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Hay Fever Face: Why Your Eyes Puff Up and What Actually Helps
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Published: May 14, 2026
Every May, the phone at the clinic begins to ring a little differently.
People tell us they look tired, their under-eyes have changed, and that friends have asked if they have been well. They’ve often been sleeping perfectly well. What’s changed is the pollen count.
According to the , UK grass pollen peaks from mid-May through July, with the heaviest concentrations in early June. For many people, that means weeks of low-grade facial inflammation that doesn’t always announce itself as hay fever (allergic rhinitis).
There might not be a runny nose, nor any obvious sneezing fits. Just a face that doesn’t quite look like itself in the mirror.
This guide is for the patients we see in spring who ageing and are actually dealing with an allergy. The distinction matters because the answer to one is patience and appropriate medical care, and the answer to the other is something else entirely.
What Hay Fever Face Actually Is
When pollen enters the airways and the tissue around the eyes, the immune system recognises it as a threat. Mast cells in the lining of the nose, sinuses and conjunctiva (the membrane covering the white of the eye) histamine. Histamine then does what it is supposed to do: it makes nearby blood vessels widen and become more permeable, so that immune cells can flood into the area and deal with the perceived invader.
The problem is the location. The skin around the eyes is the thinnest on the body, approximately 0.5 millimetres. The tissue underneath it is loose and well supplied with small vessels.
When those vessels dilate and leak fluid, the surrounding area swells quickly and clearly. The pooling of blood in the dilated vessels also shows through that paper-thin skin as a bluish or violet shadow. This shadow is known as an allergic shiner, or a dark circle.
The package usually includes puffy upper or lower lids, watery red eyes, a faint flush across the cheeks and nose, and sometimes a slightly swollen, heavier look to the entire face. None of it is structural. All of it is reversible.
How to Tell Hay Fever Face From Ageing
Why We See a Spike in Tired Eye Enquiries Every May
At the clinic, we see a pattern from late April onwards. Patients book consultations for , under-eye or around the eyes, often with a phone photo showing how tired they look. In a lot of these consultations, the underlying issue isn’t volume loss. It’s an allergic swelling, and treating the wrong problem will not fix it.
A that takes this seriously will pause before booking anything. We routinely decline to treat under-eye concerns during an active flare, and we will say so on the day. It saves people from spending money on a treatment that can’t answer the question they are actually asking.
What Not to Do During an Active Flare
treatments around the eyes should be postponed. There are three reasons:
Avoid using aggressive skincare, such as retinoids, glycolic and acids, and strong vitamin C serums, as they can aggravate an already-irritated skin barrier. This is a season for ceramides, panthenol and hyaluronic acid, not for pushing the skin harder.
And, gently but firmly: try not to rub the eyes. Mechanical friction triggers further histamine release, which exacerbates the swelling, and it damages the delicate skin in a way that genuinely does, over the years, contribute to and .

What Genuinely Helps in the Short Term
Most patients can manage hay fever face well at home with a combination of the following. None of this is a clinic treatment. All of it is supported by and guidance.
A cold compress applied for several minutes constricts the dilated and reduces the fluid leak. A clean flannel rinsed in cold water, or a gel mask kept in the fridge, works well. Avoid anything frozen directly against the skin.
A non-drowsy antihistamine such as cetirizine, loratadine or fexofenadine, taken consistently through the season, is more effective than reaching for one only when symptoms appear. Continuous low-level blockade keeps the histamine cascade quieter. A pharmacist can advise on which formulation suits you.
A saline rinse or saline nasal spray clears pollen from the nasal lining, which lowers the total allergen load reaching the upper airway. Eye drops containing sodium cromoglicate or ketotifen are useful when eye symptoms are the main complaint and can be bought over the counter.
Wraparound sunglasses are quietly one of the most effective outdoors, simply by reducing the amount of pollen that reaches the conjunctiva. Washing the face and changing the pillowcase after time outside means you are not sleeping with pollen pressed against your skin for eight hours.
