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Understanding Female to Male Bottom Surgery

By 17 October 2025January 19th, 2026No Comments

Female-to-male bottom surgery is an element of gender-affirming care that helps align anatomy with identity. It covers procedures such as metoidioplasty and phalloplasty to construct a penis, and may include hysterectomy or vaginectomy depending on individual goals.

These medical interventions are performed by specialized teams. Centers like UCLA combine plastic surgery, urology, gynecology, behavioral health, hormone therapy, and primary care to deliver coordinated care and improve overall health.

Hospital stays are often short, with most people going home after a few days. Recovery requires activity limits and follow-up visits to support healing and monitor outcomes.

Evidence shows high satisfaction: a 2018 study reported 94%–100% positive responses across different techniques. Risks rise with cigarette use, so preoperative optimization matters.

This introduction frames bottom work as one part of a broader plan. Each person’s path is individualized, with consultations and careful planning guiding expected results and responsibilities during recovery.

Key Takeaways

  • These procedures are aimed at aligning anatomy with personal goals.
  • Metoidioplasty and phalloplasty are common options, often paired with hysterectomy or vaginectomy.
  • Short hospital stay is typical; recovery includes activity limits and follow-up.
  • Satisfaction rates are high, though outcomes vary by technique and patient factors.
  • Multidisciplinary teams improve coordination and long-term health support.

Defining female-to-male bottom surgery and its role in gender affirmation

Reconstructive genital operations play a central role in many people’s gender affirmation journeys. These procedures focus on changing genital anatomy to match personal goals and function.

Common types include metoidioplasty, phalloplasty, scrotoplasty, vaginectomy, and hysterectomy/BSO. Teams often stage steps to create a neopenis, form a scrotum, or remove reproductive organs based on medical needs and preferences.

Chest reconstruction (top surgery) reshapes the chest and often has very high satisfaction with low complication rates. Top and genital work are separate but complementary parts of comprehensive care that may also include hormone therapy and behavioral health support.

  • Multidisciplinary teams — plastic surgeons, urologists, and gynecologists coordinate plans.
  • Outcomes depend on anatomy, available skin and tissue, overall health, and priorities like standing urination or penetrative function.
  • Patient-centered planning helps patients set realistic expectations, timelines, and sequence of procedures.

Coordinated care improves continuity, streamlines referrals, and supports pre- and postoperative needs, which can positively influence long-term outcomes for patients.

How to prepare: consultations, care team, and creating a surgical plan

Early consultations shape an individualized timeline that balances goals, donor-site choices, and medical readiness. This stage helps patients set priorities such as standing urination, sensation, or aesthetics and informs the surgical plan.

Choosing a qualified team

Assemble specialists across plastic surgery, urology, gynecology, and behavioral health. A coordinated team supports pre-op work, perioperative care, and long-term follow-up.

Insurance and records

Many U.S. insurers require two surgery letters and recent health records for authorization. Programs like UCLA’s care coordination team help submit documents and schedule consultations.

Pre-op steps

Discuss fertility preservation early. Smoking cessation and medical clearance improve overall health and lower complication risk. Pelvic floor physical therapy is recommended before and after procedures.

For flap-based reconstruction, donor-site options include radial forearm, anterolateral thigh, or latissimus dorsi. Surgeons give a hair removal template; clearance may take several weeks. Tattoos at donor sites can remain if perfusion and skin function test normal.

  • Confirm records and letters before booking.
  • Follow hair removal and therapy timelines.
  • Discuss whether urethral lengthening fits goals and staging.

For further resources, see this FTM resources guide.

What is a female to male bottom surgery?

A personalized set of procedures helps align anatomy with identity. Teams design plans that consider function, scarring, and recovery. Care focuses on goals such as standing urination, sensation, and appearance.

Common types include metoidioplasty and phalloplasty for penis creation. Metoidioplasty uses hormonally enlarged clitoral tissue for a smaller neopenis. Phalloplasty uses skin and tissue flaps from donor sites like the forearm, thigh, or back for a larger result.

Scrotoplasty reshapes labial tissue and may later receive silicone implants. Removal procedures such as hysterectomy and vaginectomy are offered when desired and often sequenced before major reconstruction. Centers coordinate staging to improve safety and outcomes.

