Getting Started With Penis Enlargement (Your First 3 Steps)

A simple, confidential process—built around urology-led evaluation

If you’re exploring penis enlargement for the first time, the safest approach is structured and medically guided. At Rejuvall, we make it simple to start with a plan that fits your anatomy, goals, and health profile.

Step 1: Start with a confidential consultation

Schedule a phone consultation with our Patient Education Manager to review your goals and determine which pathways may be appropriate.

Step 2: Confirm candidacy with a urologic evaluation

Before any procedure is scheduled, a board-certified urologist reviews your case to confirm what is medically appropriate and to set realistic expectations.

Step 3: Choose the right pathway (and pace)

Some men start with non-surgical options; others are better suited for surgical correction first (especially when visibility or anatomy limits results). Your plan is designed to protect function, symmetry, and future options.

Rejuvall non-surgical options: conservative planning first

Non-surgical enhancement can be a good fit for men who want minimal downtime and a stepwise approach—when they are appropriately selected and medically supervised. The key is not “how fast can I get bigger,” but how safely and predictably we can build a result that looks natural.

5 Reasons Patients Choose Rejuvall®

1) Discreet, professional care and clear guidance

Many men prefer privacy when exploring enhancement. Our process is built to be confidential and straightforward—so you can ask questions, learn your options, and move forward without pressure.

Non-surgical girth enhancement also tends to have less downtime than surgery, but your plan still requires careful aftercare and realistic expectations.

2) A destination clinic that also handles complex revision cases

A meaningful portion of our work involves correcting unsatisfactory outcomes from procedures performed elsewhere. That experience changes how we plan for new patients: we prioritize conservative foundations, documented product use, and follow-up strategy.

We’d rather help you do it correctly the first time than have you need repair later.

3) Urology-led enhancement matters because the penis is an organ

Penile enhancement affects vascular structures, nerves, soft-tissue layers, and (in surgical cases) supportive attachments. That’s why Rejuvall is urology-led and why evaluation comes before treatment.

Dr. Kenneth J. Carney, MD, PHARM, FACS has extensive experience in reconstructive urology and complex genital cases, including leadership experience in a high-acuity trauma setting. That background matters when planning procedures where precision and complication-management skill are essential.

4) MacroSculpting™ planning and technique-driven placement

Rejuvall uses Dr. Carney’s MacroSculpting™ framework to plan and place girth enhancement with a focus on:

  • proportion and symmetry
  • conservative staging when appropriate
  • controlled placement and settling
  • follow-up planning for refinement

Clinics use different tools and techniques. What matters most is the anatomy-guided plan, product transparency, and a medically supervised follow-up strategy.

5) Surgical options available when non-surgical isn’t the right first step

Non-surgical enhancement is not the best first option for everyone. Some men need surgical correction first to restore visibility, address buried anatomy, or create a safer foundation before considering thickness.

Rejuvall offers both surgical and non-surgical pathways, which allows us to recommend what is medically appropriate—not what a single-modality clinic happens to sell.

Important: who may not be a good candidate for starting with non-surgical girth

Circumcision (planning and safety)

For girth enhancement, circumcision is typically required to reduce the risk of contour issues and foreskin-related complications after girth is added. If you’re not circumcised, we’ll explain timing and options—including circumcision revision when medically appropriate.

Buried/hidden anatomy or large suprapubic fat pad

If a suprapubic fat pad conceals part of the shaft, starting with girth can make the penis appear shorter. In those cases, a LifeSize® plan (visibility restoration) is often the safer first step.

Micropenis or very limited visible length

If length is the limiting factor, adding thickness first can worsen proportions visually. These patients typically benefit from length planning first (non-surgical and/or surgical), then girth as a later step if appropriate.

FAQs: Getting Started With Penis Enlargement

You’ll speak with our Patient Education Manager in a confidential, no-pressure call. He’ll review your goals (length, girth, restoring lost visible size, or repair), discuss your general health factors, and explain which pathways may be appropriate. If it looks like you may be a candidate, the next step is a medical evaluation with a board-certified urologist to confirm what’s safe and realistic for your anatomy.

Not usually. Many patients start with a remote screening process and then complete a urologic evaluation via secure telehealth when appropriate. If an in-person exam is needed for your case, we’ll tell you early—before you make travel plans.

We start with what’s medically appropriate for your anatomy and goals. Some men are great candidates for non-surgical enhancement; others are better served by surgical correction first—especially when visibility is limited by buried/hidden anatomy, a larger suprapubic fat pad, significant webbing, or other structural factors. The goal is a plan that looks natural, protects function, and doesn’t close off future options.

Non-surgical procedures often involve minimal downtime, but you still need to follow aftercare restrictions while the result settles. Surgical procedures typically require a more structured recovery window and more involved aftercare. Exact timing varies by procedure and your healing factors, and we’ll give you individualized guidance during your consultation.

You can still be evaluated. We’ll review what was done, when it was done, and (when possible) what material was used. Prior procedures can change anatomy and predictability, so your plan may involve correction, stabilization, or a different sequencing strategy. The key is diagnosis-first planning rather than guessing.

No. Penis enlargement procedures are considered elective/cosmetic and are not covered by insurance. We provide transparent pricing and can discuss financing options where available.

Ready to get started?

Schedule a confidential phone consultation. Our team will answer your questions, discuss candidacy, and help you understand what’s realistic for your anatomy.

Before scheduling any procedure, a board-certified urologist will complete a brief urologic evaluation (often via HIPAA-protected telehealth for out-of-area patients).

Schedule your case consultation

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