Urgent care · evaluated online

Tonsillitis

Most acute tonsillitis is viral and resolves with supportive care. Bacterial tonsillitis (strep) needs antibiotics. A clinician can help sort it out.

Licensed clinicians · Available in all 50 states
Tonsillitis
Common Rx
Amoxicillin (if strep), supportive otherwise
Time to feel better
3–7 days
Contagious
Yes
Telehealth fit
Yes — photos help

What is tonsillitis?

Tonsillitis is inflammation of the tonsils — usually from viral or bacterial infection. About 5–15% of cases in adults (more in kids) are strep, which needs antibiotics. The rest are viral and self-limited.

Recurrent tonsillitis (multiple episodes per year) may warrant tonsillectomy referral.

Do I have tonsillitis? Common signs

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

Very swollen, red tonsils White or yellow spots on tonsils Severe sore throat Painful swallowing High fever Swollen, tender lymph nodes in neck Headache, body aches Sometimes bad breath Ear pain (referred)
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

Viral (most common in adults): adenovirus, EBV (mono), influenza, COVID. Bacterial: Group A streptococcus most concerning.

Is it contagious?

Yes — through droplets and direct contact.

The classic strep look is bright red tonsils with white spots, high fever, swollen front-neck nodes, NO cough — that combination warrants testing and likely antibiotics.

Can it be treated online?

Routine tonsillitis is well-suited to telehealth. Severe difficulty swallowing or breathing, drooling, severe one-sided throat pain (possible peritonsillar abscess), high fever with neck stiffness, immunocompromise — need in-person evaluation.

How tonsillitis is treated

Viral: supportive — NSAIDs, throat lozenges, salt water gargles, hydration, rest. Bacterial (strep): amoxicillin or penicillin VK 10 days first-line. Azithromycin for penicillin allergy. Steroids occasionally for severe inflammation. Recurrent tonsillitis (7+ in 1 year, 5/year for 2 years, 3/year for 3 years): tonsillectomy referral.

Self-care while you wait

When to skip telehealth and seek emergency care Difficulty breathing, can't swallow saliva (drooling), severe one-sided throat pain with deviation of uvula, severe neck stiffness, very high fever with confusion — emergency. Could be peritonsillar abscess or epiglottitis.

How long does it last?

Viral: 5–10 days. Strep with antibiotics: improvement in 24–48 hours, full course 10 days.

Frequently asked questions

Will I need my tonsils out?

Most adults don't. Recurrent episodes (specific thresholds) or peritonsillar abscess history may warrant tonsillectomy.

How long am I contagious?

Strep: 24 hours after starting antibiotics. Viral: throughout symptoms.

Why do white patches develop?

Pus and inflammatory exudate — common in both viral and bacterial tonsillitis. Not specific to strep.

Is mono making me sick?

Mono (EBV) commonly causes severe tonsillitis with prolonged fatigue. Avoid contact sports (spleen risk).

Can I get strep from kissing?

Yes — direct contact can transmit. Avoid kissing during active infection.

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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