  • Selection factors: size goals, standing urination, sensation, donor-site scars, and recovery time.
  • Donor sites: forearm, anterolateral thigh, latissimus dorsi, or abdomen.
Procedure Primary goal Typical donor site
metoidioplasty Small neopenis using local tissue local genital skin
phalloplasty larger penis creation forearm, thigh, back
scrotoplasty / removal scrotum formation; organ removal local tissue; N/A for removal

Metoidioplasty: procedure steps, urethral lengthening, and expected results

Metoidioplasty reshapes hormonally enlarged clitoral tissue into a small, functional neophallus. The operation begins with clitoral release to free length, then refines surrounding tissue for improved contour and support.

Clitoral release, tissue use, and creation of a small neopenis

Surgeons mobilize the clitoris, preserving nerves and blood supply while releasing ligaments that limit visible length. Local genital tissue forms the shaft and base, avoiding large donor-site scars.

Urethral lengthening options and standing urination

For standing urination, teams may perform urethral lengthening using grafts from the cheek, labia minora, or other vaginal tissue. Those grafts help extend the urethra through the neopenis and reduce tension at closure.

Sensation, erections, recovery time, and potential complications

Because clitoral erectile tissue remains intact, many patients experience erections and preserved sensation. Size is usually smaller than that from phalloplasty, but functional sensitivity tends to be high.

Recovery typically involves a short hospital stay, limited activity, and scheduled follow-up to monitor the urethra and incisions. Common complications include urethral stricture or fistula; early reporting improves management.

Candidate profiles often include people seeking fewer stages, less donor-site morbidity, and strong sensory outcomes. Collaborative planning with the surgical team helps decide whether urethral lengthening and scrotoplasty match urinary and aesthetic goals.

For more detail and resources, see this FTM resources guide.

Phalloplasty: flap choices, staging, implants, and donor-site considerations

Phalloplasty uses skin flaps from other areas of the body to sculpt a functional, aesthetic neophallus. Donor selection balances thinness, vascular reliability, and scar location.

Radial forearm, anterolateral thigh, and latissimus dorsi

The radial forearm free flap (RFFF) offers thin, pliable skin and clear options for nerve coaptation, but often needs a forearm graft. The anterolateral thigh (ALT) flap hides scars and may be thicker. The latissimus dorsi (MLD) flap can close in line without large grafts but may affect shoulder strength temporarily.

Staged approach and implants

Typical staging: stage 1 creates the phallus with an inpatient stay of about 4–5 days. Stage 2 (5–6 months later) may add urethral lengthening, scrotoplasty, and clitoral burying. Stage 3 (roughly 12 months after stage 2) places testicular and erectile implants, which carry infection and device risks and are considered off-label for this use.

Grafts, nerves, sensation, and size

Some flaps require donor-site grafts. Nerve hookup and clitoral burying can enhance protective and erogenous sensation, though recovery may take months. Typical length after reconstruction is about 5–6 inches; girth varies with flap fat content and technique.

Flap Advantages Drawbacks
Radial forearm Thin skin, good nerve options Visible forearm graft, donor-site care
Anterolateral thigh Concealed scar, larger available skin May be thicker; contouring needed
Latissimus dorsi Linear closure, robust tissue Potential shoulder weakness; bulkier

Pre-op planning includes hair removal mapping and perfusion tests; tattoos at donor sites require evaluation. Align flap choice and staging with each person’s priorities—standing urination, return of feeling, scar placement, and recovery timeline—and consult a specialized surgeon for a tailored plan. For more on phalloplasty options, visit this transgender phalloplasty resource.

Related procedures: hysterectomy, salpingo-oophorectomy, vaginectomy, and scrotoplasty

Many centers combine internal organ removal with reconstructive steps to streamline care and reduce repeat anesthesia. This approach helps match the surgical plan to each person’s goals while lowering overall risks.

Timing and reasons for combining procedures

Hysterectomy and salpingo-oophorectomy are often done before phalloplasty when a vaginectomy is planned. Removing or ablating vaginal mucosa creates space and can simplify later urethral lengthening.

Vaginectomy typically means excision of mucosa and closure of the canal. Teams coordinate this step with urethral work to improve urinary outcomes and reduce tension on closures.

Scrotoplasty reshapes labial tissue into a scrotum. Testicular implants are usually placed later to let tissues heal and cut infection risk.

Patients choosing metoidioplasty may combine fewer removal steps than those seeking phalloplasty with a flap. Surgeons and the multidisciplinary team build a tailored plan that balances function, comfort, and recovery.

  • Combining steps can reduce total anesthesia events.
  • Sequencing optimizes space for reconstruction and urinary function.
  • Individual goals guide which procedures are paired and when.

