
Pre-ejaculate can lead to pregnancy under specific conditions, but the risk is far lower than with full ejaculation. The short answer is yes, but the risk depends on several factors including timing, sperm presence, and whether birth control is used. This article breaks down what the research actually says, separates myth from medical evidence, and gives you a clear picture of what to do if you’re concerned.
Percentage of pre-ejaculate samples containing sperm: 41% (multiple studies) ·
Estimated pregnancy rate from precum per cycle: 4–7% ·
Sperm survival in female reproductive tract: Up to 5 days ·
Typical use failure rate of withdrawal method: 22% per year
Quick snapshot
- Precum can contain sperm capable of fertilization (Medical News Today (health news outlet))
- Pregnancy from precum is possible, with increased risk during ovulation (The Bump (parenting resource))
- Withdrawal method is not a reliable contraceptive — 22% typical use failure rate (Flo (fertility tracking platform))
- Exact per-act probability of pregnancy from precum remains unknown (Medical News Today)
- Whether all men produce sperm-containing precum consistently is not established (Mira Fertility Shop (fertility analytics platform))
- Sperm can survive up to 5 days in the reproductive tract (American Pregnancy Association (nonprofit health organization))
- Pregnancy risk peaks when precum exposure occurs during the fertile window (Clearblue (pregnancy test brand with medical oversight))
- Emergency contraception (Plan B, Ella, copper IUD) can be used after unprotected precum exposure (Flo)
- Pregnancy test at 14 days post-exposure is recommended (First Response (pregnancy test manufacturer))
Five key facts, one takeaway: the risk of pregnancy from precum is real but highly dependent on timing and individual biology.
Here is a quick reference table summarizing the core data points.
| Fact | Value |
|---|---|
| Contains sperm | Yes, in 16–41% of men |
| Pregnancy possible | Yes |
| Withdrawal method typical use failure rate | 22% per year |
| Sperm survival in tract | Up to 5 days |
| Emergency contraception window | Plan B: 72 hours, Ella: 120 hours, Copper IUD: 5 days |
Does precum still have sperm in it?
What percentage of men have sperm in precum?
The numbers vary across studies, but the consistent finding is that a significant minority of men release sperm in their pre-ejaculate. A 2011 study reported active sperm in pre-ejaculatory fluid in 37% of participants (Flo (fertility tracking platform)). A 2016 study found a lower rate of 16.7% (Clearblue (pregnancy test brand with medical oversight)). Yet another study cited by Clearblue found sperm in 41% of pre-ejaculatory samples from 27 men. A 2024 research study identified sperm in clinical-pregnancy-risk concentrations in 7 out of 70 samples (Mira Fertility Shop (fertility analytics platform)).
- 2011 study: 37% had sperm
- 2016 study: 16.7% had sperm
- 2024 study: 7/70 samples had sperm at pregnancy-risk concentrations
The pattern: the presence of sperm in precum is not rare, but it is also not universal — making the withdrawal method a gamble.
Can precum contain viable sperm?
Yes. The sperm found in pre-ejaculate can be motile and capable of fertilization (Medical News Today (health news outlet)). The source of this sperm is often residual sperm left in the urethra from a previous ejaculation (Related stories



