Urgent care · evaluated online

Cellulitis

Cellulitis usually responds well to oral antibiotics. Severe cases may need IV antibiotics in person.

Licensed clinicians · Available in all 50 states
Cellulitis
Common Rx
Cephalexin, dicloxacillin, clindamycin
Time to feel better
2–3 days for improvement
Contagious
Generally no
Telehealth fit
Yes — photos help

What is cellulitis?

Cellulitis is a bacterial infection of the skin and subcutaneous tissues — usually Strep or Staph. Often follows skin injury (cut, insect bite, athlete's foot, eczema), but sometimes occurs spontaneously.

Most cases respond to oral antibiotics. Severe or rapidly spreading cases need IV antibiotics and in-person evaluation.

Do I have cellulitis? Common signs

If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth may be a good next step:

Spreading red area on skin Warm to touch Tender or painful Swelling Sometimes blisters Fever, chills Swollen nearby lymph nodes Red streaks moving toward heart (lymphangitis) Often on lower legs, face, arms
Here's how it actually works
01
Tell us what's going on5-minute online intake covers your symptoms, history, and any photos.
02
A clinician reviewsLicensed in your state. Reviews your case and asks anything needed.
03
Rx to your pharmacyIf treatment is appropriate, the prescription goes to the pharmacy you choose.

What causes it

Bacterial infection — usually Group A strep or Staph aureus (including MRSA). Enters through any skin break: cuts, insect bites, athlete's foot, eczema, surgical sites. Risk factors: diabetes, lymphedema, peripheral vascular disease, IV drug use, immunosuppression.

Is it contagious?

Generally not person-to-person, but underlying skin condition or MRSA strain may have implications.

Draw a line around the redness with a marker — if it expands beyond that line in 24 hours, you need to escalate quickly.

Can it be treated online?

Routine cellulitis without systemic symptoms is well-suited to telehealth with close follow-up. Rapidly spreading, severe pain (out of proportion to appearance — possible necrotizing fasciitis), fever, immunocompromise, diabetic patient, facial cellulitis, or treatment failure — need in-person care, possibly IV antibiotics.

How cellulitis is treated

Cephalexin 500mg 4x daily — most common first-line. Dicloxacillin alternative. Clindamycin if penicillin-allergic or MRSA concern. TMP-SMX (Bactrim) or doxycycline for MRSA. Treatment typically 5–7 days. Mark borders to track progression. IV antibiotics for severe.

Self-care while you wait

When to skip telehealth and seek emergency care Rapidly spreading redness, severe pain out of proportion, blistering or bullae, dark/black skin areas (possible necrotizing fasciitis), high fever with low blood pressure, confusion — emergency.

How long does it last?

Improvement in 2–3 days on appropriate antibiotics; full resolution 1–2 weeks.

Frequently asked questions

Should I be worried about flesh-eating bacteria?

Necrotizing fasciitis is rare. Severe pain disproportionate to appearance, rapid spread, dark areas, systemic illness — go to ER immediately.

Why does cellulitis keep coming back?

Recurrent cellulitis often has underlying cause: chronic athlete's foot (breaks skin barrier), lymphedema, eczema. Address those.

Is it the same as MRSA?

MRSA can cause cellulitis — antibiotic choice differs. Suspected MRSA based on risk factors and prior infections.

Can I take Bactrim or doxycycline?

Yes if concern for MRSA, especially with abscess. Cephalexin alone may not cover MRSA.

How long until I'm not contagious?

Cellulitis itself usually not person-to-person contagious. MRSA on skin can spread by direct contact — cover area, wash hands.

This page is for general information only — not a substitute for individual medical advice. A licensed clinician reviews every intake submitted through PrescriberNow before any prescription is issued. If you're experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

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