Allegra vs. Zyrtec: Which Antihistamine Beats Allergies Faster?
Allegra and Zyrtec are over-the-counter antihistamines that block histamine, the chemical behind sneezing, itching, and runny noses. Allegra uses fexofenadine; Zyrtec uses cetirizine. Both tame hay fever and hives, but speed, side-effects, and duration differ.
People reach for whichever box is on sale, yet they’re frustrated when one “doesn’t work.” Confusion grows because both are non-drowsy labeled, both come in nearly identical purple packaging, and both promise 24-hour relief—so expectations clash with reality.
Key Differences
Zyrtec kicks in 20–60 minutes; Allegra needs 1–3 hours. Zyrtec lasts 24 hours yet may cause drowsiness; Allegra is less sedating but peaks slower. Zyrtec suits sudden attacks; Allegra suits daytime clarity.
Which One Should You Choose?
Need fast relief at night? Pick Zyrtec. Driving or presenting? Allegra. If one stops working after months, switch for a week—your receptors reset, and the old drug regains punch.
Can I take both together?
No doubling up. Pick one per 24 hours to avoid dry mouth and drowsiness.
Will either work for food allergies?
Neither treats anaphylaxis. Use epinephrine first; these drugs handle only mild, histamine-driven reactions like hives.
Do generics perform the same?
Yes. FDA-approved fexofenadine and cetirizine match brand performance at half the price.