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Is Bladder Leakage a Normal Part of Aging?

A person in gray sweatpants stands with hands covering their crotch, showing a large wet stain indicative of bladder leakage. A bed with white sheets appears in the background, highlighting the need for absorbent products or bladder leakage pads.

There is a quiet, widespread belief among women that at a certain age, after children, after menopause, and after “a lot of living,” bladder leaks just happen. You carry a pad. You know which restrooms are the cleanest. You skip the trampoline park with the grandkids. You don’t say anything to your doctor because, honestly, what would they even say? This is just…aging.

Using appropriate absorbent products and a gentle skin-care routine may help support skin integrity.
The medical community is clear: urinary incontinence is common, but it is not a normal or inevitable part of aging. The Mayo Clinic Health System states it directly that “although urine incontinence is common, it’s not normal.” The condition has causes, those causes have treatments, and those treatments, for many women, work remarkably well.

Your voice Matters

Men with stress urinary incontinence are invited to complete a confidential 20-minute survey about daily symptoms, treatment experiences, and quality of life.