Cough in Kids: Types, Causes, Remedies & When to See a Doctor

Child Health Guide for Parents

Cough in Kids:
Complete Parent Guide

Every type of cough your child might have — from the common cold cough to croup, whooping cough, and asthma — explained clearly with causes, home remedies, and signs that need a doctor.

8–10coughs per year in kids
90%viral — no antibiotics
3 wksavg post-viral cough
#1reason kids visit doctor
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Call Emergency Services Immediately If Your Child Has:
Lips or fingertips turning blue · Struggling to breathe or suck in with every breath · High-pitched crowing sound when breathing in (stridor) · Drooling and unable to swallow · Completely silent chest — no air moving · Extreme distress, confusion, or loss of consciousness
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Section 1Types of Cough in Children

The sound and pattern of a child’s cough carries significant diagnostic information. Experienced parents and clinicians can often identify the likely cause simply by listening carefully. Here are the most important cough types to recognise.

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Wet / Productive Cough
Most Common
SoundRattly, gurgling, bubbly — mucus clearly present
CausesViral respiratory infections, post-nasal drip, bacterial chest infections
MeaningMucus in the airways — the cough is doing its job clearing it
ActionUsually self-limiting; see doctor if green sputum or lasts >3 weeks
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Dry / Tickly Cough
Very Common
SoundNon-productive, hacking — no mucus brought up
CausesPost-viral irritation, asthma, acid reflux (GERD), dry air, allergies
MeaningAirway irritation without mucus — can persist weeks after a cold
ActionHoney + warm fluids; if >3 weeks or nocturnal, see GP for asthma/GERD check
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Barking / Seal Cough
Unmistakable
SoundLoud, harsh, barking — like a seal or dog bark
CausesCroup (viral laryngotracheobronchitis) — almost always
AgeMost common ages 6 months – 3 years; peaks at night
ActionCool night air often helps; steroids if severe; see doctor same day
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Wheezy Cough
Important
SoundCough with audible wheeze on breathing out
CausesAsthma, bronchiolitis (under 2s), viral-triggered wheeze
MeaningNarrowed airways — bronchospasm. Wheeze is the airflow being forced through a tight passage
ActionUse reliever inhaler if prescribed; see GP urgently if first episode
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Paroxysmal / Spasmodic Cough
Serious
SoundIntense fits of rapid coughing — followed by a high-pitched “whoop” or vomiting
CausesWhooping cough (pertussis) — most dangerous in under-1s
ActionSee doctor urgently. Notifiable disease. Antibiotics needed. Keep away from babies
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Nocturnal Cough
Pattern
WhenWakes child from sleep; worst in first hours after bedtime or early morning
CausesAsthma (most common), post-nasal drip, acid reflux (GERD), croup
ActionPersistent night cough >2 weeks needs GP assessment for asthma
“A child’s cough is a reflex designed to protect the airway — not an illness in itself. The sound, timing, and pattern of the cough tell you far more than its presence alone.” — Paediatric respiratory medicine consensus
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Section 2Common Causes of Cough in Children

Understanding why your child is coughing is the key to knowing how to respond. Over 90% of childhood coughs are caused by viral infections and require no antibiotic treatment — just time, supportive care, and watchful waiting.

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Viral Respiratory Infection

The most common cause by far. Common cold, flu, RSV, COVID-19, and adenovirus all cause cough as the airways become inflamed and produce excess mucus. Usually resolves in 1–3 weeks.

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Post-Nasal Drip

Mucus from the nose dripping down the back of the throat irritates the airway, causing a persistent dry, tickly cough — especially when lying flat. A very common cause of “cough that won’t go away” after a cold.

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Asthma

In children, asthma often presents primarily as recurrent cough — especially at night, after exercise, or triggered by cold air and allergens — rather than the classic wheeze adults experience. Frequently underdiagnosed.

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Allergies / Hay Fever

Allergic rhinitis causes post-nasal drip and a persistent dry cough, especially seasonal (spring/summer pollen) or perennial (dust mites, pet dander). Often worse at night and on waking.

