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DivaCup - BPA-Free Reusable Menstrual Cup - Leak-Free Feminine Hygiene - Tampon and Pad Alternative - Up To 12 Hours Of Protection - Model 2

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Availability: Only 3 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Saturday, Mar 8
Order within 21 hours and 28 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Color: Clear


Size: Model 2 (Pack of 1)


Features

  • Silicone Cup Size & Capacity: DIVA Cup Model 2 holds the equivalent of 6 regular tampons of flow, ideal for heavy flows, post-partum, wide vaginal canals, and people ages 35+
  • Reliable Silicone Menstrual Cup: DIVA Cup is made from 100% medical grade silicone, ensuring safety and durability for people who menstruate; plastic free and dye free
  • Reusable Period Care Product: Our DIVA Cup is safe for up to 12 hours of continuous use; then, simply wash thoroughly and insert again
  • Menstrual Cup Design Features: Cup includes leak-resistant air holes for a secure seal and visible flow lines for easy tracking, so you can know your flow
  • About DIVA: As makers of the original DivaCup and the most trusted name in the period care category, we innovate with the same integrity we started with over 20 years ago

Description

Give your period the care it deserves with the DIVA Cup, a trusted choice in reusable menstrual cups since 2003. Designed with inclusivity in mind, this silicone cup comfortably fits all body types, ensuring 12 hours of comfort and reliable protection. This is the menstrual cup for those who value a better period experience, one that's free from the inconveniences of tampon strings or frequent bathroom visits. When it comes to period care, the DIVA Cup is a game-changer. It allows you to confidently navigate your menstruation cycle without the need for disposables. With three different model sizes, you can find the cup that fits your flow. DIVA Cup's flexible, 100% medical-grade silicone design allows for easy insertion, while the leak-resistant air holes create a secure seal to keep the cup in place. But the benefits of the DIVA Cup extend beyond its functionality. As a reusable cup for period care, it's a plastic-free, zero-waste solution that aligns with our commitment to the environment. Not only does it contribute to a more sustainable planet, but it's also a cost-effective option. With proper care, a single DIVA Cup can last several years, helping you leave monthly period expenses in the past. The DIVA Cup is more than just a period cup for those who menstruate—it's an investment in your health and a step towards a more sustainable future. Its convenience, comfort and conscious design make it a standout in the world of health care products. It's time to transform your cycle and embrace the DIVA difference. DIVA (formerly DivaCup) has been a leader in the period care and menstrual health industry for over 20 years. We take a conscious and expert- backed approach to our cycle care products because we know period and menstrual health is integral to overall health. As your trusted friend in the period care industry, we design our products to fit your body and support your cycle experience—no matter what stage of life you are at.

Size: Model 2 (Pack of 1)


Brand: DivaCup


Color: Clear


Material: Silicone


Item Diameter: 45 Millimeters


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 3.54 x 1.97 x 6.1 inches; 0.8 ounces


Item model number ‏ : ‎ DV002-EO


Department ‏ : ‎ Women


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ January 8, 2004


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Diva International Inc.


