For most people genuinely looking to improve their sexual knowledge or intimacy, OMGYes is worth the cost. It’s one of the few sexual education resources backed by peer-reviewed research, it charges a one-time fee rather than a subscription, and a study of 870 women found statistically significant improvements in both sexual knowledge and actual pleasure after just four weeks of use.
That said, “worth it” depends on what you’re comparing it to and what you’re hoping to get out of it. Here’s what the platform actually offers, what the research says, and where it falls short.
What You Actually Get
OMGYes is a web-based platform focused on women’s sexual pleasure. It’s built around video interviews with real women describing specific techniques, paired with animations, diagrams, and interactive how-to guides. The content is organized into “seasons” covering different topics, from foundational techniques to more specific areas of exploration.
The base tier (“Essentials”) costs $49 and includes 12 foundational techniques across 60-plus videos. The expanded bundle (“Essentials + Explore More”) is $75, normally $149, and unlocks 300-plus videos covering hundreds of techniques drawn from the experiences of over 20,000 women. Both are one-time payments for lifetime access, not subscriptions. You pay once and keep it forever.
The tone is deliberately casual and honest. Women on camera laugh, describe things in their own words, and talk about what actually works for them rather than performing. This is probably the single biggest differentiator from free content online: the specificity and authenticity of the information, grounded in a massive dataset of real experiences rather than one person’s advice or stylized demonstrations.
What the Research Shows
OMGYes has an unusual level of academic backing for a consumer product. Since 2015, the company has partnered with researchers at Indiana University, led by Devon Hensel, an associate research professor at the IU School of Medicine and associate professor of sociology at IUPUI. The research team surveyed more than 20,000 women to build the platform’s content.
A peer-reviewed study published through PubMed gave 870 adult women access to the site and tracked their responses over four weeks. The results showed large effect size improvements in several areas: participants knew more about their own pleasure preferences, felt more confident about that knowledge, and reported that their sexual experiences were more pleasurable during both solo and partnered sex. Many women also said they felt more motivated to explore what they liked and more comfortable communicating preferences to a partner.
Those aren’t subtle findings. “Large effect size” in research terms means the changes were meaningful in daily life, not just statistically detectable. And the improvements showed up across multiple dimensions: knowledge, confidence, communication, and actual experienced pleasure.
How It Compares to Free Resources
There’s no shortage of free sexual health content online, from articles and forums to YouTube channels. So why pay?
The gap comes down to depth and evidence. Most free resources offer general advice: communicate with your partner, try different things, relax. That’s fine as far as it goes, but it doesn’t tell you much about the specific range of techniques that real women report enjoying, how those techniques differ from person to person, or how to actually practice them. OMGYes gets granular in a way free content rarely does, naming and demonstrating dozens of distinct approaches with enough detail that you can actually try them.
The platform also avoids two common problems with free content. First, it isn’t selling a product or pushing you toward a paid tier (because there isn’t one beyond the initial purchase). Second, the information comes from structured research with thousands of participants rather than individual opinion. That doesn’t make it infallible, but it means the techniques represent patterns across a large, diverse sample rather than one creator’s personal experience.
Who Benefits Most
OMGYes is designed for women and their partners. It’s particularly useful if you feel like something is “missing” but can’t articulate what, if you’ve never had a straightforward resource for learning about your own body, or if you and a partner want a shared vocabulary for talking about pleasure without the awkwardness of starting from scratch. The study participants specifically reported feeling more able to advocate for what they enjoy, which suggests the platform works as a communication tool, not just an educational one.
Couples exploring the content together often get the most out of it. The site offers gift certificates that can be emailed or printed, and the company doesn’t add gift recipients to any marketing lists. If you’re considering it as a gift for a partner or buying it to explore together, the gifting process is straightforward and discreet.
Where It May Fall Short
OMGYes focuses almost exclusively on women’s pleasure. If you’re looking for content on male pleasure, prostate health, or sexual topics outside this scope, this isn’t the resource for you. The platform also doesn’t address sexual dysfunction, pain during sex, or medical conditions. It’s educational, not therapeutic.
Some users also find that after going through all the content, there isn’t much reason to return. It’s a one-time learning experience rather than something you’ll use weekly for years. Whether that’s a drawback depends on your expectations. At $49 to $75, it’s roughly the cost of a single therapy session or a decent dinner out, so the bar for “worth it” is relatively low if even a few techniques or insights prove useful long-term.
The content also skews toward cisgender, heterosexual experiences in its framing, though many of the techniques are broadly applicable. If you’re looking for LGBTQ-specific content, you may find the platform helpful but not fully representative.
The Bottom Line on Value
At a one-time cost of $49 to $75, OMGYes sits in an unusual sweet spot: affordable enough that the risk is low, research-backed enough that the content is credible, and specific enough that most users learn something they didn’t know. The peer-reviewed evidence showing meaningful improvements in pleasure and confidence after just four weeks is stronger than what most competing products can point to. For anyone curious enough to search whether it’s worth it, it probably is.