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Acid Reflux (GERD)

Stomach acid reaching the throat causes chronic throat irritation and a persistent dry cough — particularly after meals and at night when lying flat. Often not accompanied by heartburn in children.

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Environmental Irritants

Tobacco smoke, wood smoke, dry indoor air (especially in winter with central heating), air pollution, and strong chemical smells all irritate the child’s sensitive airways and cause coughing.

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Foreign Body Inhalation

In toddlers especially, inhaled objects (small toys, food pieces) cause sudden onset choking followed by persistent cough. Always consider this in children under 5 with sudden unexplained cough — requires immediate medical evaluation.

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Bacterial Chest Infection

Bacterial pneumonia or bronchitis causes a productive cough with fever, fast breathing, and general illness. Much less common than viral infections but requires antibiotic treatment. See a doctor promptly.

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Why Your Child Coughs More in Winter

Cold air dries and irritates the airways, reduces mucociliary clearance (the mechanism that sweeps mucus and particles out), and increases time spent indoors in close proximity to other people carrying viruses. Viral respiratory infections peak between October and March in the Northern Hemisphere — school returns in September are consistently followed by surges in childhood coughs.

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Section 3Cough by Age — What’s Normal & What’s Not

The most likely cause of cough — and the threshold for concern — varies significantly by age. A cough that is completely normal in a 7-year-old may be a medical emergency in a 2-month-old.

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Under 3 Months

  • Any cough = see doctor same day
  • Coughing after feeds = possible reflux
  • Paroxysmal fits = rule out whooping cough urgently
  • Low threshold for emergency: babies decompensate rapidly
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3 Months – 1 Year

  • Bronchiolitis common (RSV) — wet wheeze
  • Whooping cough still very dangerous
  • Croup can begin at 6 months
  • Any breathing difficulty = urgent care
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1 – 5 Years

  • Peak age for croup (barking cough)
  • Viral URTIs most common cause
  • Foreign body risk highest — sudden onset cough
  • First wheezy episode — evaluate for asthma
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5 – 12 Years

  • Asthma diagnosis peaks in this age group
  • Recurrent nocturnal cough = asthma until proved otherwise
  • Post-viral persistent cough very common
  • Whooping cough now more common in unvaccinated school-age kids
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Teenagers

  • Asthma may present for first time in teens
  • Habit / psychogenic cough more common in this group
  • Smoking, vaping — rising cause of chronic cough
  • Pertussis (whooping cough) re-emerges as vaccine immunity wanes
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Section 4Croup — The Barking Cough in Children

Croup is one of the most distinctive and alarming-sounding childhood illnesses — but in the vast majority of cases it is manageable at home. It is caused by parainfluenza virus (usually) infecting the voice box (larynx) and windpipe (trachea), causing swelling that narrows the airway and produces the classic barking cough and stridor (a harsh, high-pitched sound when breathing in).

Key Facts About Croup

  • Who gets it: Most common between 6 months and 3 years of age. Boys are affected slightly more than girls. It can recur in the same child — some children have “spasmodic croup” which recurs multiple times
  • When it peaks: Typically begins with 1–2 days of cold symptoms followed by the sudden barking cough — almost always worse at night and often frightening parents who hear it for the first time
  • The “seal bark”: The swollen, narrowed airway creates the distinctive loud, brassy bark. Stridor — the crowing sound on breathing IN — indicates significant airway narrowing and requires urgent assessment
  • Cool night air often helps: Many parents notice that taking the child outside into cool night air (or into a cool bathroom) relieves symptoms rapidly — reduced temperature decreases airway swelling. This works in mild cases
  • Treatment: A single dose of oral or inhaled corticosteroid (dexamethasone or budesonide) is the evidence-based treatment for moderate to severe croup — it reduces airway swelling within 2–6 hours. Nebulised adrenaline is used in hospital for severe cases
🚨 Seek Emergency Care Immediately For Croup If:
Stridor (crowing noise) at rest — not just when crying or upset
Chest or neck visibly sucking in with every breath (recession)
Child appears pale, grey, or blue around the lips
Drooling, difficulty swallowing, or sitting forward to breathe
Child is becoming very agitated or unusually quiet and floppy
Croup in a child under 3 months of age
Symptoms not improving after 30 mins of cool air and worsening rapidly
High fever with croup — may indicate bacterial tracheitis (rare but serious)
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Section 5Whooping Cough (Pertussis) in Children

