Mometasone Nasal Spray

Buy Mometasone Nasal Spray Online

US comparison $151.39 Save $138.40
Canadian comparison $75 Save $62.01
Our Price $12.99 Price Match Promise Found a lower price? We'll match it.
x
Secure Encrypted Payments

Mometasone Nasal Spray is a corticosteroid nasal spray used for nasal allergy symptoms such as congestion, sneezing, itching, and runny nose. It can be bought online with U.S. delivery from Canada, and you can choose the available strength shown during ordering to match your clinician’s directions. Current pricing, quantity, and manufacturer information should be checked before checkout.

Price, Strength, and Ordering Basics

Mometasone nasal spray price can vary by manufacturer, bottle quantity, and the number of metered sprays supplied. When paying out of pocket, look at the total bottle count and expected days of use rather than only the unit price. This helps you plan refills before allergy season or before symptoms become difficult to control.

The commonly referenced label strength is mometasone furoate 50 mcg per spray, also written as mometasone furoate 50 micrograms nasal spray. Your product carton and bottle label should guide the exact strength, spray count, inactive ingredients, and pump directions. Choose the dose or strength displayed during ordering only if it matches the directions from your clinician.

BorderFreeHealth offers Canadian-sourced choices through licensed pharmacies. We may review order details for accuracy before the medicine is supplied. If your symptoms are mainly seasonal, ordering ahead can reduce the chance of running out during high-pollen weeks.

Quick tip: Keep a note of the labeled spray count so you know when the bottle is empty, even if liquid remains inside.

What It Treats

Mometasone furoate nasal spray helps prevent and relieve nasal symptoms of seasonal allergic rhinitis and perennial allergic rhinitis. Seasonal allergic rhinitis is often called hay fever and may flare with pollen, mold spores, or outdoor triggers. Perennial symptoms can occur throughout the year with indoor triggers such as dust mites, animal dander, or mold.

The spray is also used in adults for nasal polyps, which are soft growths inside the nasal passages or sinuses. By reducing local inflammation, it may improve stuffiness and airflow when used as part of ongoing care. For condition background, see our resources on allergic rhinitis and nasal polyps.

This medicine treats symptoms in the nose. It is not a rescue treatment for severe allergic reactions, wheezing, or sudden breathing trouble. If you have frequent sinus pressure, thick discolored drainage, fever, or facial pain, ask a clinician whether infection or another condition could be involved.

How This Steroid Nasal Spray Works

Mometasone is an intranasal corticosteroid. “Intranasal” means it is sprayed into the nose, and “corticosteroid” means it lowers inflammation. In the nasal lining, mometasone reduces inflammatory signals that contribute to swelling, mucus, itching, and sneezing.

Because the medicine acts mainly where it is sprayed, whole-body exposure is generally lower than with oral corticosteroids when used as directed. That local action is one reason nasal corticosteroids are often used for moderate or persistent allergy symptoms. Regular use matters, because inflammation control is different from the fast drying effect some people notice with decongestants or antihistamines.

Mometasone is not the same medication as fluticasone, the active ingredient in many Flonase products. Both are corticosteroid nasal sprays, but they have different active ingredients, labels, age ranges, and product directions. If one nasal steroid irritates your nose or does not control symptoms well, a clinician may discuss a different option.

Mometasone, Nasonex, and Generic Naming

Nasonex is a brand name associated with mometasone furoate nasal spray. Many people use terms such as generic Nasonex nasal spray, Nasonex generic, or generic of Nasonex when looking for the same active ingredient. The practical point is to confirm the active ingredient, strength, and labeled directions on the product you receive.

Brand names and generic availability can differ by country. A Canadian-sourced mometasone product may have packaging or manufacturer details that differ from a U.S. retail product. That difference does not change the need to follow the bottle label and clinician directions for your specific medicine.

Some labels describe the ingredient as mometasone furoate monohydrate nasal spray. This refers to the form of the active ingredient used in the product. The front of the carton, bottle label, and patient leaflet are the best places to confirm the exact ingredient wording.

How to Use the Spray

Use the spray exactly as directed on the label or by your healthcare professional. Prime the pump before first use and again if the bottle has not been used for the time stated in the instructions. Gently blow your nose before spraying so the medicine can reach the nasal lining.

Shake the bottle if the label says to do so. Keep your head upright, insert the nozzle into one nostril, and aim slightly away from the center wall of the nose. Breathe in gently while pressing the pump, then breathe out through your mouth. Avoid a forceful sniff, which can pull medicine into the throat instead of leaving it in the nose.

Wipe the nozzle after use and replace the cap. If the spray tip becomes blocked, follow the cleaning instructions on the product leaflet. Do not pierce the nozzle with a pin or sharp object because that can damage the metered pump and change the spray pattern.

Dose Timing and Missed Uses

Mometasone nasal spray dose instructions depend on the reason for use, age, and the product label. Adults and adolescents with allergic rhinitis often use daily sprays in each nostril, while younger children need age-appropriate directions. Adults with nasal polyps may be directed to use a different daily schedule.

If you miss a scheduled use, take it when you remember unless it is close to the next dose. If the next use is due soon, skip the missed use and return to your usual timing. Do not double the number of sprays to make up for a missed application.

Many people get the best symptom control when they use the spray consistently at the same time each day. Some benefit may appear with regular use, but full relief can take longer for certain patients. If congestion persists, ask a clinician to watch your spray technique before assuming the medication is not working.

Common Side Effects and Comfort Tips

The most common side effects involve the nose and throat. Nosebleeds, nasal burning, irritation, sore throat, cough, headache, or an unpleasant taste or smell can occur. These effects are often mild, but persistent irritation deserves attention because technique, dryness, or overuse can contribute.

