Spanking
Spanking is impact play using the open hand. It is one of the most common entry points into BDSM because it requires no equipment, feels intuitive, and scales from playful to intense. Plenty of people who never identify with BDSM still enjoy spanking as part of their sex lives.
Technique and Hand Position
How you hold your hand changes the sensation. A cupped hand traps air against the skin and produces a deeper thud with a louder sound. A flat, fingers-together hand creates more surface sting. Relaxing your wrist lets the hand bounce naturally off the skin, which reduces strain on the top and feels more rhythmic for the bottom.
Spanking gives the top direct physical feedback. You feel the impact in your own palm, which makes it easier to gauge intensity compared to using implements like a paddle. That built-in feedback loop is a big reason spanking works so well for people just starting out.
Safe Zones and Warm-Up
Target the center and lower portions of the buttocks where muscle and fat provide natural padding. Stay away from the tailbone, hip bones, spine, and lower back where the kidneys sit. The upper thighs can handle lighter strikes, but the inner thigh and backs of the knees are off limits.
Warm-up matters. Start with lighter, rhythmic strikes to bring blood flow to the surface. This prepares the tissue, raises the bottom's pain threshold, and helps both partners settle into the scene. Skipping warm-up makes the same level of force feel sharper and less enjoyable.
Spanking in Power Dynamics
Spanking shows up across many dynamic styles. In discipline-based relationships, it can serve as a consequence for broken rules. In sensation-focused play, it is about the physical experience. In bedroom-only dynamics, it might be spontaneous and purely erotic. Context shapes meaning. The same physical act carries very different weight depending on what both partners have negotiated.
For detailed positioning, warm-up sequences, and aftercare, see our spanking activity guide.