Whooping cough (Bordetella pertussis) is a highly contagious bacterial infection and one of the most dangerous childhood respiratory illnesses — particularly in infants under 6 months who have not yet completed their primary vaccination course. Despite widespread vaccination, pertussis still circulates and causes outbreaks globally.

PhaseDurationSymptomsContagiousness
Catarrhal (Cold-like) 1–2 weeks Runny nose, mild cough, low fever — indistinguishable from common cold. Most contagious phase MOST contagious
Paroxysmal 2–8 weeks Intense, rapid coughing fits (10–25 coughs per breath) followed by the “whoop” on inspiration; vomiting after fits; cyanosis in infants Still contagious
Convalescent Weeks to months Coughing fits gradually improve but recur with any new respiratory illness — “100-day cough” is accurate Low contagiousness
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Whooping Cough Is Deadly in Infants Under 6 Months

In babies under 6 months, whooping cough often presents without the classic “whoop” — instead babies may simply stop breathing (apnoea) during coughing fits, turn blue, and require resuscitation. It is fatal in approximately 1% of infected infants and causes brain damage in more. If whooping cough is suspected in a baby, call emergency services immediately. Pregnant women are offered a booster vaccine in many countries specifically to protect their newborn.

  • Treatment: Antibiotics (azithromycin or clarithromycin) given in the catarrhal phase can shorten illness and reduce transmission — but they do not shorten the paroxysmal cough phase if started late. Still given for all confirmed cases to reduce spread to others
  • Exclusion: Child must be excluded from school/nursery until 48 hours after starting antibiotics, or 21 days from onset of coughing if not treated
  • Prevention: The DTaP vaccine is the most effective prevention. Vaccine immunity wanes — booster doses are recommended for school-age children, adolescents, and adults in close contact with babies
  • Notifiable disease: Whooping cough must be reported to public health authorities in most countries — to enable contact tracing and protection of vulnerable contacts
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Section 6Asthma & Cough-Variant Asthma in Kids

Asthma is one of the most common chronic conditions in children and one of the most frequently missed causes of persistent cough. In children — particularly younger ones — cough is often the primary or sole symptom, with wheeze being minimal or absent. This is called cough-variant asthma and it is consistently underdiagnosed.

When to Suspect Asthma as the Cause of Your Child’s Cough

  • Cough that is worse at night or in the early morning — the classic asthma pattern, driven by natural fluctuations in airway calibre and cortisol levels overnight
  • Cough triggered by exercise — running, football, PE class — or cold air
  • Cough that comes and goes, or recurs multiple times per year, always following the same pattern
  • Cough associated with wheeze that improves quickly with a blue reliever inhaler (salbutamol)
  • Family history of asthma, eczema, or hay fever (atopic triad) — strong genetic risk factor
  • Cough that worsens around allergen exposures — grass pollen season, pet contact, dusty environments
  • Persistent cough after a respiratory viral infection that lasts more than 3–4 weeks without resolution
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How Childhood Asthma Is Diagnosed

In children under 5, asthma is largely a clinical diagnosis based on the history and pattern of symptoms — spirometry (lung function testing) is unreliable in this age group. In older children, spirometry with bronchodilator reversibility, peak flow monitoring over 2–4 weeks, and FeNO (exhaled nitric oxide) testing help confirm the diagnosis. A trial of inhaler therapy (and its effect) is often the most informative diagnostic step.

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Section 7Child Cough at Night — Causes & Relief

Night-time cough is one of the most searched parenting health topics — and for good reason. It disrupts the whole family’s sleep, is distressing to witness, and is often more severe at night than during the day. Here is why it happens and what to do.

