
If you’re in a hostile policy environment, community and self-advocacy matter. Bring a friend, write down what you want, and lean on mutual aid. HER’s piece on how to advocate for your sexual health has step-by-step ideas. It’s also completely okay to walk out of an appointment and decide that the clinician or doctor is not a good match for you. A good, supportive healthcare worker will make you feel supported, safe, and comfortable throughout the whole process.
If talking about testing and barriers feels awkward… Well, you’re normal. Many of us weren’t centered in sex ed, so we learn together. And even if you got awesome sex ed… Most of us aren’t in the habit of schmoozing and making easy conversation about sexual habits. And that’s totally okay- it’ll get easier over time.
Conversation starters:
Remember: asking questions is an act of care, not distrust. In sapphic culture, mutual support and shared learning are all part of the intimacy.
Sexual health means feeling safe, respected, and connected, not just “not having an STI.” Policy climates shape our stress: nearly 1 in 3 LGBTQ youth report that anti-LGBTQ legislation has negatively impacted their mental health (APA trend report). Shame and non-affirming spaces can delay testing or conversations (U.S. STI Plan).
Ways to protect your head and heart:
Yes, lesbians and anyone with a vulva or cervix should get tested regularly for STIs, regardless of who their partners are. Many infections don’t show symptoms, so screening protects everyone involved.
Dental dams, condoms on toys, and gloves for manual play are effective barrier methods. They lower the risk of passing STIs during oral, digital, or toy-involved activities.
Pap tests are important for everyone with a cervix, even if you only have sex with women. They screen for cervical changes often caused by HPV.
Try a simple but to-the-point opener like, “When was your last STI test?” or suggest testing together. Clear, kind communication builds trust and comfort.
Look for clinics with inclusive forms, visible LGBTQ credentials, and good community reviews, or search facilities recognized in the Healthcare Equality Index. Asking queer friends for recommendations also helps.
Resources cited in-line: CDC oral sex risk overview; CDC guidance for women who have sex with women; U.S. STI National Strategic Plan; WHO STI facts; U.S. Women’s Health STI pages; NHS guidance for lesbian and bisexual women; Mayo Clinic on lesbian health issues; Healthcare Equality Index; UVA Health self-advocacy; “State of the Vagina” report; APA policy trends.
Robyn Exton, Jill O'Sullivan, Mook Phanpinit
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.