X marks the spot — but the Zs can’t find it. 

Despite having youth, stamina and virility on their side, a majority of sexually-active Gen Z gents have no clue where to locate the clitoris during coitus, according to jaw-dropping new data. 

Researchers from The Urology Foundation recently surveyed 2,000 UK blokes to find that only 41% of men ages 18 to 24 know the whereabouts of the female pleasure part. 

Shockingly, however, it seems baby boomers have the Zoomers licked as a remarkable 70% of fellas ages 55 to 64 were able to positively pinpoint it, per the poll. 

Representatives from the organization tell The Post that investigators asked participants of their study pool, “Where in the body is the clitoris located?,” alongside multiple choice responses, reading: “Above the opening to a female’s urethra where the inner labia meet,” “In the vagina,” “Between the vagina and the anus,” “None of the above,” or “Not sure.”

Ultimately, the pros determined an impressive 61% of dudes across all generations can accurately put a finger on the hotspot — no GPS necessary.

But it should come as no surprise that most younger guys are not well-versed in the vagina’s design. 

In fact, sex experts like psychologist Laurie Mintz, a professor from the University of Florida, previously argued that women orgasm less than men due to sexual misinformation spread through popular media, which oft-underemphasizes the importance of clitoral stimulation. 

“Education for both men and women about the clitoris could be a game-changer,” said Mintz. 

And it seems the game is in dire need of changing as a recent report revealed that most women have grown accustomed to faking orgasms during sex to protect their clitoris-blind man’s fragile ego. 

But probers of The Urology Foundation found that menfolk aren’t just ignorant to the intricacies of the female anatomy. They’re also a bit bedeviled by their own. 

To the survey question, “Where in the body is the prostate located?,” just 38% of chaps under age 25 could correctly identify the reproductive gland. 

Contrastingly, 58% of male boomers zeroed in on the zone. 

But Rebecca Porta, chief executive of The Urology Foundation, warns that their lack of body-knowledge may be life-threatening. 

“Whilst the data reveals that only 41% of young men aged 18-24 could identify the location of the clitoris, what’s more startling is that only 38% of them could locate their own prostate — this was lower than any other age category,” she told The Post. 

“It’s worrying that many males are reaching adulthood without knowing where their prostate is or what it does and more males aged 18-24 years are aware of female sexual anatomy than their own bodies.”

Porta, too, cautioned of the perilous risks one runs by remaining uninformed about their physical form. 

“Prostate cancer rates are set to double globally by 2040,” she said in a release. “So it is crucial that men understand their prostate health, recognize their individual risk factors, know the possible signs and are empowered to take control of their prostate health.”

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