Why Cough Is Worse at Night in Children

  • Lying flat allows post-nasal drip mucus to pool in the throat rather than draining, triggering the cough reflex continuously
  • Airway calibre naturally narrows overnight due to circadian changes in cortisol and autonomic tone — making asthma and wheeze significantly worse between midnight and 4am
  • Cool bedroom air can trigger bronchospasm in children with reactive airways
  • Acid reflux (GERD) worsens when lying flat, causing throat irritation and coughing
  • There are fewer distractions at night — the child notices the cough more and it disturbs sleep more easily

How to Reduce Night Cough — Practical Steps

1

Elevate the Head of the Bed

For children over 1 year: raise the head of the mattress slightly (put books under the bed legs, or use a firm pillow). This reduces both post-nasal drip and acid reflux. Never use pillows in infants under 12 months due to SIDS risk.

2

Use a Cool-Mist Humidifier

Dry bedroom air irritates the airway and thickens mucus. A cool-mist humidifier (not a steam vaporiser — scalding risk) at 40–50% relative humidity soothes the airway lining. Clean it daily to prevent mould growth, which would worsen coughing.

3

Give Honey Before Bed (Age 1+)

A teaspoon of honey 30 minutes before bed has Level 1 evidence from randomised controlled trials for reducing night cough severity and frequency in children over 12 months. It coats and soothes the irritated airway. Never give honey to children under 1 — risk of infant botulism.

4

Saline Nasal Drops or Spray

Nasal saline rinse before bed clears post-nasal mucus, reducing the drip that triggers coughing. Effective, safe at any age, available without prescription. Particularly helpful for coughs triggered by allergies or colds.

5

Ensure a Dust-Mite-Reduced Bedroom

Wash bedding weekly at 60°C. Use allergen-proof mattress and pillow covers. Vacuum regularly with a HEPA-filter vacuum. Remove soft toys from the bed. These measures significantly reduce allergen load in children with allergy-triggered night coughs.

6

No Smoking or Vaping Anywhere in the Home

Passive tobacco and e-cigarette smoke dramatically worsens all childhood respiratory conditions including cough, asthma, and recurrent chest infections. Even “smoking outside” leaves residual carcinogens on clothing and surfaces (third-hand smoke) that children inhale.

Section 8Persistent Cough in Children That Won’t Go Away

A cough lasting more than 3–4 weeks is classified as chronic or persistent cough and warrants a proper medical assessment. It is one of the most common reasons parents bring children to the GP repeatedly — and one of the most important to assess systematically, because several treatable conditions cause it.

DurationClassificationMost Likely CausesAction
<3 weeks Acute Viral URTI, croup, influenza, COVID-19 Home care; see GP if worsening or red flags
3–8 weeks Subacute Post-viral cough, post-nasal drip, early whooping cough convalescence GP review; trial of treatment for likely cause
>8 weeks Chronic / Persistent Asthma, GERD, allergic rhinitis, protracted bacterial bronchitis (PBB), habit cough, inhaled foreign body, rare causes GP or paediatrician; structured assessment; possible chest X-ray and spirometry

Protracted Bacterial Bronchitis (PBB)

PBB is an increasingly recognised cause of chronic wet cough in children aged 1–6 — wet cough present daily for more than 4 weeks with no other identifiable cause. It results from bacterial infection (typically Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, or Moraxella catarrhalis) persisting in the lower airways. It is treatable with a 2-week course of antibiotics (amoxicillin-clavulanate) but requires a doctor’s assessment to diagnose correctly.

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Post-Viral Cough — The “Normal” Persistent Cough

The most common cause of “cough that won’t go away” after a cold is post-viral airway hyperresponsiveness — the airways remain inflamed and sensitive for 2–6 weeks after a viral infection resolves. The virus is gone but the cough reflex threshold is still lowered. This is completely normal and self-limiting. It needs no antibiotics, no specialist, and no investigations — just time. Honey, fluids, and reassurance are all that is needed in otherwise well children.

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Section 9Home Remedies for Child’s Cough That Actually Work

The good news: several simple, inexpensive home remedies have genuine clinical evidence behind them — and work as well as, or better than, over-the-counter cough medicines in children. Here are the ones that are truly effective.

