Cold sores

A cold sore usually starts with a tingling, itching or burning feeling.

Over the next 48 hours one or more painful blisters will appear on your face.

Cold sores should start to heal within 10 days, but are contagious and may be irritating or painful while they heal.

Certain things may trigger a cold sore, such as illness, sunshine or being on your period.

Cold sores are contagious from the moment you first feel tingling or other signs of a cold sore coming on to when the cold sore has completely healed.

They can easily spread to other people and other parts of your body.

To help stop cold sores spreading:

  • wash your hands with soap and water whenever you touch your cold sore
  • do not kiss anyone while you have a cold sore
  • do not have oral sex until your cold sore completely heals as you could give your partner genital herpes

Important

Kissing a baby if you have a cold sore can lead to neonatal herpes, which is very dangerous to newborn babies.

A pharmacist can recommend:

  • creams to ease pain and irritation
  • antiviral creams to speed up healing time
  • cold sore patches to protect the skin while it heals

You can buy electronic devices from pharmacies that treat cold sores with light or lasers.

You may find these helpful, but there's not much evidence to confirm they work.

If you regularly get cold sores, use antiviral creams as soon as you recognise the early tingling feeling. They do not always work after blisters appear.

Find a pharmacy

There are things you can do to help ease cold sores while they heal and to avoid triggering a cold sore.

Do

Don't

  • do not touch your cold sore (apart from applying antiviral cream) – and if you do wash your hands before and after

  • do not rub cream into the cold sore – dab it on instead

  • do not eat acidic or salty food if it makes your cold sore feel worse

See a GP if:

  • a cold sore has not started to heal within 10 days
  • you're worried about a cold sore or think it's something else
  • the cold sore is very large or painful
  • you or your child also have swollen, painful gums and sores in the mouth (gingivostomatitis)
  • you have a weakened immune system – for example, because of chemotherapy or diabetes

A GP may prescribe antiviral tablets if your cold sores are very large, painful or keep coming back.

Newborn babies, pregnant women and people with a weakened immune system may be referred to hospital for advice or treatment.

Cold sores are caused by a virus called herpes simplex.

Most people are exposed to the virus when they're children after close skin to skin contact, such as kissing, with someone who has a cold sore.

Once you have the virus, it stays in your skin for the rest of your life. Sometimes it causes a cold sore.