With COVID-19, nasal mucus may stay clear or turn white, yellow, or green, and color alone can’t identify the cause.
Mucus is gross. It’s also useful. Your nose and sinuses make it to trap dust, keep tissues moist, and move irritants out of your airways. When a respiratory virus hits, that system often ramps up. You may get a runny nose, a blocked nose, or both in the same day.
Then the tissue test begins. People see clear one morning, yellow the next, green after that, and start wondering if it’s COVID, a cold, allergies, or a sinus infection. Here’s the core point: there’s no single “COVID mucus color.” Many people with COVID-19 have clear or white mucus. Some have yellow or green. Some have almost none.
This article explains what common mucus colors can line up with during COVID-19, what signals matter more than color, and when it’s time to get medical care. It draws from information published by the CDC, NHS, WHO, and Mayo Clinic.
What Mucus Color Can And Can’t Tell You
Mucus color can hint at what your nose is doing. It can’t tell you which virus you have. That misunderstanding leads to two mistakes: assuming green means bacteria, and assuming clear means “not sick.”
Viruses can cause yellow or green mucus. Allergies can start clear, then turn cloudy once swelling blocks drainage. Dry indoor air can thicken mucus and make it look darker. Repeated blowing can add small streaks of blood and change the shade again.
Why Mucus Color Shifts When You’re Sick
Your nasal lining swells when it’s irritated. Swelling narrows the passages, slows drainage, and keeps mucus sitting longer. Water content can drop, which makes secretions thicker and stickier.
Color shifts often come from what gets mixed into mucus: white blood cells, proteins, dust, and old blood. Timing matters too. When mucus sits longer in warm, swollen sinuses, it can darken even as you start to feel better.
Mucus Color With COVID-19: What Different Shades Can Mean
COVID-19 can cause a blocked or runny nose, plus many other symptoms. Nasal congestion and runny nose show up on symptom lists from public health agencies.
Mucus color also overlaps with colds, flu, RSV, and allergies. Treat the notes below as context, not a label.
Clear Or White Mucus
Clear mucus is common early in many viral infections, including COVID-19. White or cloudy mucus often shows up when swelling blocks drainage, so mucus moves slower and looks thicker.
Try fluids, saline spray, steam, and rest. If you also have fever, aches, sore throat, a new cough, or known exposure, testing gives a cleaner answer than a tissue.
Yellow Or Green Mucus
Yellow or green mucus often means more white blood cells are in the mix. Enzymes inside those cells can tint mucus yellow to green. That can happen with viral infections too.
Track the trend across a few days. If symptoms are easing, color alone usually isn’t alarming. If symptoms get worse after you started to feel better, or you have strong one-sided face pain with fever, that pattern leans more toward sinus infection.
Pink, Red, Brown, Gray, Or Black Mucus
Pink or red streaks often come from irritation after frequent blowing or dry air. Brown or rust is often old blood that dried before it came out. Smoke and dust can also darken mucus.
Gray or black mucus can come from soot or heavy smoke exposure. In rare cases, dark mucus can point to a serious fungal infection, mainly in people with weakened immunity.
For a clear explanation of why yellow or green mucus isn’t a reliable “bacteria test,” the Mayo Clinic Q&A on nasal mucus color walks through what color changes can reflect.
Mucus Color Chart For COVID-19, Colds, And Allergies
This chart condenses common patterns. Use it to guide next steps, not to self-diagnose. One color shift on its own isn’t a turning point.
Along with color, notice thickness and whether one nostril feels worse. Thick mucus that drains slowly can look darker. Smell alone isn’t a diagnosis. If mucus is thick and you keep swallowing it, you may notice throat clearing and coughing at night. Match the chart with your symptoms and the day-to-day trend.
| Mucus Color | Common Pattern | Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Clear | Normal, early viral illness, allergies | Hydrate, saline, rest; test if other COVID signs show up |
| White / cloudy | Nasal swelling and slow drainage | Steam, saline; gentle decongestant if safe for you |
| Pale yellow | Immune activity rising | Watch symptoms; keep nasal lining moist |
| Deep yellow | More concentrated mucus | Saline rinse; watch for face pain or fever that persists |
| Yellow-green | White blood cell enzymes | Track trend: improving vs. worsening |
| Green | Thick mucus with lots of cell debris | Seek care if you worsen after feeling better |
| Pink / red streaks | Irritated nasal lining | Saline gel; avoid forceful blowing |
| Brown / rust | Old blood, smoke, dust | Rinse gently; seek care if coughing blood |
| Black / dark gray | Soot exposure; rarely fungal infection | Get medical care soon, especially with fever |
Signals That Matter More Than Color
If you’re trying to sort COVID from “just a cold,” look past the tissue. Symptom mix, timing, and exposure history are more reliable.