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Mar 8

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Divacup: no more period smells wafting to neightbors' noses!
Color: Clear Size: Model 1 (Pack of 1)
I love my cup so much!!!! BASIC WONDERS I was a diehard disposable pad girl until I started enjoying camping and the great outdoors four years ago. Tampons dried me up too much/hurt/smelled and I didn't know anything else existed. The cup eliminates the need to carry pads into the wilderness (yay, weight savings!!!) but most amazingly, it eliminated the smell that pads get after you've been using them for a few hours. Why didn't I know about this sooner!!???!! Diva cup has also been amazing for traveling around the world. No more worrying if I brought enough pads/am carrying enough with me during the day! Just go pee, dump it out, continue on your way. Four years of owning my cup and it is still going strong. INSERTION TIPS Insertion was a small learning curve - at the beginning, I did mess up and get uncomfortable poking of the cup stem into my vaginal walls/outer labia. At first, I put the cup super low in my vagina and it hurt (my cervix descends during most periods making the entire vagina short). Turning the cup inside out to make it shorter makes it too wide to be comfortable for me. Over time, my vag canal has become longer on my period - between that and trimming the cup's stem, I no longer get poked. The stem is easily trimmed with regular scissors (only do a little at a time so you don't take too much away!!!). Note there is a way that you can "walk" a low sitting cup up deeper into the vagina to prevent poking. Insert, pop the cup open (run finger around outside rim to be sure it opened correctly and that you cannot feel your cervix [cervix is a bump in the vagina which feels like the tip of your nose. you may feel a small 'hole' which is the entrance to your uterus] - note blood comes out of your cervix so if the cervix is outside the cup, it does you no good), hold stem/cup base with thumb and index finger, push up slowly & gently and while rocking the cup side to side. I used to be more 'tight' (virgin) and could only do the punch-down fold (any other fold was too big - there are so many folds, please google them to find one good for you!). Since then, I have worked my way up to the C-fold for insertion. Water based lube is your friend if you're worried! Avoid silicone because silicone lubes can change silicone materials like the divacup. The punch-down fold was great when I didn't have an IUD, but since getting one, the C fold is an easier way for me to guarantee not catching the IUD string between the cup and the vag wall. The moment I really "got it" as far as insertion was watching a youtube video where a lady uses a cylindrical vase to represent the vagina (definitely look for that one; author "the cup guru"'s "How To Use A Menstrual Cup"). IUD BIRTH CONTROL For me, it's been four periods with both the IUD and Diva cup. I left my IUD strings long but you can have them trimmed super short. The first 2 periods, I used the punch down fold. The next two I switched to C-fold. Before insertion, reach up and push the ends of the IUD strings up as high as you can get them, preferably wrapping around cervix; then insert cup low in vagina. Gently and slowly "walk" the cup up into the vagina using steps described above. During removal, go slow. Feel around the rim to make sure the string didn't migrate down to hang outside the cup - that happened to me once when I had the cup low and subconsciously squeezed my pc muscles really hard while squirming around (if that happens, push inwards on the rim at the spot where the string is, push string up into the cup so you don't pull on it during cup removal). Squeeze stem and cup gently to break suction, "walk" cup down the vagina; tilt stem up slightly to make for easier removal (your vaginal canal runs more perpendicular to the length of your body, not straight up and down) I've had no problems with IUD expulsion (*knock on wood*). REMOVAL The first time you try a cup removal, try doing it at home with no pants on (and on tile floor/in the tub if you can) to avoid messes. If not on your period, you can practice by filling the cup with a *little* plain water, inserting cup, and removing. It took about 2 periods until I got comfortable with the angle at which to pull. I stand with feet shoulder width apart/wider, knees bent. In public bathrooms, I still usually put a ~1 square foot paper towel/toilet paper on my underpants crotch because I'm clumsy and have dumped an entire ounce of blood on my pants before. As my period goes on, the vag walls become more slick with mucus so both insertion and removal become easier. If it remains difficult for you, try smearing the cup outside with a water-based lubricant first. CLEANING I use [clean] toothpicks to clean out the little holes at the top. If you pull the cup really hard (don't break it though), you can stretch the holes a little in the shower and let the spray of water clean out clotted blood from the holes too. During my period, I'll wash the cup with a few drops of divawash once a day. I sterilize mine once a month in a 2.5 Quart Aluminum Cook Pot with Lid Stansport 2.5 Quart Aluminum Cook Pot with Lid: chosen because I didn't want handle(s) sticking out of the side. I'd much prefer enamel (avoid potential chemical leaching), but at the time, there was no enamelware with no protruding handles (now there is: Blue Speckled Enamelware Convex Kettle w/Lid-2 Quart, 4.5H x 6.5D). The pot can double as a place to soak cloth liners (although I just let the blood air dry on mine; no dark staining on cotton flannel!) or place to hand wash bras. To sterilize, drop cup into pot of boiling water for 10 minutes, drain water, pick cup up carefully with clean paper towel, dry cup off, shove into cloth bag until the next use (don't forget about it as silicone can melt if the pot boils dry). LEAKS I always use the cup with a cloth pantyliner because I've been known to forget the cup is in (yes, it is that comfortable) and it overflows. I used to empty it every 8-12 hours. Since getting the paragard copper IUD, I need to empty it every 2-3 hours. Sometimes a public bathroom isn't available and I've leaked through my pants (it's situations like that where a heavy [cloth] pad would have been handy). My cup only leaks when the cup gets too full (this cup is the wrong shape for some womens' bodies so they need another cup brand to avoid leakage - and that's okay!). STAINS AND ODOR My cup stains a little towards the middle of the period, but amazingly, the stains disappear after its monthly boiling. An unpleasant odor tends to develops inside the cup (not on the outer sides) half way through my period. That also goes away with boiling. My body chemicals may just make me lucky - no residual effects on the silicone....but if your cup staining and smell doesn't go away, try hydrogen peroxide (lingering odor and staining from healthy individuals can be very normal). I've been thoroughly checked for vaginal diseases by my gynecologist because I freaked out when the cup&midperiod-blood started smelling bad/not metallic (everyone says when the cup is