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Honey

The most evidence-backed home remedy for childhood cough. Coats and soothes the airway, has mild antimicrobial properties, and reduces cough frequency at night. Give 1 teaspoon neat or in warm water or herbal tea.

Age 12 months+
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Warm Fluids

Warm water, diluted honey-lemon, or warm herbal tea (chamomile, thyme) helps thin mucus, soothes the throat, and reduces cough irritation. Adequate hydration keeps airway secretions fluid and easier to clear.

All ages (appropriate temp)
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Saline Nasal Drops

Isotonic saline drops or spray before sleep and feeds moisturises nasal passages, loosens mucus, and reduces post-nasal drip. Completely safe for all ages including newborns — available over the counter.

All ages including newborns
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Cool-Mist Humidifier

Adds moisture to dry indoor air, preventing airway drying that worsens cough. Most effective for croup and dry, irritant coughs in winter. Clean daily to prevent mould — a contaminated humidifier makes things worse.

All ages (cool mist only)
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Thyme or Ivy Leaf Syrup

Herbal syrups containing thyme extract or ivy leaf (hedera helix) have clinical evidence for reducing cough severity and duration in children. Available in pharmacies in many countries as an alternative to conventional cough medicines.

Check product labelling
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Steam from Bathroom

Running a hot shower and sitting with your child in the steamy bathroom for 10–15 minutes loosens mucus and soothes the inflamed airway — particularly helpful for croup (though cool air works better for severe croup).

Supervised — all ages
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Section 10What NOT to Give Your Child for a Cough

This is one of the most important sections in the guide. Several widely available cough and cold medicines that parents commonly reach for are not recommended for children — and some carry genuine safety risks.

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Over-the-Counter Cough & Cold Medicines — Not Recommended Under Age 6

Regulatory bodies including the FDA (USA), MHRA (UK), TGA (Australia), and EMA (Europe) all advise against over-the-counter cough medicines containing antihistamines, decongestants, dextromethorphan (DM), or guaifenesin in children under 6 years. These medications have not been shown to work better than placebo in young children, and can cause serious side effects including rapid heart rate, seizures, and sedation. Do not give them to children in this age group.

SubstanceFound InRisk in ChildrenGuidance
CodeineSome prescription cough syrupsRespiratory depression, death — especially children who are rapid metabolisersBanned under 12 in most countries
HoneyHome remediesInfant botulism — potentially fatalNEVER in under 12 months
Dextromethorphan (DM)Robitussin, Benylin, many OTC productsToxic in overdose; hallucinations; no proven benefit under 6Not recommended under 6
AspirinSome cold productsReye’s syndrome — rare but potentially fatal liver and brain damageNever give to under-16s
Antihistamines (first gen)Piriton, some cough combosParadoxical excitation in children, sedation, cardiac effectsNot for under 6 for cough/cold
Menthol/Eucalyptus rubsVicks VapoRub, similar productsCamphor toxicity in infants; not safe on face or under nose under 2Not under 2; not on face/nose
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Section 11When to See a Doctor for a Child’s Cough
🚨 Call Emergency Services Immediately If:
Child’s lips, tongue, or fingertips are turning blue (cyanosis)
Severe breathing difficulty — chest wall visibly sucking in with each breath
Stridor (harsh crowing sound) at rest, not only when upset
Child is unable to speak or cry due to coughing or breathing difficulty
Sudden choking onset — possible inhaled foreign body in a young child
Child becomes pale, limp, unresponsive, or loses consciousness
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See a Doctor Same Day or Within 24–48 Hours For:

Any cough in a baby under 3 months · Croup in a child under 1 year · Barking cough with stridor when calm or resting · Breathing rate consistently faster than normal for age · Child appears very unwell, refuses to drink, or is extremely lethargic · High fever (>39°C) lasting more than 3–5 days alongside cough · Suspected whooping cough — any child with coughing fits + vomiting or “whoop”

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Book a Routine GP Appointment For:

