TL;DR
Increase fluids, take paracetamol, and use a hot water bottle for comfort, but these will not cure a bacterial UTI. The fastest UK route to antibiotics is the NHS Pharmacy First scheme, free at your local pharmacy for most women aged 16 to 64. Call 111 or go to A&E if you have back pain with fever, vomiting, confusion or reduced urine output.
That sting and constant urgency when you go for a wee is the classic early sign of a bladder infection. If you have woken up with cystitis symptoms, the two questions on your mind are usually the same. What can you safely do at home to feel less awful, and what is the quickest way to get proper treatment in the UK?
This guide answers both. It covers the home remedies that actually help, the ones that do not, the NHS Pharmacy First scheme that gets most women antibiotics without a GP appointment, and the warning signs that mean you stop reading and call 111.
What a bladder infection actually is and how to know you have one
A bladder infection, also called cystitis, is the most common type of urinary tract infection. It happens when bacteria, usually E. coli that have travelled from the bowel into the urethra, multiply in the bladder. Women are four to eight times more likely than men to get a UTI because the female urethra is shorter. Classic symptoms are a burning pain when you wee, needing to wee more often, a sudden strong urge, cloudy or smelly urine, lower tummy pain, and sometimes a sense of feeling generally unwell or shivery.
Home remedies that genuinely ease UTI symptoms
None of these are a cure. They support your body and reduce discomfort while you get proper treatment. Use them alongside antibiotics, not instead of.
The NHS specifically recommends increasing your fluid intake to dilute your urine and help flush bacteria out of the urinary tract. Plain water is best. Steady sips through the day work better than chugging a litre at once.
Up to two 500 mg tablets, four times a day, is the NHS-recommended pain relief. It reduces the burning and any low-grade temperature. Ibuprofen can also help, but check with a pharmacist first if you have kidney issues, asthma or stomach problems.
Holding wee gives bacteria more time to multiply. Go as soon as you feel the urge and try to fully empty the bladder each time.
Placed low on the tummy, it eases the cramping that often comes with cystitis.
Perfumed feminine washes, bubble baths, scented soaps and douches can all worsen urethral irritation. Plain water or a fragrance-free wash is enough.
Potassium citrate sachets like Cystopurin or Canesten Oasis make the urine less acidic, which can briefly ease the burning. Symptom relief only, not a cure.
A 2023 Cochrane review found modest evidence that cranberry products in concentrated capsule form may reduce the recurrence of UTIs in women prone to them. They do not treat an active infection. Sugary cranberry juice cocktail does not help at all.
A simple sugar that may help prevent recurrent UTIs by blocking E. coli from attaching to the bladder wall. Low-level evidence, generally safe, not a treatment for active infection.
Home remedies that do not work, and why ignoring them matters
Apple cider vinegar, lemon juice, garlic capsules, baking soda in water and “alkaline diets” are all common online suggestions with no real evidence behind them as cures. The risk of leaning on any of these is delay. UTIs can ascend to the kidneys within 48 hours, and a kidney infection is a far more serious condition that may need IV antibiotics. If your symptoms are not clearly improving within 48 hours of starting treatment, you need to escalate, not switch to another home remedy.
The NHS Pharmacy First scheme is the fastest UK route to antibiotics
This is the single most useful change for UK women with cystitis. NHS Pharmacy First launched in England in February 2024, with similar schemes already running in Wales and Scotland. If you are a woman aged 16 to 64 with symptoms of an uncomplicated UTI, you can walk into any participating community pharmacy and, after a short private consultation with the pharmacist, walk out with a three day course of antibiotics. No GP appointment needed. Free if you do not normally pay for prescriptions, otherwise the standard prescription charge.
The first-line antibiotic is nitrofurantoin, either 100 mg modified-release twice a day for three days, or 50 mg four times a day for three days. If nitrofurantoin is not suitable for you, the second-line choice is trimethoprim 200 mg twice a day for three days. Symptoms usually start to improve within 24 to 48 hours of the first dose. You should complete the full three day course even if you feel better.
NHS Pharmacy First at a glance
- Who: women aged 16 to 64 with uncomplicated UTI symptoms
- Where: any participating Boots, LloydsPharmacy, Well, Superdrug or independent pharmacy
- Cost: free for under-60s in England, free in Scotland and Wales, prescription charge otherwise
- First-line: nitrofurantoin 100 mg MR twice a day for 3 days
- Second-line: trimethoprim 200 mg twice a day for 3 days
- How long until you feel better: 24 to 48 hours
Research Spotlight: What UK monitoring data shows about Pharmacy First
UK Health Security Agency monitoring since the Pharmacy First UTI pathway launched in February 2024 shows no rise in nitrofurantoin resistance. This means more women are getting fast, free antibiotic treatment for UTIs without driving up bacterial resistance, the long-feared trade-off. Stewardship is holding.
- February 2024: NHS Pharmacy First UTI pathway launched in England.
- 2024 to 2025: no measurable rise in nitrofurantoin resistance in E. coli isolates.
- Tens of thousands of women have used the scheme for same-day antibiotics without GP wait.
