The question arrives quietly — usually late at night, after you have once again crossed a line you swore you would not cross. Has this become something more than I can handle? That moment of honest self-examination takes courage. And if you are asking it, it is worth taking seriously.

Pornography use exists on a spectrum. Research consistently shows that many people use pornography without significant harm. But for a meaningful minority — estimates suggest between 3% and 6% of the general population — use becomes compulsive, distressing, and increasingly difficult to control. In a 2023 narrative review published in Cureus, Mehmood Qadri and colleagues found that the most commonly reported signs of pornographic addiction included loss of interest in real-world sex, low self-esteem, depression, and spending an average of five hours daily viewing pornography.

This article outlines ten signs that may suggest pornography use has crossed into compulsive territory. It is not a diagnostic checklist — only a qualified professional can assess that. But it is a starting point for honest reflection.

First: What Does “Addiction” Actually Mean Here?

The word addiction carries a lot of weight. It is worth clarifying what clinicians actually mean when they use it in this context.

Since January 2022, the World Health Organization’s International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) has included Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder (CSBD) — code 6C72 — as a formally recognised impulse control disorder. The ICD-11 defines it as “a persistent pattern of failure to control intense, repetitive sexual impulses or urges resulting in repetitive sexual behaviour” that persists for six months or more and causes “marked distress or significant impairment in personal, family, social, educational, occupational or other important areas of functioning.”

Clinical Note: The ICD-11 definition explicitly clarifies that this diagnosis should not be based solely on moral disapproval or guilt about sexual behaviour. There is an important distinction between feeling shame about pornography use because of your values, and genuinely losing control of it. Both can coexist — but it is the loss of control and life impairment that defines compulsive sexual behaviour disorder clinically.

With that framework in mind, here are ten signs that clinicians and researchers consistently identify as markers of problematic pornography use.

Sign 01