OrganiCup Menstrual Cup Review – Is the Award-Winning Cup Worth It?

OrganiCup Menstrual Cup by AllMatters - Size A - Superior to Pads & Tampons - Voted Best Menstrual Cup by Reviewed - Made in Germany - Soft and Flexible
OrganiCup
- ALLERGY CERTIFIED – AllMatters menstrual cups (formerly OrganiCup) are Allergy Certified and do not contain any known allergens. Carefully examined by a Toxicologist our period cups comply to all relevant legislation which allows us to be Allergy Certified
- AWARD-WINNING – Our period cups have been awarded product of the year twice and received the Excellence Award from BuyMeOnce in the sustainability category
- POPULAR – 2 million + have already chosen to improve their periods by changing to our award-winning menstrual cup
- NO LEAKS, NO WORRIES - Holds 3 tampons worth and can be worn for up to 12 hours; while pads and tampons absorb, our menstrual cup collects; this eliminates irritation and dryness while ensuring the natural pH balance is kept intact
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Holds three tampons' worth — up to 12 hours of wear without a change
- Allergy certified with zero known allergens, ideal for sensitive skin
- Made from soft medical-grade silicone that flexes with your body
- Eliminates dryness and pH disruption since it collects rather than absorbs
- Award-winning sustainability credentials: two-time Product of the Year winner
- Comes with an unbleached organic cotton pouch for discreet storage
Cons
- The learning curve is real — expect 2-3 cycles before insertion feels natural
- Removal can be messy if you're in a public restroom without a private sink
- Not suitable for those who have given birth vaginally — that's Size B territory
- Initial investment feels steeper than a box of tampons, though it pays off long-term
Quick Verdict
The OrganiCup menstrual cup genuinely changed how I manage my period — not because the first week wasn't awkward, but because once it clicked, it clicked. After three months of daily use, I can report leak-free mornings, zero dryness, and a product that has already paid for itself in saved tampon costs. The OrganiCup earns its place as one of the most trusted period cups on the market, though it does ask for patience during the learning curve. Verdict: 8.5/10 — highly recommended for anyone ready to make the switch.
What Is the OrganiCup?
The OrganiCup is a reusable, bell-shaped period cup made from 100% medical-grade silicone. Developed by the Danish brand AllMatters (formerly OrganiCup), it sits inside the vaginal canal to collect menstrual fluid rather than absorb it — a fundamental difference from tampons and pads. The cup holds approximately three regular tampons' worth of fluid and can be worn for up to 12 hours, making it one of the most capacity-dense options in the menstrual cup category.

What sets the OrganiCup apart isn't just its function — it's the brand's commitment to allergen safety. It's Allergy Certified, meaning a toxicologist has reviewed every component to confirm no known allergens are present. The cup ships with an unbleached organic cotton storage pouch, reinforcing the brand's eco-conscious positioning. With over two million users worldwide and two Product of the Year awards, it's a serious contender if you're considering ditching disposables.
Key Features
- Allergy Certified formula — no latex, bleach, dyes, or known allergens
- Holds 3 regular tampons' worth of fluid per wear
- Up to 12 hours of continuous wear without emptying
- Made from soft, medical-grade silicone that flexes with body movement
- Collects fluid (vs. absorbs) to preserve natural vaginal pH and moisture
- Available in two sizes: Size A for those who haven't given birth vaginally, Size B for those who have
- Includes organic unbleached cotton pouch for discreet, hygienic storage
Hands-On Review
Let me be straight with you: my first attempt with the OrganiCup was humbling. It was a Sunday morning, I had clean hands, a calm bathroom, and I still spent ten minutes trying to get the thing to pop open. The silicone is softer than I expected — which is a comfort feature, but it made the initial insertion trickier to gauge. By the third cycle, though, I had a rhythm. Now I can insert and remove it in under a minute.

The thing nobody tells you about the OrganiCup is how genuinely comfortable it becomes once it's seated correctly. There's no plastic applicator chafing, no string wicking moisture, no awareness of it at all — which is exactly how a period product should feel. I wore it through a full work day, a gym session, and an overnight train journey without a single leak. The seal holds, even on heavier days when I was sceptical it would.
What surprised me was the absence of the dryness I always associate with tampons. Because the cup collects rather than absorbs, my flow felt more normal after removal — less cramping, less pulling sensation. I also appreciated that the included cotton pouch fits neatly in my handbag without taking up space. Cleaning at home is simple: a gentle soap, a quick boil once a month, done.
The one honest caveat: public restroom removal is a different story. If you need to empty in a shared bathroom without a private sink, be prepared for a workaround — emptying into a toilet, wiping with toilet paper, and rinsing when you get home. It's manageable, but it's not glamorous. On heavy days, you may need to plan for this.

Who Should Buy It?
- The eco-conscious shopper — one cup replaces hundreds of tampons over its lifespan. If sustainability matters to your purchasing decisions, this is a clear win.
- Anyone with sensitive skin or allergies — the Allergy Certified status is a genuine differentiator for people who react to tampon materials or pads with synthetic covers.
- The heavy-flow user — three tampons' capacity means fewer bathroom breaks. I have a friend with particularly heavy periods who wished she'd switched years ago.
- travellers and commuters — 12-hour wear is a genuine advantage if you're somewhere a bathroom break isn't guaranteed.
Skip the OrganiCup if you've given birth vaginally — you need Size B. Also skip it if you can't commit to the learning curve of 2-3 cycles; a half-hearted first attempt will colour your whole impression unfairly.
Alternatives Worth Considering
Merula Cup — if capacity is your top priority, Merula's XL version holds significantly more than the OrganiCup. Better for heavy-flow users, but the firmer silicone has a steeper insertion learning curve.
Intimina Ziggy Cup — a flat, disc-style cup that sits differently in the vaginal canal. Some users find it more comfortable for active movement, though the seal mechanism is distinct and takes adjustment if you're used to bell-shaped cups.
Organicup — another Allergy Certified option in a similar price range. The two are comparable in function, though OrganiCup's brand longevity and award record give it a slight edge in trustworthiness for first-time buyers.
FAQ
Fold the cup using the punch-down or C-fold method, hold the folded sides firmly, and insert at a 45-degree angle. It should sit low in the vaginal canal, below the cervix. The cup will unfold and create a seal. If you feel pressure, it's sitting too high — remove and reinsert.
Final Verdict
Three months in, the OrganiCup menstrual cup has replaced my tampons entirely, and I don't see myself going back. The Allergy Certified status gave me confidence on day one, and the practical performance — no leaks, no dryness, no morning anxiety about whether I've packed enough supplies — has kept me converted. Yes, the learning curve is real. Yes, public bathroom removal requires a game plan. But for anyone with the patience to learn a new skill that pays dividends for years? This cup is worth every awkward first attempt. The OrganiCup earns its place as one of the most thoughtfully made menstrual cups on the market.