Can hayfever make you tired?

Hayfever is an allergic reaction to tree, grass, or weed pollen that peaks in the warm breezy months from late March to September across Kent. Sneezing, blocked nose, watery eyes, and feeling tired headline the NHS list of symptoms.
Common local triggers
- Ryegrass on the Hoo Peninsula
- Oak and birch in Capstone Valley Park
- Waterside weeds along the River Medway
Why fatigue appears with hayfever
Immune cells treat pollen as a threat, releasing chemicals that raise body temperature slightly and burn extra energy. That biological effort alone can sap strength during high pollen spells.
Congested nasal passages interrupt deep sleep by forcing mouth breathing. Research links allergic blockage with fragmented sleep and next-day drowsiness.
Itchy sore eyes prompt frequent rubbing that keeps many people awake longer and shortens the most restorative rapid eye movement phase of sleep.
Medicines that may worsen or ease tiredness
Pharmacy antihistamines fall into two groups. First generation types such as chlorphenamine reach the brain easily and often leave users feeling slow or foggy.
Non drowsy choices including cetirizine, loratadine, and newer fexofenadine act mainly outside the brain so daytime alertness is preserved for most adults.
Taking any tablet late at night can still cause grogginess the next morning. Community pharmacists can advise on timing to match shifts, driving, or study schedules.
Everyday habits that drain energy
Outdoor runs or football during the early morning pollen surge expose lungs to the day’s highest counts and often intensify fatigue.
Warm weather and some antihistamines both increase fluid loss. Even light dehydration of two percent body weight reduces concentration and makes effort feel harder.
Even modest evening alcohol cuts rapid eye movement sleep and interacts with sedating medicines, multiplying next day weariness.
When tiredness needs expert review
Seek professional help when:
- Daily fatigue lasts beyond two weeks
- Sleepiness threatens safety at the wheel or at work
- Wheeze or chest tightness joins hayfever, hinting at poorly controlled asthma
A pharmacist can triage swiftly and refer to a GP if needed.
Simple steps to fight hayfever tiredness
- Check the Met Office pollen forecast each morning and aim outdoor tasks for lower reading days.
- Shower, wash hair, and change clothes before bed to remove trapped pollen grains.
- Use a preservative free saline spray before sleep to clear mucus and improve airflow.
Support at Chatham Pharmacy
Chatham Pharmacy stocks a full range of branded and own label hayfever tablets plus liquid pumps for children. A private review helps residents swap sedating medicine for non drowsy options when possible.
Pharmacists can supply prescription strength steroid nasal sprays and soothing single use eye drops without delay. For severe uncontrolled symptoms a consultant led hayfever injection service is available on site.
The quiet consultation room allows blood pressure and peak flow checks to explore whether tiredness hides low oxygen saturation or undertreated asthma.
The Medway pollen picture
Very High grass pollen alerts are frequently forecast for London and South East England, a region that includes the River Medway corridor where breezes lift meadow pollen across Chatham, Gillingham, and Rochester.
Your next move ✅
Feeling drained this spring or summer is not just in your head. Effective medicine, smart timing, and small lifestyle tweaks can restore energy. Pop into Chatham Pharmacy on the High Street or call for friendly advice and tailored solutions.