how fast does the flu come on
Flu symptoms usually come on fast , often over just a few hours, after an incubation period of about 1–4 days from when you were exposed to the virus. Many people feel fine earlier in the day and then suddenly develop chills, body aches, fatigue, and fever later that same day.
How fast it starts
- Incubation (time from exposure to first symptoms) is typically 1–4 days, with 2 days being most common.
- Once it starts, symptoms usually ramp up quickly over the course of a few hours, not slowly over days.
- People often describe feeling “hit by a truck” or that it “comes out of nowhere,” which fits the abrupt onset of influenza.
Typical first signs
- Sudden fatigue or weakness, chills, and diffuse muscle or body aches.
- Rapid-onset fever (often 100.4–104°F), headache, and sore throat.
- Dry cough, loss of appetite, and feeling too unwell to do normal activities often appear within the first day.
When to be more concerned
Seek urgent medical care or at least prompt professional advice if:
- Breathing is difficult, fast, or painful, or lips/face look bluish.
- Chest pain, confusion, seizures, or inability to stay awake appear, or fever is very high or not improving after several days.
How long it tends to feel worst
- Symptoms usually peak around day 1–3 of feeling sick, then gradually improve over 5–7 days, though cough and fatigue can linger up to two weeks or more.
- You are often most contagious from about 1 day before symptoms start until 3–4 days after onset, sometimes longer in children or people with weak immune systems.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.