Prostate Location and Size: Complete Guide with Age Chart
- Where is the prostate located?
- Surrounding structures and relations
- What is normal prostate size?
- Prostate size by age โ complete chart
- How is prostate size measured?
- When does size become BPH?
- Does size matter for symptoms?
- Can prostate size change?
- Interactive FAQ โ 9 questions on prostate location and size
Where is the prostate located?
The prostate is a small, walnutโsized gland located deep in the male pelvis. Its position is best understood by its relationship to surrounding organs:
- Above (superior): The bladder neck โ the prostate sits directly underneath the bladder.
- Below (inferior): The urogenital diaphragm and external urethral sphincter.
- In front (anterior): The pubic symphysis (pubic bone), separated by the retropubic space (space of Retzius).
- Behind (posterior): The rectum โ the prostate can be felt through the anterior rectal wall during a digital rectal exam (DRE).
- Through the centre: The urethra runs through the prostate (prostatic urethra).
- On the sides: The levator ani muscles and neurovascular bundles (critical for erections).
Surrounding structures and relations
Understanding the prostate's neighbours is essential for clinical practice:
- Bladder: The prostate forms the bladder neck. BPH can cause bladder outlet obstruction.
- Rectum: Separated by Denonvilliers' fascia. Prostate cancer can invade the rectum (late sign).
- Urethra: The prostatic urethra is lined by transitional epithelium. Urethral strictures can follow prostate surgery.
- Ejaculatory ducts: Pass through the prostate to empty into the urethra. BPH can obstruct them, causing haematospermia.
- Neurovascular bundles: Run posterolaterally; contain parasympathetic nerves (erections) and blood supply.
- Prostatic venous plexus: Drains into internal iliac veins and communicates with vertebral plexus (route for metastasis).
What is normal prostate size?
Normal prostate size varies by age. Size is measured in grams (weight) or millilitres (volume) โ these are roughly equivalent (1g โ 1mL). Dimensions are also measured in centimetres.
- Weight: 15โ20 grams in young men (20s).
- Dimensions: Approximately 3โ4 cm (length) ร 4โ5 cm (width) ร 2โ3 cm (height).
- Volume: 20โ30 mL is typical for men under 40.
The prostate continues to grow throughout life, but growth accelerates after age 40 due to hormonal changes (increased dihydrotestosterone sensitivity).
Prostate size by age โ complete chart
The following table shows normal prostate size (estimated weight) by age decade. These are averages โ individual variation is common.
| Age Range | Average Weight (grams) | Comparative Size | Clinical Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20โ30 years | 15โ20 g | Walnut | Rarely causes symptoms |
| 30โ40 years | 20โ25 g | Walnut to golf ball | Asymptomatic growth begins |
| 40โ50 years | 25โ30 g | Golf ball | 10โ20% have mild BPH symptoms |
| 50โ60 years | 30โ40 g | Golf ball to ping pong ball | 30โ50% have BPH symptoms |
| 60โ70 years | 40โ50 g | Ping pong ball | 50โ60% have BPH symptoms |
| 70โ80 years | 50โ60 g | Small lemon | 70โ80% have BPH symptoms |
| 80+ years | 60โ70+ g | Lemon to tennis ball | Most men have some urinary symptoms |
Important: A prostate >40 grams in a symptomatic man is consistent with BPH. However, some men with 80g prostates have mild symptoms, while others with 30g prostates have severe symptoms โ size alone does not dictate symptom severity.
How is prostate size measured?
Several methods are used to estimate or precisely measure prostate size:
- Digital Rectal Exam (DRE): The urologist estimates size on a scale of 1โ4 (normal, small, moderate, large). Very subjective but quick and useful.
- Transrectal Ultrasound (TRUS): Gold standard. Uses a probe in the rectum to measure dimensions and calculate volume (length ร width ร height ร 0.523). Accurate to within 5โ10%.
- Transabdominal Ultrasound: Less accurate but nonโinvasive. Uses a probe on the lower abdomen. Good for screening.
- MRI (Multiparametric MRI): Most accurate, but expensive and timeโconsuming. Used primarily for cancer evaluation, not routine BPH.
- Cystoscopy (Urethroscopy): Visual estimation of prostatic urethral length and obstruction โ not a precise measurement but useful for surgical planning.
For routine BPH evaluation, TRUS is the preferred method. For cancer diagnosis, MRI is superior.
When does size become BPH?
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) is defined by both size and symptoms:
- Size threshold: A prostate >30โ40 grams is often considered enlarged. However, some men have normal size (20g) but significant symptoms due to intravesical protrusion or high bladder neck.
- Symptom threshold: An IPSS (International Prostate Symptom Score) of >7 (moderate) or >19 (severe) with bothersome symptoms.
- Flow rate: Peak urinary flow rate <10 mL/sec suggests obstruction.
Clinical BPH is diagnosed when an enlarged prostate causes bothersome lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in the absence of infection or cancer.
Does size matter for symptoms?
The relationship between prostate size and symptom severity is weak. Two important factors matter more:
- Intravesical prostatic protrusion (IPP): How much the prostate bulges into the bladder. A large IPP (>10mm) causes severe obstruction even with a moderately sized prostate.
- Bladder function: A weak bladder muscle (detrusor underactivity) causes symptoms even without significant obstruction.
- Median lobe enlargement: A middle lobe that acts like a ballโvalve can cause severe symptoms with a small overall prostate.
This is why two men with the same prostate size can have completely different symptom levels. Treatment decisions should be based on symptoms, not size alone โ except when choosing surgical procedures (e.g., large prostates >80g may require open or laser surgery rather than TURP).
Can prostate size change?
Yes โ prostate size is not static:
- Natural growth with age: The prostate grows throughout life, accelerated by dihydrotestosterone (DHT).
- Medications that shrink the prostate: 5โalpha reductase inhibitors (finasteride, dutasteride) reduce prostate size by 20โ30% over 6โ12 months.
- Medications that cause temporary enlargement: Alphaโblockers (tamsulosin) relax smooth muscle but do not change size.
- Inflammation: Prostatitis can cause temporary swelling (enlargement) that resolves with treatment.
- Surgery: TURP, HoLEP, and simple prostatectomy remove prostate tissue, reducing size.
- Hormonal changes: Castration (medically or surgically) causes prostate involution (shrinking).
Interactive FAQ โ Prostate location and size
The prostate sits below the bladder, in front of the rectum, and surrounds the urethra. It can be felt through the rectum about 5โ7 cm inside.
At age 20โ30: 15โ20g. At age 50โ60: 30โ40g. By age 80: 60โ70g. Size varies significantly between individuals.
Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) is the gold standard. DRE gives a rough estimate. MRI is most accurate but reserved for cancer evaluation.
No. Some men with 80g prostates have mild symptoms. Symptom severity depends more on intravesical protrusion and bladder function than size alone.
Generally >30โ40g, but BPH is a clinical diagnosis (size + symptoms). Asymptomatic enlargement is not BPH.
Yes โ finasteride and dutasteride (5โalpha reductase inhibitors) shrink the prostate by 20โ30% over 6โ12 months.
Because the prostate lies directly in front of the anterior rectal wall, separated only by a thin fascial layer (Denonvilliers' fascia).
Yes โ larger prostates produce more PSA. PSA density (PSA divided by volume) >0.15 ng/mL/mL suggests cancer risk.
No โ the prostate is fixed in the pelvis. However, severe BPH can cause the prostate to bulge into the bladder (intravesical protrusion).
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. Prostate size varies significantly between individuals. If you have urinary symptoms, consult a urologist at Vivekananda Hospital for proper evaluation.