Which mainstream condom models list exact nominal widths and where to buy them by country?
Executive summary
Major mainstream condom manufacturers and specialty sellers do publish nominal widths for specific models, but availability of model-specific width labeling depends on market and packaging rules: Trojan’s product pages list base and mid‑shaft nominal widths (useful to U.S. buyers) [1], ONE®/MyONE® publishes a full nominal‑width chart including a 52–size range [2], and in the European Union packaging is required to show nominal width so condoms sold there will list it [3]. Online retailers and size‑chart sites collect model widths and note where items ship, but there is no single global directory that ties every model to every country — this reporting cannot fully map every model to every national retailer.
1. Trojan and U.S. market clarity: model pages that state widths
Trojan’s official size charts explicitly list per‑model measurements, including length, base nominal width and mid‑shaft nominal width on their site, which makes it straightforward for shoppers in markets where Trojan sells directly (primarily the U.S. and English‑speaking e‑commerce channels) to find exact nominal widths before purchase [1]. Those model pages are presented as guidance about fit and show that mainstream U.S. brands can and do publish nominal widths for individual SKUs [1].
2. ONE® / MyONE®: the custom‑fit example and where to buy
ONE® Condom’s materials frame “standard” nominal widths (about 53 mm) and explicitly promote MyONE® Custom Fit, a line offering a broad range of nominal widths (45–64 mm) and 52 distinct sizes, information the brand publishes on its chart and sells directly online, making it one of the clearest options for buyers worldwide seeking exact nominal widths [2]. The MyONE® product is positioned for online purchase and direct shipping, which helps consumers in many countries obtain sizes not always stocked in local pharmacies [2].
3. European labeling rules and how that affects buying in the EU
Condoms sold in the European Union must state nominal width on the packaging under the EN ISO 4074 standard, so any brand legally sold in EU retail or pharmacies will provide nominal‑width figures on the box; this regulatory requirement means EU shoppers can rely on packaging to see exact widths even if brand websites are sparse [3]. That rule creates a practical advantage for consumers in EU countries when comparing models by nominal width at brick‑and‑mortar pharmacies or regional online stores [3].
4. Aggregators, online retailers and country access limitations
Commercial size‑chart sites and condom retailers — including CondomDepot, Condom‑Sizes.org and WorldCondoms — compile per‑model nominal widths, display standard ranges (small ~50 mm, regular ~52–55 mm, large ~55–60 mm, etc.), and provide buying options or links, but availability varies by country and many charts focus on English‑language markets or international shipping rather than a country‑by‑country store map [4] [5] [6]. These aggregators are useful for comparison shopping but the reporting shows they do not replace checking a brand’s regional site or local pharmacy stock lists for exact SKU availability [4] [5] [6].
5. Practical buying guidance and reporting limits
The clearest path to find exact nominal widths is: consult a brand’s official size chart (Trojan for many U.S. SKUs, ONE®/MyONE® for custom sizes, Durex regional pages such as Durex Canada for Canadian consumers), check packaging in EU markets where labeling is mandatory, and use reputable online retailers that list nominal widths when cross‑checking availability and shipping to a specific country [1] [2] [7] [3] [4]. This account is based on available brand pages, regulatory guidance and aggregated charts; the provided sources do not enumerate every mainstream model by country or create a comprehensive per‑country retail map, so readers needing a definitive shop‑by‑country catalogue must consult regional pharmacies, manufacturer country pages, or international retailers directly [1] [2] [3] [5] [4].