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Can Colds Cause A Fever? | What The Signs Mean

A cold can cause a mild fever, especially in children, while a higher or longer-lasting temperature may point to flu or another infection.

Most people link the common cold with a runny nose, sneezing, and that scratchy throat that makes tea sound like a smart move. Fever feels less clear-cut. Some people never get one with a cold. Others, especially kids, can run warm for a day or two and still have nothing more than a plain viral cold.

That mix is why this question trips people up. A cold can cause a fever, but the pattern matters. A mild temperature rise can fit a cold. A fever that is high, lasts several days, or comes with body aches, chest pain, shortness of breath, or marked fatigue deserves a closer look.

Can Colds Cause A Fever In Adults And Kids?

Yes. The common cold can bring on a fever, though it is more common in children than in adults. In adults, a cold often stays in the nose and throat: congestion, sneezing, sore throat, cough, and feeling run-down. In children, the same virus can stir up a stronger whole-body response, which may include a temperature of 38C or higher.

That said, “cold” is often used as shorthand for any bug that hits the upper airways. Flu, COVID-19, RSV, sinus infections, ear infections, and strep throat can start with similar early signs. So the real job is not to ask only, “Can a cold do this?” It’s to ask, “Does this pattern still look like a cold?”

What A Fever Means With A Cold

Fever is part of the body’s response to infection. It does not always signal danger on its own. A mild fever early in a cold can happen, then fade as the nose, throat, and cough symptoms take over. A temperature that keeps climbing, hangs on, or returns after a few better days deserves more caution.

According to the CDC page on the common cold, cold symptoms usually stay mild and center on the upper airways. The NHS common cold guidance also notes that colds are usually mild and get better on their own, while flu tends to hit harder and faster.

When A Fever Still Fits A Common Cold

A fever is more likely to fit a cold when the rest of the picture lines up. The nose is blocked or runny. Sneezing is front and center. The throat feels raw. The cough is mild to moderate. Energy is lower than usual, though not wiped out. Appetite may dip, but fluids still go down.

In kids, a mild fever with a cold can be part of the package. Parents often see a child feel warm, sleep more, act clingy, and then bounce back once the stuffy nose starts to clear. Adults can get a fever too, just less often.

  • Mild fever early in the illness
  • Runny or blocked nose as a main symptom
  • Sneezing or sore throat
  • Symptoms building gradually, not all at once
  • Steady improvement within a few days

If the temperature is low-grade and the person is drinking, resting, and not getting worse, home care is often enough. Rest, fluids, and age-appropriate fever medicine can help with comfort. Antibiotics do not treat viral colds.

Signs That Point Beyond A Simple Cold

This is where people get tripped up. A high fever does not rule in a cold. It can still happen with a viral infection, but the odds start shifting toward flu, COVID-19, an ear infection, a sinus infection, or another illness.

Watch the whole symptom cluster, not the thermometer alone. Flu often comes on fast and can bring stronger fever, headache, chills, and body aches. A cold usually creeps in and stays more centered on the nose and throat.

Pattern More In Line With A Cold More In Line With Another Illness
How symptoms start Gradual onset over a day or two Sudden onset within hours
Fever level Mild or none, often brief Higher fever or fever that keeps rising
Nasal symptoms Runny nose and congestion are front and center Less nasal focus, more whole-body illness
Body aches Light or absent Strong aches and marked fatigue
Cough Mild to moderate Deep, harsh, or paired with breathing trouble
Course over time Starts to ease within a few days Gets worse after day 3 to 4
Hydration Drinking fairly well Dry mouth, low urine, poor intake
Return of fever Usually does not come back after improvement Can signal a new or secondary infection

What Counts As A Fever

For children, the NHS guidance on fever in children defines a high temperature as 38C or more. Adults often use the same cutoff. A digital thermometer gives a better read than guessing from a warm forehead.

Try to check temperature the same way each time if you are tracking it. A reading taken right after a hot bath, bundled sleep, or heavy blankets can look higher than it really is. Give it a few minutes, then recheck.

What A Mild Fever Looks Like

A mild fever may leave someone warm, tired, and a little achy, though still alert and able to drink. With a cold, this kind of fever often passes as the nasal symptoms settle into their usual groove.

A rough patch starts when the fever hangs around more than a few days, rises above what you’d expect for a plain cold, or travels with new symptoms such as ear pain, wheezing, chest pain, stiff neck, rash, or trouble staying awake.

Home Care That Makes Sense

Most colds do not need a clinic visit. What matters most is comfort, fluids, and watching the trend. If the fever is mild and the person is otherwise stable, home care is often enough.

  • Drink water, broth, or warm tea
  • Rest more than usual
  • Use acetaminophen or ibuprofen if needed and appropriate for age
  • Use saline spray or drops for a blocked nose
  • Skip antibiotics unless a clinician finds a bacterial infection

For children, avoid aspirin. Also be careful with combination cold medicines, since they can overlap with fever reducers and make dosing messy. If you are treating symptoms, keep it simple and measure doses with care.

Situation Home Care Is Often Enough Get Medical Advice
Adult with mild fever and cold symptoms Rest, fluids, symptom relief If fever lasts over 4 days or breathing gets harder
Child over 6 months, drinking and alert Monitor, give fluids, reduce discomfort If fever lasts 5 days, child worsens, or intake drops
Child 3 to 6 months Use extra caution Seek advice at 39C or higher
Infant under 3 months Do not wait it out at home Urgent medical advice for 38C or higher
Symptoms improve, then fever returns Not a typical cold pattern Book medical review

When To Call A Doctor

Fever with a cold is not always a big deal. The red flags are the part that matter. Get medical care sooner if there is trouble breathing, dehydration, confusion, chest pain, a stiff neck, a seizure, blue lips, or a fever that will not ease up.

For young infants, the bar is lower. A baby under 3 months with a temperature of 38C or more needs prompt medical advice. For older babies and children, the pattern still matters: poor drinking, hard breathing, unusual sleepiness, and fever that lasts should not be brushed off.

Watch For The Trend, Not Just One Number

One reading can scare anyone at 2 a.m. The trend tells a better story. Is the person drinking? Waking up? Breathing with ease? Getting slowly better each day? A mild fever with those signs can fit a cold. A fever tied to steady decline calls for more action.

What To Take From It

So, can colds cause a fever? Yes, they can. The usual pattern is a mild, short fever, more often in children than in adults. The moment the fever runs high, lasts too long, or shows up with stronger whole-body symptoms, it is smart to widen the net and think beyond a plain cold.

If you are unsure, start with the basics: check the temperature with a thermometer, track the trend, push fluids, treat discomfort, and pay close attention to breathing, alertness, and hydration. Those clues tell you far more than the number alone.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.