what does covid sore throat feel like
A COVID sore throat often feels like a very irritated, scratchy, or even “on‑fire” throat, but it can vary a lot from person to person.
How a COVID sore throat typically feels
People commonly describe it as:
- Scratchy or dry, like sandpaper in the throat.
- Burning or “razor blade” pain, especially with some newer Omicron‑family variants.
- Worse when swallowing, talking, or coughing.
- Constant soreness that can spread to the ears or neck because of shared nerve pathways.
It may be:
- Mild: a slight irritation that feels like the start of a cold.
- Moderate: clear pain every time you swallow, eat, or talk.
- Severe: “throat on fire,” “glass/razor blades when I swallow or cough,” making it hard to eat or drink.
Other symptoms that often show up with it
COVID sore throat usually comes with at least some of these:
- Fever or feeling very hot/chilled.
- Dry or productive cough.
- Headache, fatigue, and body aches.
- Runny or stuffy nose, especially with recent variants.
- Sometimes loss or change of taste or smell (less common now but still possible).
You can, however, have only a sore throat and still test positive for COVID.
COVID sore throat vs. “regular” sore throat
| Feature | COVID sore throat | Strep/“regular” sore throat |
|---|---|---|
| Onset | Can start scratchy and worsen over a few days. | [3][1]Often sudden, very painful from the start (especially strep). | [1]
| Pain quality | Scratchy, burning, “razor blades,” often with cough. | [7][3][1]Sharp pain, hard to swallow; may have white patches on tonsils in strep. | [1]
| Other symptoms | Fever, cough, fatigue, congestion, headache, sometimes loss of taste/smell. | [3][9][1]Fever, swollen tonsils/neck nodes, usually little or no cough in strep. | [1]
| Cause | Viral (SARS‑CoV‑2). | [5]Can be viral (cold/flu) or bacterial (strep). | [5][1]
| Testing | COVID test (rapid or PCR) needed to confirm. | [9][3]Strep test/throat culture for strep throat. | [1]
How long it usually lasts
- Often a few days up to about a week, but it can last longer as part of the overall COVID illness.
- For some Omicron‑type infections, the sore throat may be one of the first symptoms and then improve as congestion and cough become more prominent.
What to do if you have a sore throat like this
- Take a COVID test if you can, especially if you also have fever, cough, body aches, or known exposure.
- Rest, drink plenty of fluids, and use throat lozenges, warm tea with honey, or salt‑water gargles to ease the pain.
- Use over‑the‑counter pain relievers like paracetamol/acetaminophen or ibuprofen if you normally tolerate them (follow package or doctor guidance).
- Follow local public‑health advice about isolation if you test positive or strongly suspect COVID.
Get urgent or same‑day medical help if:
- You have trouble breathing, chest pain, or feel like you can’t catch your breath.
- You cannot swallow fluids or your saliva.
- Your sore throat is extremely severe on one side, or your voice changes and you can’t open your mouth well.
- You feel very drowsy, confused, or your symptoms suddenly get much worse.
If your throat feels unusually severe, has lasted more than a few days without improvement, or you’re not sure if it’s COVID, a clinician can examine you and decide if testing or treatment is needed.
Bottom line: a COVID sore throat often feels scratchy to burning, can be very intense with some newer variants, and usually comes with other viral symptoms like cough, fever, and fatigue.
Note: This is general information, not a diagnosis. If you’re worried about your own symptoms, especially if they’re severe or getting worse, it’s safest to contact a healthcare professional.