Romance fiction has built an entire universe of intimate moments, and for decades those moments have unfolded largely without condoms. A growing number of authors in the genre are pushing back against that default, arguing that the absence of sexual health conversations in steamy scenes sends a message worth reconsidering.
The genre is thriving. Enemies to lovers, forced proximity, forbidden romance and other beloved tropes continue to draw millions of readers. But as society confronts declining condom usage rates among young people, rising rates of sexually transmitted infections and restricted access to reproductive health care in many parts of the country, some authors say the fiction readers consume is not keeping pace with the realities they face.
What authors are saying and why it matters
Bestselling author Jordyn Taylor addresses condom use directly in her new queer romance novel, See You at the Summit, and has spoken openly about her frustration with the stigma the topic carries even within the genre. Her position is that portraying safe sex in romance fiction can help normalize those conversations in readers’ real lives, removing some of the awkwardness that makes the subject feel difficult outside of fiction.
Author BK Borison makes a similar argument, though she frames it less as a public health message and more as a craft opportunity. Her view is that pausing for a condom does not have to interrupt the momentum of a scene. Handled well, she argues, it can become part of the intimacy rather than a disruption to it. The assumption that protection is inherently a mood-killer is one she pushes back on directly in her work.
Award-winning author Alisha Rai takes a broader view, pointing out that skilled romance writers are capable of making almost any subject feel charged and engaging. Her argument is that condom use is no different from any other detail a writer chooses to include. The skill lies in the execution, not the topic itself. Bestselling author Sarah Adams agrees, noting that the key is matching the tone of the moment to the rest of the scene. Handled with the same attention a writer brings to any other beat, it lands naturally.
What gets lost when safe sex stays off the page
Writer and sex critic Ella Dawson has written about the gap between what contemporary romance portrays and what readers actually navigate in their lives. Her argument is not that every novel needs a clinical breakdown of STI testing protocols, but that dismissing safe sex as incompatible with escapism is an easy out that does not hold up under scrutiny. Readers are dealing with real stakes around sexual health, and fiction that treats those stakes as invisible misses an opportunity to be genuinely relatable.
Romance bloggers who write about the genre have made a related point about character authenticity. A contemporary protagonist who never thinks about protection can read as either careless or poorly constructed, and either reading creates distance between the reader and the story. Characters who reflect the full range of concerns real people carry tend to feel more real, and that connection is ultimately what romance fiction is selling.
How the genre is responding
The authors advocating for this shift are not arguing for a change in tone or an end to fantasy. The case they are making is more specific: that sexual health can be woven into intimate scenes without sacrificing heat, and that doing so actually adds dimension to the characters involved. How someone handles protection in a vulnerable moment reveals something about who they are. That kind of detail is exactly what romance writers build relationships out of.
The genre has always evolved in response to its readers. The current conversation about safe sex in romance fiction is part of a broader reckoning with what contemporary readers expect from the stories they choose, and what responsibility authors carry when those stories shape how intimacy gets imagined.