Recovery and aftercare: hospital stay, catheters, physical therapy, and timelines

The early weeks after reconstruction demand close observation, device management, and staged healing milestones. After major stages, most patients stay in hospital for monitoring. Stage 1 phalloplasty often requires about 4–5 days for flap checks and mobility assessments. Other procedures commonly mean shorter stays of a couple of days.

Hospitalization, catheter management, and imaging

Many leave with a suprapubic tube and sometimes a Foley catheter. Around four weeks, teams perform a retrograde urethrogram to confirm urethra integrity before SPT removal. Prompt reporting of changes in urine flow or fever helps catch problems early.

Activity limits, wound care, donor-site healing, and hair

After discharge, activity is limited to protect incisions, the developing scrotum, and the neopenis. Donor sites such as the forearm or thigh may need graft care, dressing changes, and scar support.

Hair removal is planned before the operation using a provided template to reduce hair inside reconstructed tracts. Good wound hygiene and nutrition support tissue healing and overall health.

Pelvic floor therapy and optimizing function

Pelvic floor physical therapy before and after procedures helps address scar tissue, posture, and voiding mechanics. Therapists give individualized home exercises to improve comfort and urinary outcomes.

Care area Typical timing Key actions
Inpatient monitoring 4–5 days after stage 1 Flap checks, vitals, mobility
Catheter management Up to ~4 weeks SPT/Foley care, retrograde urethrogram
Donor-site care Weeks to months Dressings, graft checks, scar therapy
Therapy and follow-up Pre-op and post-op weeks Pelvic floor PT, scheduled clinic visits

Adherence to follow-up and clear communication with the team reduce complication risk. If wounds look unusual, urine flow changes, or fever develops, patients should contact their surgeon promptly. Careful steps during recovery improve long-term function and satisfaction after surgery.

Risks, complications, satisfaction, and long-term outcomes

Risks range from common surgical problems like infection and bleeding to procedure-specific issues such as urethral fistula or stricture. Pre-op optimization and careful follow-up lower many complications and improve outcomes.

Urethral, graft, and implant issues

Urethral work can cause fistula or stricture. Symptoms include leakage or a weak stream; early evaluation helps timely repair.

Donor sites may scar or experience graft failure. Routine wound checks and dressing care support healing and protect the body.

Erectile and testicular implants after phalloplasty carry infection and rejection risks. Devices may need removal and staged reimplantation after months of healing.

Quality of life, sensation, and reported satisfaction

Sensation varies: nerve repair and clitoral burying can help, but full return is not guaranteed. Some regain strong protective and erogenous feeling over months.

Long-term surveys report high satisfaction and improved quality of life for many patients after gender-affirming procedures. Individual results depend on goals, anatomy, and any complications.

  • Follow-up: Keep appointments in the first days and weeks to monitor healing and catch issues early.
  • Watch: Urine flow, incision changes, fever, and implant comfort.
  • Resources: For further detail on metoidioplasty, see this metoidioplasty overview.

Conclusion

Conclusion

Patients benefit most when early discussions produce a stepwise plan that balances risk, function, and recovery time. A thorough consultation helps clarify goals and builds a staged approach for complex phalloplasty and related work.

Coordinated care — including behavioral health, pelvic floor physical therapy, and diligent follow-up — improves results. Preparing administratively (letters, records) and medically (smoking cessation, hair removal) streamlines the path forward.

Realistic expectations about sensation, urinary function, and recovery help each person stay engaged through staged procedures. High satisfaction and quality-of-life gains are achievable when patients partner closely with their team and report concerns early.

For program details and planning resources, see this surgical planning guide.

FAQ

What procedures fall under masculinizing genital reconstruction and how do they support gender affirmation?

Masculinizing genital reconstruction includes metoidioplasty, phalloplasty, scrotoplasty, hysterectomy and vaginectomy. These surgeries reshape anatomy to align physical characteristics with gender identity, often improving comfort, social confidence, and urinary function. Care plans vary by goals, anatomy and health.

How do chest reconstruction and genital reconstruction differ and how do they work together?

Chest reconstruction focuses on contouring the chest to a masculine appearance, while genital reconstruction alters pelvic anatomy and urinary function. Together they provide comprehensive gender-affirming care by addressing both appearance and bodily function, often staged based on health, insurance and personal priorities.

How should one prepare for consultations and build a surgical team?

