HPV, or human papillomavirus, can infect the skin or mucous membrane epithelium, and it is impossible to generalize about the symptoms of infection. Most of them cause benign papillomas or warts, and if a patient has a low-risk HPV infection, he or she may develop symptoms 1 to 2 months after infection. If a patient has a high-risk HPV infection, symptoms may appear 8 to 24 months after infection. How long it takes for patients to develop symptoms after HPV infection needs to be judged on an individual basis. Most patients with low-risk HPV infection may develop symptoms such as genital pimples and warts 1~2 months after infection with the HPV virus, but a small number of patients with stronger immune systems may not develop symptoms until a very long time after infection with HPV, or may not develop symptoms at all. If a patient is infected with high-risk HPV, symptoms such as genital itching and warts may appear 8 to 24 months after infection with the virus, and some patients may also experience watery leukorrhea, abdominal pain, and other symptoms of cervical lesions. However, the incubation period for some patients infected with HPV may be longer, so the time of the emergence of symptoms is not certain. How long it takes for symptoms to appear after HPV infection depends on the patient’s own immunity and the type of HPV, and it is recommended that patients infected with HPV need to consult a doctor in a timely manner, and the doctor will take appropriate measures to treat the patient’s condition.