The 5 Stages of a Cold Sore (and What to Do at Each)
Most cold sore treatments fail because people start too late. Understanding each stage tells you exactly when to act — and what to do.
1
Tingling / Prodrome Stage
Hours 0–24 · Your treatment window
A tingling, burning, or itching sensation at the lip or mouth corner — before anything is visible. This is the HSV-1 virus beginning to replicate. No blister yet.
⚡ ACT NOW: Start prescription antiviral immediately. Apply OTC antiviral cream. This is the only stage where you can meaningfully shorten the outbreak.
2
Blister Stage
Days 1–2
Small fluid-filled blisters appear, often in a cluster. Redness, swelling, and pain intensify. The area is highly contagious at this stage.
Continue antivirals. Apply cold compress. Use topical numbing gel (lidocaine/benzocaine). Do not pop blisters.
3
Weeping / Ulcer Stage
Days 3–4 · Most contagious
Blisters burst, leaving shallow open sores that weep fluid. Most painful stage. Highest risk of spreading the virus to others or other parts of your face.
Keep moist with petroleum jelly. Wash hands obsessively. Avoid kissing, sharing utensils. Pain relief with ibuprofen or acetaminophen.
4
Crusting Stage
Days 5–7
A honey-coloured or reddish-brown crust forms over the sore. Itchy and tight. Cracking and bleeding possible if crust is disturbed.
Do NOT pick the crust — this extends healing and risks scarring. Keep moisturised with petroleum jelly. Let it heal naturally.
5
Healing Stage
Days 8–10
Crust flakes off, skin underneath regenerates. Mild redness may persist. Contagion risk drops significantly but isn’t zero until fully healed.
Continue moisturising. SPF lip balm protects healing skin. Still avoid kissing until fully clear.
Treatments: Ranked by Effectiveness
1. Valacyclovir (Valtrex) — Oral Prescription
Strongest option
How to use: Apply a thin layer directly to the tingle area every 3–4 hours (roughly 5 times daily) using a clean fingertip or cotton swab. Start at the first tingle — do not wait for a blister to appear. Continue for up to 10 days or until healed. Discard or clean the applicator after use to avoid reinfection.
4. Cold Compress
Symptom relief
Applying a cold compress (ice wrapped in a cloth, or a cold damp cloth) reduces swelling, redness, and pain — particularly effective in the blister and weeping stages. Cleveland Clinic dermatologists specifically recommend it “as soon as that tingling feeling starts” for 5–10 minutes several times a day. It won’t make the cold sore heal faster, but it meaningfully reduces the severity of symptoms while your antivirals do the work. Never apply ice directly to the sore — wrap it first to avoid frostbite damage to already-inflamed skin.
How to use: Wrap ice in a damp cloth or use a gel cold pack. Apply to the cold sore for 5–10 minutes, several times daily. Most effective in stages 1–3. Always use a clean cloth to avoid contaminating other surfaces with the virus.
5. Medical-Grade Manuka Honey
Promising evidence
A 2021 study found that medical-grade Manuka honey is a strong alternative to standard antiviral cold sore treatments — the strongest home remedy with direct research support. Honey has known antiviral and antibacterial properties and keeps the sore moist, which supports faster healing. The caveat: the study used medical-grade Manuka honey (UMF 10+ or higher), not standard supermarket honey, which has significantly lower antibacterial potency. Patch test first — some people react to topical honey application.
How to use: Apply a small amount of medical-grade Manuka honey (UMF 10+ minimum) directly to the cold sore using a clean cotton swab. Reapply every 3–4 hours. Do not lick it off — this dries out the skin. Patch test on inner arm 24 hours before applying to face if you’ve never used topical honey before.
6. Petroleum Jelly (Vaseline)
Supportive care
Won’t speed up healing, but does a crucial job in stages 3–5: keeping the cold sore moist prevents painful cracking and peeling, which can extend healing time and increase scarring risk. Cleveland Clinic specifically recommends petroleum jelly as a cold sore supportive treatment. Apply throughout the healing process, particularly during the crusting and peeling stages. Use a clean cotton swab each time — not your finger — and don’t double-dip into the pot to avoid contaminating the product.
How to use: Apply a thin layer using a clean cotton swab 3–4 times daily, particularly after washing your face. Especially valuable from stage 3 (weeping/ulcer) onward. Discard the cotton swab immediately after use.
7. Topical Anaesthetic (Lidocaine / Benzocaine)
Fast pain relief
Anaesthetic gels containing lidocaine or benzocaine don’t fight the virus or shorten healing time, but they provide fast, temporary pain numbing that makes the blister and weeping stages considerably more bearable — particularly for eating and talking. Available OTC at most pharmacies. Best used alongside an antiviral treatment rather than instead of one. If pain is severe, combine with ibuprofen or acetaminophen for layered relief.How to use: Apply a small amount using a clean cotton swab to the affected area as needed for pain. Follow package instructions for frequency. Most effective in stages 2–3 (blister and ulcer stages). Do not use on broken or weeping skin if the product is not specifically formulated for open sores.
What Doesn’t Work (Despite What the Internet Says)
A few popular internet remedies lack evidence — or actively make things worse:
- ✗Toothpaste: May temporarily dry a blister due to SLS content, but can irritate skin and has no antiviral effect. Not recommended by dermatologists.
- ✗Popping the blister: Spreads the virus to surrounding skin, significantly extends healing time, and increases scarring risk.
- ✗Picking the crust: Removes the protective scab, restarts the weeping phase, and increases scarring risk.
- ✗Lysine supplements: Cleveland Clinic notes recent studies suggest lysine is unlikely to help prevent or treat cold sores — older studies showing benefit have not been replicated reliably.
- ✗Alcohol or hand sanitiser on the sore: Highly irritating, damages healing skin, and does not kill the virus effectively in this context.
Prevention: How to Stop the Next Outbreak
Sun protectionUV exposure is a major trigger. Use SPF 30+ lip balm outdoors consistently.Sleep & stressHSV-1 reactivates when immune defences drop. Poor sleep and high stress are the top triggers.Suppressive antiviralsDaily low-dose valacyclovir significantly reduces outbreak frequency in frequent sufferers. Ask your GP.Illness triggersCold and flu weaken immunity and often trigger outbreaks — keep antivirals on hand in cold season.Avoid transmissionDon’t kiss or share utensils/lip products during any stage. You’re contagious from tingle through full healing.Keep antivirals on handThe treatment window is 24 hours. You can’t use antivirals effectively if you’re waiting for a prescription during an outbreak.