Cough lasting more than 3 weeks in any child · Persistent night cough waking child from sleep (assess for asthma) · Recurrent chest infections (3+ per year) · Child coughing so much they vomit repeatedly · Any cough associated with unexplained weight loss, fatigue, or night sweats · Parent concerned about possible asthma · Cough in a child with known asthma that is not responding to usual treatment

Normal Breathing Rates — Know These to Assess Your Child

AgeNormal Breathing Rate (breaths/min)Fast / Concerning
Under 2 months30–60>60 — seek urgent care
2–12 months25–40>50 — seek urgent care
1–5 years20–30>40 — seek urgent care
5–12 years16–25>30 — seek urgent care
Over 12 years12–20>25 — seek urgent care
Section 12Frequently Asked Questions
My child coughs so much they vomit — is this serious?
Coughing to the point of vomiting is common and distressing but not always dangerous on its own. In young children, the vomiting reflex and cough reflex are closely linked, and forceful coughing can easily trigger vomiting — especially after meals or at night when stomach is fuller. It is very characteristic of whooping cough, so if vomiting follows paroxysmal coughing fits, see your doctor to rule out pertussis. In other cases, if the child is otherwise well, breathing normally between episodes, and keeping fluids down, monitor at home and book a GP appointment if it continues beyond a week.
Is a child’s cough contagious? Should I keep my child home from school?
It depends entirely on the cause. A post-viral cough that has been present for 3 weeks with no fever is not meaningfully contagious — the child can attend school. A cough with fever, or in the first 5 days of a new cold or flu, is contagious. Whooping cough is highly contagious and requires exclusion. As a general rule: if your child has a cough with a fever above 38°C, keep them home. If the cough is the only symptom and the child feels well and energetic, they can usually attend school.
How do I know if my child’s cough is asthma?
The key patterns that suggest asthma are: cough that is consistently worse at night or early morning; cough triggered by exercise, cold air, or allergens; cough that recurs multiple times per year in a similar pattern; cough associated with wheeze; and rapid improvement with a blue reliever inhaler. If your child has 2 or more of these features, see your GP and ask specifically about asthma. Asthma is diagnosed by history, examination, and often a trial of inhaler therapy — a single “normal” GP consultation is often enough to get a diagnosis and start effective treatment.
Can I give my child cough medicine from the pharmacy?
For children under 6, almost all over-the-counter cough and cold medicines are not recommended by international regulatory bodies — they have not been shown to work and carry safety risks. For children aged 6 and over, some products are available, but always read the label carefully and confirm the correct age restriction and dose. Honey (for over-1s), saline nasal drops, and warm fluids are safer, evidence-backed first choices before reaching for a pharmacy product. Always ask your pharmacist for guidance on specific products.
Why does my child always get a cough after starting school or nursery?
This is completely normal and predictable. School and nursery environments expose children to a large number of respiratory viruses they have never encountered before — each one triggering a fresh immune response and a cough. New school starters commonly catch 6–12 respiratory infections in their first year. Each infection builds lasting immunity, so the frequency drops significantly by age 7–8. Good handwashing before and after school, keeping the child’s vaccinations current, and a healthy diet all help, but some degree of this is a normal and important part of immune system development.
What does it mean if my child has a dry cough with no fever?
A dry cough without fever has several common causes that are not acute infections. The most likely include: post-nasal drip from allergies or the tail end of a cold, acid reflux (GERD) — often unrecognised in children, cough-variant asthma (particularly if nocturnal or triggered by exercise), dry indoor air in winter, or a post-viral cough following a recent illness. If it has been present for more than 3 weeks, see your GP so these causes can be systematically assessed and treated.

Most Coughs Get Better.
Know the Ones That Won’t.

Nine out of ten childhood coughs are caused by viruses, need no medication, and resolve with time and simple care. The tenth one needs a parent who knows the warning signs — and acts quickly.

Trust your instincts. If something doesn’t feel right about your child’s breathing, always seek medical advice promptly.

⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a qualified healthcare provider. Always seek medical advice for any health concerns about your child — particularly for infants and young children. In emergencies, call your local emergency services immediately.

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