Orchiectomy Before Vaginoplasty? Think Twice
Let’s talk about a question that comes up a lot (usually late at night, after way too much Googling): “Should I get an orchiectomy now, or wait for vaginoplasty?”
Short answer? It depends, but you don’t want to rush this one.
First, the obvious (that’s not always obvious). A vaginoplasty already includes an orchiectomy. So, if your long-term plan is vaginoplasty, you’re technically checking that box twice if you do it separately. That doesn’t mean it’s wrong, just… worth thinking through.
When doing it earlier does make sense
Sometimes, waiting isn’t realistic.
If testicular dysphoria is intense, or hormone blockers are causing side effects (or draining your bank account), an orchiectomy can bring real relief:
- Lower testosterone without medication
- Emotional calmness (yes, many people report this)
- Feeling more aligned in your body
And honestly? That matters. You don’t have to “earn” relief by waiting for a bigger surgery. Here’s where things get a bit technical, but stay with me. For all vaginoplasty techniques, the scrotal skin is essential. it’s used to a natural-looking external anatomy.
So if someone has an orchiectomy and scrotal skin is removed or the tissue isn’t preserved properly…it can limit options later or require additional grafts. Not ideal.
The golden rule
If you’re considering vaginoplasty in the future, keep the scrotum intact. A well-performed orchiectomy for future vaginoplasty should:
- Remove the testicles
- Preserve as much scrotal tissue as possible
- Be done with future surgery in mind.
- If you’re years away from vaginoplasty → it can be a very reasonable step.
Think of it like this:
- If you’re planning vaginoplasty soon → it might be redundant and non a very good investment
- If it’s done without surgical planning → that’s where problems happen.
In some cases, techniques like scrotoplasty can affect how much tissue is preserved, which is why surgical planning matters more than most people realize.
A more grounded way to decide
Ask yourself:
- Is my dysphoria manageable right now?
- Am I doing this for relief, or just to “progress” faster?
- Do I have a realistic timeline for vaginoplasty?
There’s no prize for doing everything as fast as possible.
If you’re still exploring what an orchiectomy involves, recovery, and who it’s right for, we break it down step by step.
Final thought (the human one)
This journey isn’t linear and it’s definitely not one-size-fits-all. If an orchiectomy gives you peace now, that’s valid.
If waiting protects your long-term results, that’s also valid.The key is simple: make decisions your future self won’t have to fix.
Your Safe Rebirth Experience
You might feel relief, excitement, vulnerability, impatience, sometimes all in the same day. Dig deeper into Gender-Affirming Surgery in Spain to get a glimpse on the experience. Having people around you who respond quickly, explain what’s happening, and genuinely care about your wellbeing can make the entire experience feel much more manageable.
Written by the Safe Rebirth Care Team and advocacy, coordination and holistic patient support across Spain and network of Gender- Affirming Surgeons.
What Sets Safe Rebirth Apart
At Safe Rebirth, we don’t just coordinate surgeries, we provide a fully personalized, compassionate experience from start to finish. We prioritize your emotional and physical well-being, offering personalized travel guides. With no gatekeeping, no unnecessary reports, and inclusive support before, during, and after surgery, Safe Rebirth ensures your journey is not only safe but also stress-free and empowering.


