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Sinus Infection Treatment Online in Texas — $49.99 Same-Day Visit

Honest, evidence-based sinus care from a board-certified Texas physician. Antibiotics only when they'll actually help — real relief either way.

Same-Day Visits
Texas Licensed Physicians
HIPAA Compliant
Rx to Your Pharmacy

Quick Answer

Can I get sinus infection treatment online in Texas today?

You can be evaluated and treated for a sinus infection online in Texas today — a $49.99 same-day video visit with a board-certified family physician. One honest thing you should know before booking: most sinus infections are viral and clear without antibiotics. Our physicians follow the clinical criteria for when antibiotics genuinely help — and prescribe them the same day when they do.

  • $49.99 flat — includes the visit, any prescription, and a 48-hour follow-up
  • Same-day video visits Monday–Saturday 7am–7pm CST
  • Board-certified Texas physicians: Dr. Casey Dean, DO and Dr. Kathryn Kline, MD
  • Antibiotics prescribed only when your symptoms meet bacterial-sinusitis criteria
  • No insurance required — HSA/FSA accepted

Symptoms we treat

Classic sinusitis symptoms in otherwise healthy adults are usually straightforward to evaluate over video.

Facial pressure or pain across cheeks, forehead, or around the eyes
Nasal congestion or blockage
Thick, discolored nasal drainage
Post-nasal drip
Sinus headache
Reduced sense of smell
Cough that's worse at night

Viral or bacterial? How doctors actually tell

The single most important question in a sinus visit isn't which antibiotic — it's whether you actually need one.

  • Symptoms under 10 days that are improving → almost always viral
  • Symptoms 10+ days without improvement → bacterial infection likely
  • Severe onset — fever 102°F+ with facial pain for 3+ days → bacterial infection likely
  • "Double worsening" — improving, then suddenly worse → bacterial infection likely

This is the standard used in family-medicine guidelines, and it's the standard we apply on every visit — it protects you from side effects and antibiotic resistance.

What treatment looks like

A real plan whether your infection is viral or bacterial — not a brush-off, not a reflex antibiotic.

If it's viral

You still get a real treatment plan, not "just wait it out." Options your physician may recommend include intranasal corticosteroid sprays (fluticasone, mometasone), saline nasal irrigation, short-course oral or topical decongestants — with a strict 3-day limit on oxymetazoline (Afrin®) to avoid rebound congestion — and analgesics for facial pain and headache.

If it's bacterial

First-line therapy is typically amoxicillin-clavulanate (Augmentin®), or an appropriate alternative if you're penicillin-allergic. The prescription is sent electronically to your Texas pharmacy the same day, along with clear instructions on when to follow up if you're not improving.

When to be seen in person instead

A small number of sinus presentations are red flags for a more serious infection. We screen for these on every visit.

  • Swelling or redness around the eyes
  • Vision changes or double vision
  • Severe one-sided headache
  • Stiff neck
  • Symptoms in immunocompromised patients (chemotherapy, transplant, uncontrolled diabetes)

If your visit reveals any of these, we'll tell you exactly where to go and you get a full refund.

Sinus infection or allergies?

In Texas, this is one of the most commonly missed diagnoses — and treating the wrong one wastes months.

In Texas, cedar (December–February) and oak (March–May) drive symptoms that mimic sinusitis — pressure, congestion, drainage, headache. Recurrent "sinus infections" every spring are often allergic rhinitis in disguise and need a different plan: intranasal steroids, antihistamines, and sometimes immunotherapy referral, not antibiotics. If your symptoms follow the pollen calendar, read our Texas allergy survival guide and mention the pattern at your visit.

Transparent pricing

One flat fee. No insurance billing. No surprise charges.

Sinus Infection Telehealth Visit

Single-Condition Visit

A same-day video visit with a board-certified Texas physician. When antibiotics are appropriate, the prescription reaches your pharmacy within minutes.

  • The video visit with a board-certified Texas physician
  • Any prescription sent electronically to your pharmacy when appropriate
  • A 48-hour follow-up message if your symptoms aren't improving

Flat cash price

$49.99

per visit — no insurance needed

Feel Better Today

No insurance or membership required. HSA and FSA cards accepted.

Frequently Asked Questions

Straight answers about online sinus infection treatment in Texas.

Can I get antibiotics for a sinus infection online in Texas?
Yes, when clinically appropriate. If your symptoms meet the criteria for bacterial sinusitis, a Texas-licensed physician prescribes same-day to your pharmacy for a flat $49.99. If they don't, you get an evidence-based treatment plan that actually shortens your misery — not a brush-off.
How do I know if my sinus infection is bacterial?
The 10-day rule: viral sinusitis improves within 10 days; bacterial infection is suspected when symptoms last 10+ days without improving, start severely (high fever + facial pain 3+ days), or improve then suddenly worsen.
How much does online sinus infection treatment cost without insurance?
$49.99 flat at Trinity Family Medicine, including the visit, any prescription, and follow-up messaging. No insurance or membership needed.
What can I do for sinus pressure right now?
Saline irrigation, an intranasal steroid spray, hydration, and short-term decongestants (max 3 days for nasal sprays) relieve most sinus pressure. A physician can tailor this and add prescription options in one video visit.
Why won't you just give me antibiotics?
Because for viral sinusitis they don't work and can cause real harm — side effects, C. diff risk, and resistance. When antibiotics will help, we prescribe them the same day. That honesty is the whole point of having your own doctor.

Feel better today

Book a same-day $49.99 video visit with a board-certified Texas physician.