

Summer is brilliant. Unless you have hayfever, in which case it involves a lot of sneezing, itching eyes, and wondering whether you'll ever feel normal again.
Hayfever, or allergic rhinitis, is an inflammatory reaction to pollen. For many people, antihistamines are the first port of call. They work well. But if you're taking them daily through peak pollen season, it's worth understanding how they work, what the side effects are, and whether there's anything else you can do alongside them.
Antihistamines block histamine, a chemical your body releases during an allergic reaction. Histamine tells your immune system to ramp up its defences, causing blood vessels to expand and triggering the familiar symptoms: sneezing, itching, watery eyes, swelling.
When pollen is the trigger, your body mistakes it for a threat. Antihistamines interrupt that chain reaction, which is why they can bring relief within an hour or two.
There are two main categories:
First-generation antihistamines (such as diphenhydramine and hydroxyzine) cross the blood-brain barrier, which is why they tend to make you drowsy. They come as tablets, syrups, and creams.
Second-generation antihistamines (cetirizine, loratadine, fexofenadine) cross the blood-brain barrier to a much lesser degree. They're less likely to cause sleepiness and are the more commonly recommended option for daytime use.
Even taken occasionally, antihistamines can cause side effects, particularly with first-generation versions. Common ones include drowsiness, dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, and difficulty urinating. At higher doses, first-generation antihistamines can cause dizziness and tinnitus.
Second-generation antihistamines are significantly less likely to cause drowsiness or dry mouth.
Who should exercise caution:
If you fall into any of these groups, speak to your pharmacist or GP before starting antihistamines.
If you're taking antihistamines every day through hayfever season, you might wonder whether that's doing you any harm in the long run. The honest answer is that the evidence on long-term effects is mixed. Research is ongoing, and it's worth reviewing your treatment with a doctor if you're on them continuously and find they're becoming less effective over time.
Some people notice their body appears to get used to antihistamines, with symptoms feeling less controlled after extended use. If that happens, it's a good reason to check in with your GP rather than simply increasing the dose.
A few simple habits can help:
Antihistamines treat the symptoms. But certain foods have anti-inflammatory properties that may help to reduce their severity. The evidence varies in strength, so treat these as supportive additions to your existing treatment, not replacements for it.
Fatty fish: Salmon, mackerel, and sardines are rich in omega-3 fatty acids, particularly EPA and DHA. Research suggests these help produce anti-inflammatory compounds that may reduce the severity of allergic conditions like hayfever.
Citrus fruits: Oranges, grapefruit, and lemons are high in vitamin C, which has antioxidant properties and may help lower histamine levels in the body. Source.
Garlic and onions: Both contain quercetin, a flavonoid with natural antihistamine properties. Studies suggest quercetin-rich foods may help reduce the severity of allergic reactions when incorporated into your regular diet.
Local honey: Contains small traces of local pollen. There's limited evidence behind it, but some research suggests regular consumption during the off-season might help the immune system gradually adjust to local pollen. Worth a try, if not a cure.
Probiotic-rich foods: Yogurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, and miso support gut health and immune function. Research suggests that probiotics may help ease allergy symptoms over time.
These foods work best as part of a consistently balanced diet, not as a last-minute hayfever hack. If you're considering significant dietary changes, speak to a nutritionist or your GP first.
Read more: Can nutrition help with hayfever?
Why: Rewrote to reflect Nutrition team's revised angle (nutrition as supportive alongside conventional treatment), stripped the first article's overly clinical and generic wellness framing, tightened the structure to remove repetition and padding, and applied UK spelling throughout. Removed all em-dashes. The nutrition section is now clearly the differentiating angle rather than a footnote. Claims flagged below.
Claims flags: