7 Home Remedies for Sinus Infections in Children

It’s hard to watch your child suffer with a stuffed nose and sinus pain when they have a cold or allergies. You might feel the impulse to visit the pediatrician to get an antibiotic prescription, especially if the discharge coming out of their nose is thick and yellow. But in most cases, antibiotics probably won’t help and may cause harm.
“Parents often think their child has a bacterial sinus infection, but the majority of the time the pain and discharge are caused by a virus, which antibiotics don’t treat,” says Barbara Rolnick, MD, a pediatrician at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Primary Care, Roxborough, in Philadelphia.
So what actually does work? Not much has been proved scientifically, but pediatricians say their experience shows home remedies can ease your child’s discomfort until the immune system clears the infection.
1. Take Your Child Into a Warm Shower to Ease Congestion
Because steam moistens the sinus passageways, which both helps your child feel better and may cause mucus clumps to pass, warming up your child’s sinus passages is a wonderful treatment, Dr. Rolnick says.
Rolnick doesn’t recommend leaning over a pot of steaming water as adults sometimes do, because the child might touch or knock over the water and get burned. Instead, she suggests placing the child in a warm shower, accompanying them if the child is young.
An alternative is to have your child lie on the bed while you place a warm washcloth over their nose and cheeks. The best way to heat up the washcloth is to run it under warm water, then squeeze the liquid out. Have a second washcloth handy so you can replace it as the first one cools.
2. Breathe in Essential Oils for Calming Relief
Although there is no scientific evidence that inhaling essential oils improves sinus inflammation, many children find oil of eucalyptus does help them breathe, Rolnick says.
3. Try Nasal Irrigation to Wash Out Sinus Passages
4. Consider Saline Spray Bottles, Which Are More Kid-Friendly Than Neti Pots
But most children do not like the sensation of the neti pot, so it’s best not to use the device with them. A saline spray bottle, or, for very young children, an eyedropper, is best, Rolnick says. Fine mist saline sprays are sold in most drugstores. Speak to your pediatrician if you have any questions or want recommendations about which one is right for your child.
5. Consider Nose Strips to Ease Breathing in Older Kids
Although Rolnick says many children typically pull off those drugstore nose strips as soon as you place them on, when they do stay on they can open the passageways enough to help your child breathe easier.
6. For Long-Term Respiratory Health, Improve Your Child’s Diet and Eating Habits
Many kids are finicky eaters, but a healthy, varied diet is crucial for allowing the body to mount the best immune defenses, Rolnick says. You may not be able to get your child to eat their veggies in the midst of their sinus flare-up, but once the child feels better, this is something to work on to help keep their immune system stable.
7. Consult a Doctor if Home Remedies Don’t Help Sinus Symptoms
The Takeaway
- To help relieve cold symptoms in children, consider warm showers or placing warm washcloths on their face, essential oils inhaled from cotton balls for calming relief, and nasal irrigation with saline solutions.
- Avoid using decongestants or over-the-counter medicines for children under 6, as current research suggests they offer no proven benefit and can have side effects.
- Should symptoms worsen or persist beyond 10 days, particularly with accompanying fever or thick, green discharge, consult your pediatrician to see if further care is needed.
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- Cough Medicine and Kids: Safety and Alternatives To Stop the Cough. Cleveland Clinic. October 30, 2023.
- 11 Essential Oils: Their Benefits and How to Use Them. Cleveland Clinic. December 14, 2021.
- Pecoraro L et al. Nasal Irrigations: A 360-Degree View in Clinical Practice. Medicine. August 1, 2025.
- Risks and Rewards of Nasal Rinses: What You Need to Know. UCLA Health. May 2, 2022.
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- Saline Sinus Rinse Recipe. American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. December 9, 2024.
- How Do Nasal Strips Work? National Sleep Foundation. November 26, 2025.
- Sinus Pressure. Cleveland Clinic. February 9, 2023.
- Is It a Cold or an Allergy? Should You Call Your Primary Care Provider? Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. March 18, 2024.

Nan Du, MD, MPH
Medical Reviewer
Nan Du, MD, MPH, is an instructor at Harvard Medical School and an attending physician at Boston Children’s Hospital. She received her Doctor of Medicine in 2016 from the Warren Alpert School of Medicine at Brown University and completed her pediatric residency at Yale–New Haven Hospital in 2019.
She also has a master’s in public health on clinical effectiveness, with a focus on environmental toxin exposures, health services research, and large databases. She completed her pediatric gastroenterology fellowship at Boston Children’s Hospital.
Currently, she works as a clinician scientist at Boston Children’s Hospital researching celiac disease and early infant nutrition.
