⚡ Quick Answer
Tonsillitis is an infection of the tonsils, usually viral, with a sharp sore throat, swollen neck glands, and white spots on the tonsils. The big three home remedies: rest, plenty of cool fluids, and paracetamol or ibuprofen for pain and fever. Aspirin is a no-go for under-16s. Keep kids off school until they have been fever-free for 24 hours. The single most important red flag is severe one-sided throat pain combined with trouble opening your mouth — that combination points to quinsy and needs A&E, not a lozenge.
Tonsillitis floors people. Adults forget how grim it is until it lands again, and most of us will catch it more than once across a lifetime. Around seven in ten cases are viral, which means the NHS will not — and cannot — fix them with antibiotics.
This guide is built for any UK adult or parent who has woken up to that ugly white-spotted throat in the bathroom mirror and wants real, NHS-aligned home care. We cover what actually helps, what to skip, and the warning signs that mean you stop self-treating and pick up the phone.
First, what tonsillitis actually is (and why it matters whether it is viral or bacterial)
Your tonsils are two oval pads of lymphoid tissue at the back of the throat, sitting like a pair of sentries either side of the soft palate. They are part of the immune system’s first line of defence — they trap germs from the mouth and nose and trigger an immune response. When they get overwhelmed, they swell and inflame, and that is tonsillitis.
Here is the split that matters. Roughly 70 percent of cases are viral — cold viruses, flu, or glandular fever (Epstein-Barr) being the usual suspects. The other 30% are bacterial, with Group A Streptococcus, the same bug behind strep throat, doing most of the heavy lifting. Why does this split matter? Antibiotics only touch bacteria. Throwing a course of penicillin at a viral throat is useless, fuels resistance, and lands you with rashes or a wrecked gut for no benefit.
🔬 Research Spotlight
FeverPAIN: how UK clinicians decide on antibiotics
GPs and Pharmacy First pharmacists use clinical scoring tools to distinguish bacterial from viral tonsillitis. The FeverPAIN score (Fever, Pus, Attended quickly, severely Inflamed, No cough or coryza) is the most common method in UK practice, helping to guide antibiotic decisions responsibly.
- →Antibiotics only help in roughly 30% of bacterial cases
- →FeverPAIN scores ≥4 trigger antibiotic discussion
- →Pharmacy First pharmacists can apply this score from January 2024 onwards
How to know it is tonsillitis and not “just a sore throat”
A normal cold-induced sore throat tends to come bundled with a runny nose and a hacking cough. Tonsillitis feels different. The pain is more focused, deeper, and usually worse on swallowing — drinking your own saliva starts to feel like a chore.
The NHS lists the classic giveaways: a sore throat (most common), painful swallowing, red and swollen tonsils with possible white pus-filled spots, high temperature of 38°C or above, swollen and tender lymph nodes just under the jaw, bad breath, headache, earache, and bone-deep tiredness. In children, you might see nausea, sickness, tummy pain, and drooling because swallowing hurts that much.
Symptoms usually go after 3 to 4 days. Viral tonsillitis can drag on to 7-10 days if the immune system is having a bad week. Bacterial tonsillitis treated with antibiotics often turns a corner within a day or two — but you must finish the full course, even when you feel back to normal, to head off complications like rheumatic fever and glomerulonephritis.
The home remedies the NHS actually recommends
These are the core, evidence-based steps for managing tonsillitis at home. Follow them in sequence for the best chance of a smooth recovery.
STAGE ONE
Rest and hydration
Your body is fighting an infection, so resting is non-negotiable. Stay home from work, keep the kids off school, and drop to half-speed for at least the first three days. Hydration matters just as much. Even small, frequent sips count, and dehydration on its own makes a sore throat feel sharper. Cool water, milk, diluted squash, ice cubes — they are all on the menu. If you cannot face a full glass, sip a tablespoon every ten minutes.
STAGE TWO
Salt water gargle
A traditional remedy, and the NHS still backs it. Half a teaspoon of table salt dissolved in a glass of warm water (not hot — you don’t want a scald on top of a sore throat). Stir until dissolved, gargle for around 30 seconds, then spit it out. Do not swallow the salt water. This one is for adults and older children who can gargle reliably; never use it for young children, because they will swallow it.
STAGE THREE
Pain relief, lozenges and Difflam
Paracetamol and ibuprofen are your frontline options, and you can use them together if you are an adult and have no contraindications. The maximums for adults are 4 grams of paracetamol over 24 hours and 1.2g of ibuprofen at OTC dose, taken with food to spare your stomach. Do not give aspirin to anyone under 16. For additional relief, consider numbing lozenges with benzocaine or hexylresorcinol, antiseptic lozenges like Strepsils, and Difflam (benzydamine) spray or gargle, which is a topical anti-inflammatory.
Food and drink: what to swallow when swallowing hurts
Choosing the right things to put in your mouth genuinely shortens the misery. Think in temperature contrasts.
Cold soothers are gold for short-term numbness. Ice cubes, ice lollies, frozen yoghurt, ice cream — all temporarily blunt the pain and slide down with less effort than warm food. A warm (not hot) drink between cold ones is the other half of the trick. Honey and lemon in warm water is a classic; chamomile or ginger tea also work. One important caveat: honey is not safe for children under 1 because of the small risk of infant botulism.
For meals, soft is the rule. Porridge, mashed potato, custard, smoothies, scrambled eggs, soup that has cooled to lukewarm. Avoid the obvious enemies: crisps, dry toast, sharp crackers, citrus juices like orange or grapefruit, and anything spicy. Smoking and alcohol both deserve a mention — both irritate inflamed throats badly, and alcohol also messes with paracetamol metabolism. Skip both until you are recovered.
|
✅ COOL THE THROAT |
⚠️ AVOID THESE |
|---|---|
|
|
Mistakes and “remedies” that can make tonsillitis worse
People do desperate things when they cannot swallow. Some are merely useless; some actively make the situation worse.
