Engineered Cooling & Support for Athletes

Engineered Cooling & Support for Athletes

Cool Beans helps reduce testicular heat to stabilise athletic baselines—supporting overall wellness and performance consistency over the long run.

Cool Beans helps reduce testicular heat to stabilise athletic baselines—supporting overall wellness and performance consistency over the long run.

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Better Conditions. Better Outcomes.

Managing testicular heat is a simple, evidence-backed step. Cool Beans makes it wearable and kind to the body, supporting sperm quality, hormonal balance and a little more peace of mind.

Born of a Family’s Journey. Built on Research.

After years of trying, a hand-stitched prototype, built with a scientist’s care and real-world testing, helped Saara and Jordan conceive four months later. Today, it’s Cool Beans—a clinician-prescribed medical device backed by 20+ global patents and counting.

Who Needs To Cool Their Beans?

How Does Cooling My Beans Help?

Perform Harder. Run Cooler.

Even small rises in groin temperature add up over hours in the saddle or gym. Our breathable pouch moves heat and friction away from the thighs, supporting steadier baselines and comfort—without changing your routine.

Frequently Asked Questions

Understanding Cool Beans

Our patented elasticised air-flow mesh pouch lifts the scrotum forward, away from the thighs, so body-core heat dissipates instead of being trapped. The open-weave mesh and premium, polyester-free fabrics let heat and moisture escape, maintaining a testicular temperature that’s up to several degrees cooler than ordinary briefs. In short: more air circulation, less squeeze, better biology.
Yes. Mahtava Enterprises Pty Ltd – Testicular temperature regulation underpants are entered in Australia’s ARTG 379655 (Class I). Registration recognises the intended purpose; it doesn’t claim guaranteed outcomes.

Fertility & Men's Health

Yes. Elevated scrotal temperature is a well-documented enemy of both sperm quality and endogenous testosterone production. By passively keeping the testes closer to their optimal 34 °C zone, Cool Beans supports higher sperm count, motility, and hormonal output. The design is registered with Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (ARTG 379655) as a Class I medical device, and is recommended by urologists and fertility clinics for exactly this purpose
Spermatogenesis runs best when the testes sit a few degrees below core body temperature—about 34–35 °C. When heat builds up (tight clothing, thighs pressed together, hot seats, saunas, fever), semen quality—count, motility, and morphology—can drop. Keeping air moving around the scrotum helps maintain that cooler zone and supports normal testicular function.
Sperm take ~74 days to develop, plus ~10–15 days to transit the epididymis. Most lifestyle changes show up on testing after 2½–3 months; sometimes it takes two full cycles.
Large clinical data suggest men who typically wear looser underwear show higher sperm concentration and total count than those in tighter styles—likely due to lower scrotal heat. (If counts are already normal, the difference may be small.) Cool Beans provides support without squeeze, prioritizing airflow.
Everyday habits that raise scrotal temperature include sitting for long periods with your thighs pressed together or wearing tight pants, resting a laptop directly on your lap, and using hot tubs, saunas, or heated car seats; high-intensity cycling can also add heat. To help keep things cooler—especially while trying to conceive—take regular standing or walking breaks, place laptops on a desk or tray instead of your lap, limit hot-water/sauna/seat heat, and when cycling, use a cut-out saddle, stand on climbs, cool down promptly, and wear breathable, airflow-focused underwear like Cool Beans.
Extended rides can raise scrotal temperature and compress perineal vessels and nerves. Practical tweaks—bike fit, cut-out saddle, standing intervals, breathable shorts—plus cooling underwear can reduce heat load and irritation. If you have numbness, pain, or erectile symptoms, see a clinician.
Yes. After a febrile illness, semen parameters can dip for one or more spermatogenic cycles; they often recover as new, heat-unexposed sperm enter the ejaculate. If you’re actively trying, consider re-testing 3 months after recovery.
A varicocele (dilated scrotal veins) can warm the testes and impair sperm quality. Supportive, cooling underwear may improve comfort and reduce heat load, but it doesn’t treat the vein abnormality. Evaluation by a urologist is recommended if you suspect varicocele.
If you’ve tried to conceive for 12 months (6 if partner ≥35), or if you notice pain, swelling, a new lump, prior testicular surgery/trauma, erectile issues, or a history of undescended testicles, consult a clinician. Cooling underwear is a helpful adjunct—not a substitute for medical care.

Fit & Use

Choose a pouch size that lifts the scrotum forward without compressing it. You want support + airflow, not squeeze. If in doubt between sizes, pick the looser pouch for more circulation.
Absolutely. The underwear was engineered for all-day comfort at the office, during sleep, light workouts, walking, or weight training. Cyclists also love the reduced saddle heat and compression. For high-intensity running or contact sports, hold tight—our performance line Cool Beans Fit is on the way.

Our Story

After three years of infertility, multiple miscarriages, and no answers from doctors, I did what I knew how to do—I turned to the science. What I found was confronting: testicular heat isn’t just uncomfortable—it damages sperm, shuts down testosterone, and silently sabotages fertility. And yet no one was talking about it.

That journey became Cool Beans Biomed—now the world’s first and only Therapeutic Goods Administration registered medical device underwear for sperm health and hormone function.

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Future Proofing Men’s Health & the Next Generation

Part memoir, part manifesto, and part medical awakening, Cool Beans Biomed exposes the systemic neglect of male bodies and the urgent need to rethink how we care for them—from adolescence to fatherhood and beyond. Because if we don’t bring men back into the conversation—on fertility, hormones, mental health, and the future of family—we’re all fighting blind.

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