Polyurethane Condoms
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Trojan Raw Non-Latex CondomsTrojan Raw Non-Latex Condoms As close to Raw as you can get! Trojan Raw Condoms are made with polyurethane, an excellent material for those with latex allergies. Non-latex condoms are good at heating up to body temperature, making the experience pleasant and exciting. Don't...
- Regular price
- From $17.99
- Regular price
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$18.99 - Sale price
- From $17.99
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Polyurethane Condoms: Currently Unavailable
True polyurethane condoms (like the discontinued Trojan Supra) are no longer being manufactured for the US market. Most major brands have shifted to polyisoprene — a different latex-free synthetic that's more elastic, more comfortable, and generally considered an upgrade over polyurethane. If you've used Trojan Supra in the past and need a latex-free alternative, polyisoprene (SKYN) is the closest replacement.
Latex-Free Alternatives
- Non-Latex Condoms — full latex-free selection (polyisoprene, lambskin)
- LifeStyles SKYN Original — polyisoprene, the most popular latex-free condom available today
- LifeStyles SKYN Elite Large — polyisoprene in large size
Polyurethane vs Polyisoprene
- Polyurethane (older, mostly discontinued): thinner than latex, transmits heat well, but less stretchy — fit more critical, slipping more common.
- Polyisoprene (current standard): synthetic latex chemistry without the latex allergens, more stretchy than polyurethane, better fit for most users.
- Latex (still mainstream): not latex-free, but the gold standard for elasticity and reliability. If latex allergy isn't a concern, latex is typically the recommendation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are polyurethane condoms still available?
Almost not at all in the US market. Trojan Supra (the most popular polyurethane condom) was discontinued. Most other polyurethane lines have also been phased out. Polyisoprene (SKYN) has effectively replaced polyurethane for the latex-free market.
Why did polyurethane condoms get discontinued?
Polyisoprene (introduced around 2008) does what polyurethane did but better — more elastic, more comfortable, less prone to slipping. As polyisoprene gained market share, polyurethane production scaled down. Most brands no longer offer polyurethane lines.
What if I'm allergic to both latex and polyisoprene?
Lambskin condoms (like Naturalamb) are an option — but note: lambskin doesn't protect against STIs, only pregnancy. For most users with latex allergy, polyisoprene works fine because polyisoprene is chemically different from natural latex.
What's the closest replacement for Trojan Supra?
LifeStyles SKYN Original (polyisoprene) is the standard recommendation. SKYN Elite is the upgraded thinner version. Both are widely available and well-reviewed for users transitioning from polyurethane.
Will polyurethane condoms come back?
Unlikely in the US market. Manufacturer trend is toward polyisoprene and away from polyurethane. We update this page if anything changes — but for now, polyisoprene is the right alternative.