inserted, the blood isn't exposed to air; they said the internal blood would only smell bad if there was some sort of bacterial infection! I'm here to say that is not always true. With the plethora of reviews online today [not as prominent when I started using the cup], you can see that a bit of odor is not unusual, but if you suspect something, keep calm and see a doctor. they can give you peace of mind/treat you for anything). Smell not noticeable from full cup while fully inserted. ADVICE ON BACK-UP PANTYLINERS/PADS (recommendations) Sometimes I forget to insert the cup until I see faint pink on toilet paper after urinating (problem recently fixed with reminders from the android app "period calendar/tracker" from abishkking - recommended free app). That means for at least the first period day, there is a little blood on the lower vaginal walls which continues to flow downwards outside of the cup. To keep underpants clean, disposables are fine but wasteful&polluting. Reusable cloth options are way better and cheaper in the long run. See the big cloth pad companies' websites for a sample cloth liner for the price of shipping (party in my pants, lunapads, gladrags). Lots of etsy sellers sell liners & pads cheap with fabulous cute prints, many fabrics (I love cotton flannel; some come with a bottom layer or PUL [a medical grade plastic to prevent leaks]), and professional stitch quality. Combinations of flannel, quilters cotton, minky, silk, fleece, corduroy, denim, nylon, interiors (bamboo terrycloth, zorb) and more! SHOPS: google caroline's creations 09 [my personal favorite], pinklemonadeshop [silk liners! comfy and supposed to be good for ladies with yeast infections, non etsy], sew sweet creations, sweet sydney bean, mother moon pad, or fuzzibunz mama cloth [non etsy] as my recommended sellers. Thong liners available in some shops. Amazon also seems to carry a nice reusable selection these days. Liners & pads ***don't*** have to be soaked in water after use!!!!!!!!!! The only time my cloth developed a smell was during soaking when I forgot to change the water daily. That smell was ****awful**** (and I *know* bad smells after having cleaned men's restrooms)! Get any smell out with multiple applications of Bac out Biokleen Bac-Out Stain and Odor Eliminator-32 fl oz.; but following these steps below, you won't need to do anything for smells: if liner/pad is blood soaked, rinse with water and let air dry (you don't even technically need to rinse if you get it to dry fast enough). If there are only small to medium spots of blood, just let it air dry. Place dried pads in laundry bag. Toss in with regular clothing in the washing machine [weeks later is okay] (no special soaps, water temperatures, pre-treating, nor fabric color sorting needed. no fabric softener.) - just do what you normally do. The dried blood completely washes out (trust me, my cotton flannel pad tops look like new even though they get blood on them every month from small leaks/my accidents. Your experience with staining may vary of course, but letting the blod just dry doesn't preclude sanitary pads after you send them through a washing machine. [caveat: there are very light, hard to see tiny stains on my white silk pads and white fleece pads using this method - whatevs right? no one else looks at my pads but me and washing machines take care of any blood related ickyness people talk about]. On dark pads, I do have minor bleaching from acidic vaginal secretions so buying dark cloth pads won't necessarily save you from *all* discolorations....) TAKING LINERS WITH ME ON THE GO Just in case I need a new liner in the middle of the day (accidental spill/leak), I carry liners around in a planetwise wet/dry bag Planet Wise Travel Wet/Dry Bag, Owl (plus a plastic produce bag or those non-crinkly small plastic bags giftstore purchases come in, to prevent leaks when carrying soiled pads). A ziplock or a Blue Q coin purse (plasticized recycled grain fabric ) Blue Q Peacock Zipper Pouch or a Logan+Lenora Wet/Dry Logan + Lenora Wet + Dry Diaper Clutch - Small Cloth Diaper Wet Bag with Dry Pocket - Carry Wipes, Diapers, Creams, Cloth Pads, Breast Pads, or Toiletries - Made in USA - Waterproof (Downtown Athenian) are other options I alternate between. Items labeled wet-dry bags (like the ones I listed) usually have a water resistant zipper. Keep new liners in the dry pocket, used liners in the wet pocket. Wet bags are sold in many etsy stores in delightful patterns and sizes. WASHING CUP IN PUBLIC BATHROOMS Sometimes handicapped stalls include a sink - that's perfect for washing a cup after dumping the contents out. I went as far as to buy a perineal irrigation squeeze bottle DYND70125H - Perineal Irrigation Bottle with my new divacup (for situations when one has no running water); effective but totally unnecessary. I almost always forgot the bottle at home anyways. A wad of toilet paper will get all visible traces of blood off your cup (and almost everything off fingers). I always feel a little self conscious walking out of a stall with bloody fingers after insertion, but then I think: "eh, you'll probably never see the other ladies again/they're probably too embarrassed to say anything to you. Menstrual blood is NATURAL - you're not dying; just move on with your day, wash your hands. The menstrual blood was just inside your uterus, if it had encountered gross bacteria/viruses up in there, here's a hint, those buggers would already all over your body/bloodstream. Probably in your mouth too; what are you going to do, never floss again?" You can wet a paper towel to carry into a stall for a hand wipe too. EXERCISE I love that I can swim with a cup in and not have to get the weird water gush feeling one has with tampons (tampon absorbs water and when you squeeze your pc muscles a little, it's like wringing a sponge). During ski season, my butt doesn't get cold when the blood in a traditional pad would cool off. OTHER MENSTRUAL OPTIONS If you're looking for a travel menstrual cup, look at the Intimina lily cup compact which folds down like those silicone camping cups. It packs away slightly smaller than the diva cup (but isn't as stiff, so removal requires more concentration to avoid spills). Look into menstrual sponges for period sex (I have a review for them) or the Instead softcup Instead 12 Hour Feminine Protection Cup 24 ea. Natural sea sponges (Premium Ultra Soft Sea Pearls Reusable Sea Sponges - Multi Size 3 Pack) or synthetic (gynotex or beppy) - note sponges not FDA approved but that doesn't mean it can't be 'safe enough' for you (see my sponge review for my opinion). TSS Cups don't seem to carry the same level of TSS risks as tampons do because they don't absorb the fluid and hold it next to a lot of your internal tissue (however I have heard of two cup-TSS cases where they believed blood in the little holes incubated bacteria and the specific chemistry of the female let the germs bloom. The literature doesn't say how long the cups were in but it could have been longer than 12 hours. That being said, I've left mine in for 24 hours with no ill affects (as have many others posting in online forums); YMMV. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2015 by Christina C

