What percentage of 60-year-olds experience erectile dysfunction?
ED becomes more common after 60, but it is not inevitable and should not be dismissed as only age.
Quick answer: ED after age 60: Erectile dysfunction is common among men in their 60s, but estimates vary by definition, health status and study method. The useful takeaway is that risk rises with age because diabetes, vascular disease, prostate symptoms, medication use, lower testosterone and lifestyle factors become more common. Still, many men over 60 maintain sexual function, and new ED can reveal treatable health issues.
This article sits inside the erectile dysfunction safety guide and is written for practical decision-making. Erectile dysfunction can be vascular, neurological, hormonal, medication-related, psychological, prostate-related or situational. In questions involving age, vascular risk, diabetes, testosterone, the safest answer depends on health history, current medicines, blood pressure, alcohol use, cardiovascular symptoms and whether the product is prescribed and regulated.
ED after age 60: what matters first
ED becomes more common after 60, but it is not inevitable and should not be dismissed as only age. The first useful distinction is whether the issue is a one-off performance problem, a recurring pattern, or a progressive change in erections. A single missed erection after poor sleep or alcohol is different from a gradual loss of firmness with leg pain while walking, diabetes or high blood pressure. The second distinction is safety: PDE5 inhibitors such as sildenafil, tadalafil and vardenafil can help many men, but they are not safe with nitrates or poppers and may be unsuitable with unstable heart disease or very low blood pressure.
Do not treat dose, brand name or online convenience as the main decision point. A medicine can be genuine and still be wrong for a particular person. A supplement can be legal to advertise and still be ineffective or contaminated. A telehealth service can be convenient, but it should still ask about chest pain, nitrates, blood pressure medicines, antidepressants, prostate medicines, kidney or liver disease and priapism history.
Practical comparison
| Age effect | Risk increases, but age alone is not a diagnosis. |
| Health factors | Diabetes, circulation, blood pressure, weight and smoking matter. |
| Medication factors | Some prescriptions can contribute. |
| Practical step | Review risk factors rather than accepting ED as inevitable. |
Safety checklist before acting
- List every prescription medicine, recreational drug, supplement and ED product you use.
- Check specifically for nitrates, poppers, alpha blockers, multiple blood-pressure medicines and recent heart symptoms.
- Describe timing: when the problem started, whether morning erections remain, and whether it is occasional or progressive.
- Do not combine sildenafil, tadalafil, vardenafil or similar medicines unless a clinician explicitly instructs you.
- Seek urgent care for chest pain, fainting, severe allergic symptoms, sudden vision or hearing loss, or an erection lasting more than four hours.
For many men, the best improvement comes from combining medical treatment with risk-factor work: exercise, stopping smoking, reducing heavy alcohol, improving sleep, treating diabetes or high blood pressure, and addressing anxiety or relationship stress. If tablets do not work, that is not the end of treatment; it is a reason to revisit diagnosis and consider devices, injections, hormonal assessment or specialist urology options.
Where to go next
- Next read: Can poor blood circulation in the legs cause erectile dysfunction? - use this when the question overlaps with your symptoms, medicines or access route.
- Next read: Treatment options for erectile dysfunction - use this when the question overlaps with your symptoms, medicines or access route.
- Next read: What causes occasional erectile dysfunction and is it normal? - use this when the question overlaps with your symptoms, medicines or access route.
- Topic hub: return to the main erectile dysfunction guide for the full map of causes, medicines, costs and treatment choices.
Frequently asked questions
Sometimes lifestyle triggers are obvious, but repeated ED, medication questions or any cardiovascular risk should be reviewed. A short consultation can prevent dangerous combinations and uncover treatable causes.Can I solve this without seeing a clinician?
No. A higher dose can increase side effects without solving poor timing, alcohol effects, anxiety, low testosterone, circulation problems or an unsuitable medicine choice.Is a stronger dose always better?
Urgent signs include chest pain, fainting, severe allergic reaction, sudden loss of vision or hearing, and an erection that lasts more than four hours.When is this urgent?
The bottom line is to match the solution to the cause and the risk profile. ED is common, but it is also a useful health signal. Treat it as information from the body, not as a reason to gamble with unregulated products or improvised dosing.
Preparing for a consultation is simple: write down the medicines you take, the pattern of erections, alcohol intake, major stressors, exercise tolerance, urinary symptoms and any previous response to ED treatment. Those details often matter more than the brand name a person has searched for online.
A practical way to prepare is to write down three details before seeking advice: when the problem happens, what medicines or alcohol were involved, and whether there are symptoms such as chest pain, leg pain with walking, urinary changes, anxiety or loss of morning erections. That short record often makes the consultation safer and more useful.