Preparation starts with consultations including a plastic surgeon, urologist, gynecologist and behavioral health provider. Patients should gather medical records, discuss goals, review risks and outline a surgical plan. A coordinated team ensures pre-op testing, fertility counseling and clear communication about recovery and follow-up.

What insurance and documentation are commonly required in the United States?

Many insurers request letters from mental health professionals and surgeons documenting persistent gender dysphoria and medical necessity. Patients should verify coverage, obtain preauthorizations, and coordinate records for hospitalization, anesthesia and multi-stage procedures to avoid billing surprises.

What preoperative steps help improve outcomes and reduce complications?

Pre-op steps include hair removal mapping at donor sites, smoking cessation, optimizing medical conditions, and discussing fertility preservation. Skin and donor-site planning, lab work and cessation of certain medications reduce infection and improve healing.

What is metoidioplasty and what results can patients expect?

Metoidioplasty releases and lengthens the hormonally enlarged clitoris using local tissue to create a small neophallus. It can allow standing urination with urethral lengthening and typically preserves clitoral sensation and erectile function. Size is limited by anatomy and hormone response.

How is urethral lengthening achieved and how reliable is standing urination after surgery?

Urethral lengthening uses local tissue flaps or grafts to extend the urethra through the new phallus. Success depends on technique, tissue quality and healing; risks include strictures and fistulas. Many patients achieve functional standing urination, but some require revisions.

What are common complications after metoidioplasty and how long is recovery?

Complications include urethral strictures, fistulas, wound issues and altered sensation. Initial healing takes weeks, with activity limits for several months. Follow-up may include imaging, catheter care and occasional revision surgery.

How does phalloplasty differ in technique and expected outcomes?

Phalloplasty creates a larger phallus using tissue flaps from donor sites such as the radial forearm, anterolateral thigh or latissimus dorsi. It often requires staged surgeries for urethral work, scrotoplasty and potential implant placement. Outcomes emphasize size, standing urination and cosmesis, balanced against donor-site scarring and complexity.

What donor sites are commonly used and what are their trade-offs?

The radial forearm flap offers thin, pliable tissue and good urethral reconstruction but leaves a visible forearm scar. The anterolateral thigh reduces donor-site visibility but can be bulkier. Latissimus dorsi provides large tissue volume but requires back scarring. Choice depends on goals, body type and surgeon expertise.

How are nerves and sensation addressed during phallus construction?

Surgeons often connect donor nerve branches to clitoral nerves to preserve erogenous sensation. Nerve repair may improve tactile and sexual sensation over time, though outcomes vary. Clitoral incorporation and careful microsurgery aim to maximize sensory return.

Why are hysterectomy, salpingo-oophorectomy and vaginectomy sometimes performed with genital reconstruction?

These procedures remove internal reproductive organs and vaginal tissue to reduce dysphoria, eliminate gynecologic risks and simplify future genital reconstruction. Combining procedures can reduce total anesthesia events but may lengthen recovery and require additional planning.

What does postoperative care involve for staying safe and promoting healing?

Postop care includes hospital monitoring, catheter management (Foley or suprapubic), wound care, activity restrictions and donor-site management. Imaging assesses urethral healing. Hair control at donor sites and pelvic floor physical therapy support long-term function.

How long is typical hospitalization and when are catheters removed?

Hospital stays range from a few days to a week depending on procedure complexity. Catheters may remain for several weeks to allow urethral healing; removal timing follows clinical assessment and imaging studies to confirm integrity.

What activity limits and rehabilitation steps help recovery?

Patients should avoid heavy lifting, sexual activity and strenuous exercise for weeks to months. Gradual return to activity, wound checks, and pelvic floor therapy optimize pelvic support and urinary control. Donor-site rehabilitation may include arm or thigh exercises.

What are the most common risks and how often do revisions occur?

Common risks include infection, bleeding, urethral strictures, fistulas, graft loss and donor-site problems. Implant-related complications can include malfunction and extrusion. Many patients require revision procedures to refine function and appearance; revision rates vary by technique.

How do sensory outcomes and sexual function vary after reconstruction?

Sensation and sexual function depend on technique, nerve repair and individual healing. Metoidioplasty often preserves erogenous sensation due to intact clitoral tissue. Phalloplasty may restore tactile and erogenous sensation over months to years but varies between individuals.

What long-term satisfaction and quality-of-life outcomes are reported?

Studies show many patients report improved body congruence, confidence and quality of life after reconstruction. Satisfaction correlates with realistic expectations, surgical planning and access to multidisciplinary care. Long-term follow-up helps address concerns and functional needs.