  • Aim the nozzle away from the nasal septum, the center wall of the nose.
  • Use a gentle sniff rather than a hard inhale.
  • Keep the nozzle clean to maintain an even spray.
  • Stop and seek guidance if nosebleeds become frequent or heavy.

Saline spray or rinsing may help some people with dryness, but timing should be separated from medicated sprays if a clinician recommends both. If you also have itchy eyes, throat symptoms, or hives, an allergy plan may include a different medicine in addition to the nasal spray.

Warnings, Interactions, and Monitoring

People with untreated infections in the nose, recent nasal surgery, or unhealed nasal injury should not use a steroid spray unless a clinician says it is appropriate. Corticosteroids can slow wound healing and may worsen certain infections. Contact a healthcare professional if you develop persistent sores, white patches, worsening pain, or unusual drainage in the nose or throat.

Less common but important risks include Candida infection in the nose or throat, nasal septum perforation, delayed wound healing, vision changes, increased eye pressure, or cataracts. Children using nasal corticosteroids may need growth monitoring during longer-term treatment. Severe allergic reactions are rare, but swelling of the face or throat, rash, or breathing difficulty needs urgent medical help.

Tell your clinician about all medicines you use, especially strong CYP3A4 inhibitors such as ritonavir or ketoconazole. These medicines can increase corticosteroid exposure. Using several steroid products at the same time, such as nasal, inhaled, oral, or skin corticosteroids, can also raise the chance of systemic effects.

If you have asthma, glaucoma, cataracts, immune system problems, recurrent nosebleeds, tuberculosis exposure, or frequent infections, discuss those issues before long-term use. For broader allergy information, our allergies condition page may help you prepare questions for your next appointment.

Storage, Travel, and Handling

Store the bottle at room temperature as directed on the label. Keep the cap on when the spray is not in use, and protect the nozzle from dust or damage. Do not freeze the bottle, and keep it away from children and pets.

For travel, pack the spray upright in a protective pouch. Keep it with your carry-on items when possible to avoid temperature extremes in checked luggage. If you are crossing borders or going through airport screening, carrying the labeled container can make identification easier.

Discard the bottle after the labeled number of sprays has been used or when the expiration date has passed, whichever comes first. A metered bottle may still contain liquid after the stated spray count, but the remaining spray may not deliver the intended amount. Orders may be sent with prompt, express shipping when available for the shipment.

When to Reassess Symptoms

Reassess if symptoms remain bothersome after consistent use and careful technique. Ongoing congestion may reflect heavy allergen exposure, a sinus condition, nonallergic rhinitis, nasal polyps, or another structural issue. Your clinician may adjust your plan, add another therapy, or recommend evaluation.

Seek medical advice sooner if you have repeated nosebleeds, facial pain, fever, thick drainage, eye pain, vision changes, or worsening symptoms after starting the spray. These signs do not always mean the medicine caused a problem, but they should not be ignored.

Tracking symptom patterns can make follow-up more useful. Note pollen exposure, pet contact, dust, timing of doses, missed days, and side effects. For many people, combining trigger reduction with daily nasal anti-inflammatory treatment improves control more than either step alone.

Related Allergy Choices

Mometasone is one option within a broader allergy treatment plan. If sneezing, itching, or watery eyes are prominent, a clinician may discuss oral antihistamines, eye drops, saline rinses, or another nasal spray. Browse related therapies in the allergies category when considering what questions to ask.

Different nasal steroid sprays can have different bottle designs, labeled age ranges, and ingredients. Technique comfort matters because the best medicine is difficult to use consistently if the nozzle irritates your nose. If your symptoms include nasal polyps, background information on nasal polyp symptoms and treatment can help frame the discussion.

Do not combine multiple nasal steroid sprays unless a healthcare professional specifically directs it. More steroid is not automatically better and may increase irritation or systemic exposure. If you need both allergy symptom control and sinus symptom evaluation, start with a clear list of symptoms, triggers, and current medicines.

Authoritative Sources

DailyMed mometasone furoate nasal spray label

MedlinePlus mometasone nasal spray drug information

This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.

Express Shipping - from $29.99

Shipping with this method takes 3-5 days

Prices:
  • Dry-Packed Products $29.99
  • Cold-Packed Products $39.99
Shipping Countries:
  • United States (all contiguous states**)
  • Worldwide (excludes some countries***)

Standard Shipping - $19.99

Shipping with this method takes 5-10 days

Prices:
  • Dry-Packed Products $19.99
  • Not available for Cold-Packed products
Shipping Countries:
  • United States (all contiguous states**)
  • Worldwide (excludes some countries***)

Rewards Program

Earn points on birthdays, product orders, reviews, friend referrals, and more! Enjoy your medication at unparalleled discounts while reaping rewards for every step you take with us.

You can read more about rewards here.

POINT VALUE

100 points
1 USD

How to earn points

  • 1Register and/or Login
    Create an account and start earning.
  • 2Earn Rewards
    Earn points every time you shop or perform certain actions.
  • 3Redeem
    Redeem points for exclusive discounts.

You Might Also Like

Acarizax

$196.64

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
US $368
Our Price $196.64
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Omnaris Nasal Spray

$56.99

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
Our Price $56.99
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Claritin Kids Rapid Dissolve

$11.39

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
CA $20.95
Our Price $11.39
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Claritin Allergy Eye Drops

$16.14

  • In Stock
  • Express Shipping
US $22.97 CA $17.06
Our Price $16.14
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page