Symptom Mix
The CDC’s signs and symptoms page lists congestion or runny nose among many possible symptoms. The NHS COVID-19 symptoms page notes that symptoms can feel like colds and flu, so testing can help when you’re unsure. The WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) fact sheet includes runny or blocked nose among possible symptoms.
Timing And Trend
Many viral illnesses rise for a couple of days, then ease. If you’re improving and only mucus color is changing, that often fits a normal getting-better phase.
Watch for a “turn” the other way: symptoms that get worse after you started to feel better, or a fever that keeps returning. That can signal a complication like sinus infection or pneumonia.
Breathing And Hydration
Trouble breathing is different. If you’re short of breath at rest, breathing fast, or have chest pain, don’t wait on a color change to make a decision.
Also watch hydration. If you can’t keep fluids down, urinate far less than usual, or feel dizzy when you stand, you may need medical care.
Home Steps For Thick Mucus And A Stuffy Nose
If symptoms are mild and you’re breathing well, home care is often about easing congestion and keeping mucus moving.
- Drink fluids often. Water, soup, and oral rehydration drinks can thin secretions.
- Use saline spray or drops. Saline adds moisture and loosens dried mucus.
- Try steam. A warm shower can open things up for a short window.
- Sleep with your head raised. It can reduce postnasal drip and nighttime coughing.
- Blow gently. Forceful blowing can irritate tissue and trigger bleeding.
- Choose meds carefully. Some decongestants can raise blood pressure or interact with other meds.
If you use a saline rinse, stick to distilled, sterile, or previously boiled water. Keep the device clean and let it dry between uses.
Honey can soothe a sore throat and cough in adults and children over 1 year. Avoid honey for infants under 12 months.
When It Might Be Sinus Infection Or Something Else
COVID can inflame the nose and sinuses, and another problem can show up at the same time. Watch for patterns that point away from a simple viral course.
Sinus Infection Clues
A bacterial sinus infection is more likely when symptoms last longer than 10 days with no improvement, when pain is sharp on one side of the face, or when symptoms get worse after you started to feel better.
Lower Airway Clues
If you’re coughing mucus up from the chest, pay attention to wheezing, rapid breathing, chest tightness, or fever that won’t settle. Those signs can show up with COVID and also with bronchitis or pneumonia. If breathing feels hard, seek care.
Bleeding Clues
Small streaks of blood after lots of blowing are common. Repeated nosebleeds, heavy bleeding, or blood paired with chest pain or fainting needs medical care.
Red Flags That Call For Medical Care
This table is a plain decision aid. If any red flag shows up, don’t wait for mucus color to change.
| What You Notice | Why It Can Matter | Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Shortness of breath at rest | Possible low oxygen or lung strain | Seek urgent medical care |
| Chest pain or pressure | Can signal heart or lung trouble | Seek urgent medical care |
| Confusion, fainting, or trouble staying awake | Can be linked to low oxygen or dehydration | Get emergency help |
| Blue or gray lips, face, or nails | Possible low oxygen | Get emergency help |
| Fever that lasts more than 3 days | Ongoing infection or complication | Contact a clinician |
| Face pain with thick discharge over 10 days | Sinus infection more likely | Arrange medical care |
| Heavy blood in mucus or coughing blood | Bleeding that needs assessment | Seek medical care soon |
| Black mucus with fever or chest symptoms | Rare but serious causes exist | Seek medical care soon |
Testing And Staying Away From Others
Mucus color shouldn’t drive COVID decisions. Symptoms plus exposure should. If you have a new cough, fever, sore throat, body aches, or sudden changes in taste or smell, a home test gives a cleaner answer than watching your tissue for clues.
If you test positive, follow your local public health advice on staying away from others, masking, and returning to work or school. Mucus color can still bounce around while you get better. That’s common with many viral illnesses.
Practical Next Steps
If you’re sick and checking your mucus, use this short checklist:
- Use color as context, not proof.
- Track symptoms across a few days and note any sudden change.
- Test when exposure or symptoms point toward COVID.
- Use fluids, saline, steam, and rest to ease congestion.
- Get medical care right away for red flags like trouble breathing, chest pain, confusion, blue lips, heavy bleeding, or black mucus with fever.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Signs and Symptoms of COVID-19.”Lists congestion or runny nose as a possible symptom and notes symptom variation.
- NHS (United Kingdom).“COVID-19 Symptoms and What to Do.”Summarizes common symptoms and the overlap with colds and flu.
- World Health Organization (WHO).“Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Fact Sheet.”Includes runny or blocked nose among possible symptoms.
- Mayo Clinic.“Nasal Mucus Color: What Does It Mean?”Explains why yellow or green mucus is not a reliable sign of bacterial infection.
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.