For skincare, keep it short and supportive. A gentle cleanser, a barrier-supporting moisturiser with ceramides or panthenol, and a hyaluronic OnabotulinumtoxinAAbobotulinumtoxinAIncobotulinumtoxinAPrabotulinumtoxinALetibotulinumtoxinARimabotulinumtoxinBHyaluronic Acid FillersCalcium Hydroxylapatite FillersPoly-L-lactic Acid FillersPolymethylmethacrylate FillersAutologous Fat GraftingForehead Lines TreatmentGlabellar Frown Lines Feet TreatmentBunny Lines TreatmentChemical Brow LiftLip FlipGummy Smile CorrectionMasseter ReductionJaw SlimmingDimpled Chin SmoothingCobblestone Chin SmoothingNefertiti Neck LiftMicro-BotoxMesotoxHyperhidrosis TreatmentChronic Migraine ReliefBruxism TreatmentTMJ TreatmentCervical Dystonia TreatmentNeck Spasm TreatmentBlepharospasm TreatmentLip AugmentationLip ContouringCheekbone EnhancementTear Trough FillersNasolabial Fold SofteningMarionette Line FillersLiquid RhinoplastyNon-Surgical Nose JobJawline ContouringJawline DefinitionChin AugmentationTemple VolumisingHand RejuvenationAcne Scar Subcision Filling (please click the up coming document) serum for hydration are enough. SPF in the morning, always.
When to See a GP
Self-care is sufficient for most people, but there are situations where a GP visit is the right next step. Severe or persistent symptoms that disrupt sleep, hay fever combined with asthma or worsening asthma control, or symptoms that do not respond to over-the-counter antihistamines all warrant a conversation with a doctor.
GPs can prescribe stronger antihistamines, combination nasal sprays containing a steroid and an antihistamine, or short courses of oral steroids in severe cases. For patients with significant, recurrent symptoms that affect quality of life, referral for immunotherapy may be . The on allergic rhinitis are a standard reference your GP will be working from.
What a Doctor Would Consider Once the Flare Has Settled
Once the pollen season ends or symptoms are well controlled on a stable regimen, it becomes possible to assess the face properly. We usually wait until symptoms have been settled for a sustained period before evaluating any under-eye concerns. From there, a conversation about options would take place.
Lymphatic drainage, for example, with compression therapy, can help shift residual periorbital congestion in patients who feel puffiness stays around after the flare.
under the eye are considered to improve the quality of skin that has been repeatedly stretched and inflamed over many seasons.
is indicated only where there is genuine volume loss above the cheek, separate from any allergic fullness, and a careful assessment can distinguish the two.
have a particular relevance here. Years of squinting against pollen, rubbing irritated eyes, and frowning through congestion laid down expression lines around the eyes and between the brows. These respond well to treatment once active inflammation has resolved.
, can help with residual redness and support barrier recovery in the weeks after a heavy season.
All of these are options to discuss in a .
Frequently Asked Questions
The shadowing from allergic shiners is not permanent in itself. However, rubbing the eyes and stretching the thin periorbital skin over time might result in long-term pigmentation and skin thinning. Treating the allergy well each season is the best prevention.
We would generally advise waiting until an active flare has . Injecting into inflamed, swollen tissue increases bruising risk and makes accurate assessment harder. If you are well controlled on antihistamines and have no active symptoms on the day, treatment elsewhere on the face is usually fine; the eye area specifically is where we pause.
Allergic swelling is often symmetrical, but the side you sleep on can be more affected in the because of how fluid pools overnight. Persistent one-sided swelling that does not match the other side as the day progresses is worth to a GP, as it can occasionally indicate something other than an allergy.
Repeated rubbing of the eye area, chronic mild inflammation, and disturbed sleep from severe symptoms can all contribute to the appearance of premature ageing around the eyes. Controlling the allergy well, the skin barrier, and avoiding rubbing are meaningful interventions.
There’s no fixed waiting period, but the under-eye area needs to be back to its baseline before we assess or treat it. Injecting into swollen tissue distorts what we’re correcting and means the result won’t reflect your actual anatomy. In practice, that usually means until symptoms are well-controlled and any puffiness has fully settled. This is often a couple of weeks after a significant flare.
A Final Note
Hay fever face is temporary. The swelling settles, the shadows fade, and the face you recognise comes back. If symptoms persist beyond the pollen season, or you suspect there is a structural component sitting underneath the allergy, a consultation is the right place to begin. We will give you an honest assessment of what an allergy is and what its anatomy is, and we will not suggest a treatment you do not need.
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