⚡ FIVE THINGS TO SKIP
Borrowed antibiotics. Taking leftover penicillin from someone else is dangerous. You may not have a bacterial infection, the dose may be wrong, and it fuels antibiotic resistance.
Apple cider vinegar gargles. The acid stings inflamed tissue and can make the pain visibly worse within an hour.
Raw garlic on the tonsils. This can cause a chemical burn on the delicate mucous membranes.
Squeezing or scraping the white spots. This can rupture the tonsil capsule, drive bacteria deeper, and dramatically raise your quinsy risk.
Excessive steam inhalation. Leaning over a bowl of boiling water poses a real scald hazard, especially with kids around, and there is no decent evidence it shortens illness.
When you should stop home treatment and call someone
Most cases sort themselves out at home. Some do not. The 4-day rule is the simple version: if you are not visibly improving by day four despite proper self-care, that is your trigger to escalate.
In England, your fastest route is now the Pharmacy First sore throat service, live in most community pharmacies since January 2024. A pharmacist can assess you on the spot, score your symptoms, and where appropriate supply NHS antibiotics without you needing a GP appointment. (Scotland and Wales have parallel pharmacy-led schemes; the names differ, but the principle is similar.) For anything more complicated — immunosuppression, multiple recurrent episodes, persistent very high fever — call your GP or use NHS 111 online.
| Feature | ✓ Pharmacy First | GP same-day | NHS 111 | A&E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| When to use | Adult sore throat 5-day wait OR FeverPAIN score | 4-day rule, immunosuppressed, recurrent | Unsure but not life-threatening | Quinsy red flags, breathing trouble |
| Wait time | Same day, walk-in | Hours to 1-2 days | Minutes (call/online) | Triage on arrival |
| Cost | Free on NHS, no GP needed | Free | Free | Free |
| What you get | Symptom score + NHS antibiotic if eligible | Examination + prescription | Triage advice and onward routing | Same-day ENT review, drainage if quinsy |
| Best for | Most adults with classic tonsillitis | Children under 5, complex cases | Out of hours / not sure where to go | One-sided pain, drooling, trismus, stridor |
The A&E red flags are: severe pain on one side of the throat, trouble opening your mouth (trismus), difficulty swallowing your own saliva (drooling), a muffled “hot-potato” voice, any difficulty breathing or stridor, visible swelling pushing the uvula over, and a stiff neck or rapidly worsening fever.
Quinsy is a collection of pus between the tonsil and the throat wall. ENT teams treat it with intravenous antibiotics plus drainage — either needle aspiration or a small surgical incision. Left untreated, it can spread into the deep neck spaces, and that is an airway emergency.
Recurrent tonsillitis — when the NHS will consider tonsillectomy
A tonsillectomy used to be handed out almost casually in the 1970s. The bar is much higher now, for good reason — it is real surgery with a sore two-week recovery, and most cases of recurrent tonsillitis settle by themselves over a few years.
The NHS England decision support tool, updated in 2023, leans on the well-known Paradise/SIGN-style criteria. In plain English: you usually qualify for a referral if you have had 7 or more documented episodes in the past year, OR 5 or more episodes a year for the past two years, OR 3 or more episodes a year for the past three years. Each episode has to be a real one — GP-confirmed, with sore throat plus at least one of fever, pus on the tonsils, or swollen tender lymph nodes. Episodes that you self-diagnosed at home don’t count. This is why GPs urge you to actually book an appointment when you are mid-flare; the documentation is what unlocks ENT referral down the line.
Other reasons surgery is considered: a recurrent peritonsillar abscess; very large tonsils causing obstructive sleep apnoea; or a one-sided tonsil that looks suspicious enough to warrant a biopsy. Cancer is rare, but it is the reason an ENT consultant pays attention to dramatic asymmetry in adults.
What people with tonsillitis are actually saying
Here are some anonymised, composite sentiments from people who have navigated tonsillitis care in the UK system.
We caught my six-year-old’s third bout this winter — Pharmacy First saved us a same-day GP wrestle and had the antibiotic in our hand inside an hour.
— Parent of 6-year-old
★★★★★
My third year of recurrent tonsillitis. The NHS finally referred me to ENT after I logged five GP-confirmed episodes. Wait list is real but the route is honest.
— 30-something with recurrent tonsillitis
★★★★☆
Quinsy in February — couldn’t open my jaw, drooling, voice gone funny. A&E spotted it in ten minutes, drained, on antibiotics. Glad I didn’t just gargle salt water through it.
— Man who had quinsy
★★★★★
Used Pharmacy First on the way home from a Bristol uni lecture. Pharmacist scored it, said no antibiotics needed, gave Difflam advice. Better in three days.
— Bristol uni student
★★★★☆
Frequently Asked Questions
⭐ THE BOTTOM LINE
Trust the NHS toolkit, watch the red flags
For most adults and children, tonsillitis is a horrible four to ten days that ends on its own. The NHS toolkit — rest, fluids, paracetamol or ibuprofen, salt-water gargles, soft cool foods — handles the vast majority of cases. Your real job is to spot the small minority that need medical help, especially the quinsy red flags.
Skip the borrowed antibiotics and the cider-vinegar internet remedies; they make things worse, not faster. If you have been miserable for more than four days without improvement, the Pharmacy First sore throat service is your fastest NHS route — no GP appointment needed.
Related reading: how to spot tonsillitis early · other UK home remedies the NHS actually backs
Last updated: May 2026 · Written by the Walton Surgery editorial team · Medical information is for educational purposes only and does not replace advice from a qualified healthcare professional.
