A sore throat is usually mild and short‑lived, and there are several home steps that can help ease the pain while your body heals. Always see a doctor quickly if you have trouble breathing, swallowing, or a high fever.

Quick relief checklist

Try a mix of these through the day, not just one thing:

  • Drink plenty of fluids (water, warm teas, clear broths) to keep your throat moist and help clear mucus.
  • Use warm salt‑water gargles several times a day (about half a teaspoon of salt in a glass of warm water, gargle and spit).
  • Sip warm herbal teas, such as chamomile or peppermint, which many people find soothing.
  • Use honey in warm tea or on a spoon if you are older than 1 year (never give honey to infants under 1).
  • Try cold options if you prefer: ice water, ice chips, or sugar‑free ice pops can numb and calm the throat.
  • Take over‑the‑counter pain relievers such as paracetamol/acetaminophen or ibuprofen if you can use them safely and they do not interact with any medicines you take.
  • Use a cool‑mist humidifier or sit in a steamy bathroom to keep the air moist and reduce that “sandpaper” feeling.
  • Rest your voice: avoid yelling, whispering for long periods, or long phone calls.

Example: Some people feel best with a mug of warm chamomile tea with honey, plus a humidifier running at night and salt‑water gargles every few hours.

Simple mini‑routine for the day

  1. Morning: Warm drink (tea or lemon water), then a salt‑water gargle.
  2. Midday: Stay hydrated with water; use a lozenge or honey if your throat is scratchy.
  3. Evening: Warm soup or broth, pain reliever if needed and safe for you, then a humidifier or steamy shower.
  4. Before bed: One last gargle and drink, then try to sleep with your head slightly elevated.

When you should get medical help

Contact a doctor or urgent care soon if you notice:

  • Sore throat plus fever that lasts more than a day or two, or feels “flu‑like.”
  • Very painful swallowing, or you cannot keep fluids down.
  • White patches in the throat, a rash, or very swollen glands in your neck.
  • A sore throat that lasts more than about a week.

Get emergency help right away if:

  • You have trouble breathing, cannot swallow your saliva, or are drooling.
  • Your voice becomes very muffled, or your neck or tongue looks very swollen.

TL;DR: Stay hydrated, gargle warm salt water several times a day, use honey and warm or cold drinks for comfort, rest your voice, and use pain relievers if safe. See a doctor urgently for breathing or swallowing problems, high fever, or symptoms that last or worsen. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.