Can You Really Reduce Allergy Symptoms at Home?
Yes. A combination of better indoor air quality, timed medications, and a few smart daily habits can significantly reduce how hard pollen season hits you. The key is acting before symptoms peak, not after.
Fastest win: Start your allergy medication two to four weeks before your season begins, and shower at night instead of in the morning to keep pollen off your pillow.
Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your medication routine, especially if you take medications or have existing health conditions.
Achoo! If your eyes are watering, your nose will not stop running, and the word “outside” fills you with dread, you are not imagining it. Allergy season is genuinely getting worse. According to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA), longer and more intense pollen seasons caused by the impact of climate change mean allergy symptoms hit harder and last longer each year. Some parts of the United States now experience pollen year-round.
The good news is that there is a lot you can do about it. Whether you want to build a pollen fortress out of your home, time your medications correctly, or finally understand why March through October now feels like one endless sneeze, this guide covers everything. Jay Ayers, Indoor Air Quality Product Manager at Trane Heating and Cooling, contributed the foundational home air quality tips in this guide, and we have updated the post with the latest guidance from allergists, researchers, and public health authorities.
Jump to Section:
Why Allergy Season Keeps Getting Worse
Know Your Pollen Calendar
13 Ways to Reduce Allergy Symptoms
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line
Key Takeaways at a Glance
Tip
Why It Helps
Difficulty
Start meds early
Preventive use blocks histamine before it fires
Easy
Keep windows closed
Stops pollen from entering your breathing space
Easy
Upgrade air filtration
HEPA removes up to 99.97% of airborne particles
Moderate
Change clothes at door
Pollen clings to fabric and transfers to furniture
Easy
Shower before bed
Washes daily pollen off hair and skin before it hits your pillow
Easy
Saline nasal rinse
Physically flushes pollen from nasal passages
Easy
Wash bedding weekly
Removes settled pollen and kills dust mites at 130°F
Easy
Use a dryer
Line-drying coats clean laundry in fresh pollen
Easy
Allergen bedding covers
Creates a physical barrier around mattress and pillows
Moderate
Dust and vacuum often
Removes settled pollen before it recirculates
Moderate
Trim the lawn
Shorter grass holds less airborne pollen
Moderate
Check pollen counts
Helps you plan outdoor time around low-count windows
Easy
Consider immunotherapy
The only treatment that changes the underlying immune