Red flag symptoms, call 111 or go to A&E
🚨 Get urgent help if you notice any of these
- A high temperature, or feeling hot and shivery
- A very low temperature, below 36 C
- Pain in your back or side, just under your ribs
- Confusion, drowsiness or slurred speech
- Difficulty breathing or rapid breathing
- Vomiting, especially if you cannot keep fluids down
- Passing very little urine
- Severe lower abdominal pain
- Visible blood in your urine
If you have back pain combined with fever, call 111 now or attend your nearest A&E.
How to lower your risk of getting another UTI
Recurrent UTIs are defined as two infections in six months or three in twelve months. If that fits you, see your GP rather than relying on Pharmacy First, but in the meantime build in these prevention basics. Drink water steadily across the day. Always wipe front to back. Empty your bladder soon after sex. Avoid douches and scented intimate products. Choose breathable cotton underwear over tight synthetics. For women past menopause, vaginal oestrogen cream prescribed by the GP significantly reduces recurrence. Other GP-managed options include a low-dose preventive antibiotic taken nightly or after sex, and non-antibiotic alternatives like methenamine hippurate for women who want to avoid long-term antibiotics.
Who is not covered by Pharmacy First
The Pharmacy First UTI pathway is deliberately limited for safety. You need to see a GP directly, not a pharmacy, if any of these apply.
- You are pregnant. UTIs in pregnancy need closer monitoring and different antibiotics.
- You are male. Most male UTIs need GP assessment and a longer antibiotic course.
- You are under 16 or over 64.
- You have a urinary catheter.
- You have had two UTIs in the last six months or three in the last twelve.
- You have already had Pharmacy First antibiotics for this episode and they have not worked.
A GP can run a urine test, check for underlying causes, and prescribe a treatment plan that suits your situation.
How home remedies compare to actual UTI treatment
| Approach | Cures the infection? | Eases symptoms? | Time to relief |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water + paracetamol | No | Yes, mildly | Hours of mild relief, infection continues |
| Cranberry capsules | No | No (active infection) | Useful for prevention only |
| Pharmacy First antibiotics | Yes | Yes | 24 to 48 hours |
| Doing nothing and “waiting it out” | No | No | Risk of kidney infection within 48 hours |
What people actually report
“Walked into Boots at 9am, got nitrofurantoin by 9:20. Symptoms were 80 percent gone by the next morning.”
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“The hot water bottle and Cystopurin tided me over until the pharmacy opened. Antibiotics still did the actual work.”
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“Tried to push through with cranberry juice and ended up with a kidney infection that put me in A&E. Will not make that mistake again.”
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“Pharmacy First was a game saver because I could not get a GP appointment for three days. Felt like a UTI miracle.”
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Frequently Asked Questions
I think I have a UTI. What should I do first?
Start drinking water, take paracetamol, and book yourself a Pharmacy First consultation at any participating UK pharmacy today. Do not wait to see if it clears on its own. Untreated UTIs can spread to the kidneys within 48 hours and become a much bigger problem than a few uncomfortable hours at the pharmacy counter.
Can I buy UTI antibiotics over the counter in the UK?
Not directly off the shelf. Antibiotics need a consultation, but the NHS Pharmacy First scheme effectively gives you that consultation at the pharmacy counter, free, without a GP appointment. For most women aged 16 to 64 with uncomplicated cystitis, this is the standard quick route.
How long do antibiotics take to work?
Symptoms typically start improving within 24 to 48 hours of the first nitrofurantoin or trimethoprim dose. Finish the full three day course even if you feel back to normal by day two. If there is no improvement at all after 48 hours, contact the pharmacy or your GP, because the bacteria may be resistant to the chosen antibiotic.
Does cranberry juice actually help a UTI?
For an active infection, no, especially not the sugary cocktail style sold in supermarkets. For preventing recurrent UTIs, concentrated cranberry capsules with high proanthocyanidins (PACs) have modest supporting evidence from a 2023 Cochrane review. They are a sensible add-on for women with repeated UTIs, not a treatment.
Men get UTIs too, just less often.
Yes, men can get UTIs, but they are much less common in men and often signal an underlying issue like an enlarged prostate. Male UTIs are not eligible for Pharmacy First. Any man with UTI symptoms should book a GP appointment.
I keep getting UTIs. Is this normal?
Two in six months or three in twelve months counts as recurrent UTIs and warrants a GP review. The GP can check for underlying causes, consider vaginal oestrogen for post-menopausal women, prophylactic antibiotics, or non-antibiotic options like methenamine hippurate. Behavioural changes help, but on their own often are not enough.
The Bottom Line
Act quickly. Use water and paracetamol for comfort, then get proper treatment the same day using the NHS Pharmacy First scheme. UTIs are common and treatable, but ignored, they can escalate within 48 hours.
Know the kidney-infection red flags, especially back pain combined with fever. Call 111 or go to A&E if any of them appear, do not wait for the next pharmacy slot.
Related reading: NHS Menopause Health Check · Protein Intake for Women Over 45 · Meningitis B Vaccine UK 2026
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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.
