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Red Eyes & Allergies

Red eyes that won't quit.

If you've been stuck in an antihistamine-and-eye-drop loop, the real cause is usually something else — or several things at once. We diagnose, then treat.

What's actually happening

Most "red eye" isn't just allergies.

Persistent red eyes are usually a combination — seasonal allergies, dry eye, blepharitis, and sometimes contact lens hypersensitivity all working at once. Treating one without the others just shifts which symptom dominates.

We diagnose the layers: which is driving the most inflammation, which is the secondary trigger, and which you can manage at home vs. in-office.

Sound familiar?

You've probably tried most of these.

01

OTC drops aren't enough

You've cycled through Visine, Naphcon, Pataday — temporary at best.

02

Allergy season is brutal

Spring and fall wreck you. Antihistamines help your nose, not your eyes.

03

Watery + red

Counterintuitive — but watery eyes usually mean dry eye, not "too much moisture."

04

Itching that won't stop

Especially worse in the evening or after rubbing.

05

Pink eye every year

Recurring "pink eye" is often allergic conjunctivitis being misdiagnosed.

06

Contact lens discomfort

Lenses feel awful by 2pm. Possible giant papillary conjunctivitis.

How we diagnose

Treat the cause. Skip the antihistamine spiral.

Every red-eye consult includes slit lamp evaluation, tear film testing, and allergy testing if indicated. We figure out which factors are actually driving your symptoms — and how to address each.

Then we build a treatment ladder: in-office now, prescription drops if needed, and a maintenance plan you can run from home.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★
"I'd been on antihistamine drops for three years thinking my eyes were just "allergy eyes." Turns out it was 80% blepharitis. One in-office treatment and I haven't needed drops in months."

— Verified Google review

Treatment options

The right tool, for the actual cause.

01

Allergy testing

In-office testing identifies specific environmental triggers.

02

Prescription drops

Pataday, Lastacaft, Zaditor — far more effective than OTC. We pick the right one.

03

BlephEx + lid care

If blepharitis is driving symptoms, treating it changes everything.

04

Dry eye therapy

Often co-exists with allergies. Treating both at once gives best results.

05

Cold compress + lubricants

Underrated. Sometimes simple, well-timed home care is enough.

06

Environmental coaching

Pet dander, dust mites, contact lens hygiene — small changes, big impact.

Frequently asked

Questions, answered.

Are allergy drops different from regular eye drops?
Yes. OTC redness reducers (Visine) constrict blood vessels — that hides redness but rebounds worse. Allergy drops (Pataday, etc.) actually treat the inflammation.
How long does an allergy eval take?
Initial consult is 45–60 minutes. Testing adds 30 minutes. We have a clear plan before you leave.
Is allergy treatment covered by insurance?
The medical exam is typically covered. Drops are billed through pharmacy benefits. We verify before any prescription.
What if my eye allergies happen year-round?
Year-round usually means indoor triggers (dust mites, pet dander, mold) — or it's not actually allergies. We test to find out which.
Will I always need drops?
For seasonal allergies, often yes — during those weeks. For chronic underlying causes (dry eye, blepharitis), no — we can usually reduce or eliminate drops once the source is addressed.
Stop the antihistamine spiral

Get the actual answer.

A red-eye consult takes 45 minutes. Most patients leave with a plan that doesn't involve "just keep using drops."