  • Comfortable Reliable Safe Leakproof
Color: Clear Size: Model 2 (Pack of 1)
Divacup was the first menstrual cup I decided to go with a few years back. I'm so happy I went with this company, it's been the best life altering decision for my periods! I'm in my 30s with a heavy flow, so I use Model #2. It did take a little getting use to in the beginning. Read the instructions so you know how to properly ace it inside. You have to fold it in half slide it up then I twist my fingers in a circular motion inside til it fully opens up. Once you get use to it it takes literally about 5-10 seconds to pop it in, 2 seconds to pull it out. I have to say, I swear by THIS BRAND! I would not risk using any other companies. I was the first person in my family to start using menstrual cups, I've had great experience with my Divacup. On a day where I have a really heavy flow I will empty it in the morning afternoon and evening. On a day where I have a light flow I will empty it once in the morning once at night before bed. Now the reason I wouldn't use any other company is because after I started using menstrual cup and loved that i didn't have to worry about it all day, unlike a tampon which you have to change every time you go to the bathroom, or sometimes every couple of hours depending on your body. I told my siblings about this product, they decided to try other companies that make menstrual cups. I'm so happy I didn't have the experience they have had! One of my sisters bought a menstrual cup in 2023 from another company, her menstrual cup suctioned itself to her cervix! She was in excruciating pain trying to get it out for hours and almost went to the ER to have it removed. She was literally crying in pain. She purchased a different company in 2024 and had the same issue. My other sister said her menstrual cup suctioned her cervix as well and it was extremely painful to take out. Another sister used a different company and hers leaked all the time. I have gotten at least 8-10 DIVACUPS already, never had any issues with them, they are easy to put in and take out. I also purchased the divacup that you slide up to your cervix, I forgot the model for that one, that is amazing for a light flow if you still want to have s3x on your period without him knowing or feeling it. That is an amazing product as well. I bought the diva cleanser to clean my cups (a little goes a long way). Best product to use if you want to go about your every day life without having to worry about changing your tampons or pads multiple times throughout the day. I will say make sure the tiny holes on the top of the cups do not have blood in them really clean that out between uses. ZERO ODOR is the best benefit. Only down side is you do get blood on your fingers when putting it in or taking it out, but honestly after all this time of using this product I can honestly care less about that because it's seriously a life saver. You don't have strings hanging out of you when you go to the beach and you don't have to worry about any possible leakage. I can go 6-12 hours depending on my flow. I saved so much money monthly and yearly by using this one product, you need to replace it once a year (as per the packaging). I highly recommend purchasing this product, and only this company. Don't risk buying other companies and risk it suctioning to your cervix or leaking. You know you are buying a great product with divacup. I am not sponsored by them I am not getting paid for this review. I am honestly giving you my review as someone who loves loves this product. What prompted me to write a review now was getting my period out in public and being forced to buy a tampon for the first time in forever, it just reminded me how happy I am to never use these things anymore. It's so annoying to have to change it every single time you go to the bathroom!! Anyways, I hope you purchase this item and it changes monthly cycles as much as it changed mine! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2024 by Lori

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