Online Sinus Infection Treatment — Video Doctor Visit + Rx if Warranted for $59
Quick answer: A bilingual COFEPRIS-licensed Mexican physician at Cabo Walk-In Clinic can evaluate sinus infection symptoms by video in 15 minutes for $59 and, if the clinical picture suggests bacterial sinusitis (rather than viral), issue a Mexican prescription for a first-line antibiotic such as amoxicillin-clavulanate. Most acute sinus infections are viral and resolve without antibiotics — our doctors follow CDC and IDSA stewardship guidance to prescribe only when bacterial infection is clinically likely. For viral cases, the doctor will discuss symptomatic care (saline rinse, decongestant, NSAID, hydration) and red-flag criteria for when to escalate.
💬 Book your $59 sinus evaluation now → · WhatsApp: +52 624 409 5065
TL;DR — Sinus infection by video
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Can a video doctor evaluate sinus infection? | Yes — well-suited to telemedicine |
| Will I get antibiotics? | Only if the clinical picture suggests bacterial sinusitis |
| Cost | $59 flat — no insurance, no subscription |
| Time | ~15 min to video + 5 min to care plan |
| Antibiotic options if appropriate | Amoxicillin-clavulanate, doxycycline, levofloxacin |
| Rx delivery | CMC Pharmacy Cabo 60-min, or US mail-order |
| When in-person care is needed | High fever, severe facial swelling, vision changes, immunocompromised |
What is a sinus infection — and when are antibiotics actually warranted?
Sinusitis is inflammation of the air-filled spaces around your nose and forehead. Roughly 90% of acute sinusitis cases are viral, caused by the same viruses that cause the common cold. The remaining ~10% are bacterial, and those are the ones that may benefit from antibiotic treatment.
The challenge — and the reason this is such a common condition for thoughtful video care — is that early symptoms of viral and bacterial sinusitis look the same. Both can cause facial pressure, nasal congestion, thick discharge, and headache. The distinction is made primarily by time course and symptom pattern:
| Pattern | Likely cause |
|---|---|
| Symptoms < 10 days, gradually improving | Viral — antibiotics not indicated |
| Symptoms ≥ 10 days without improvement | Possibly bacterial — antibiotics may be warranted |
| Initial improvement, then worsening (“double sickening”) | Bacterial superinfection — antibiotics warranted |
| Severe symptoms with fever ≥ 102°F, facial pain, purulent discharge from day 1 | Possibly bacterial from outset — antibiotics may be warranted |
This is why the CDC’s antibiotic stewardship guidance and the Infectious Diseases Society of America recommend watchful waiting for typical sinus infection in the first 10 days, and antibiotic treatment when the bacterial pattern emerges. Our doctors follow that guidance — meaning some sinus visits result in an antibiotic Rx and others result in a symptomatic-care plan plus instructions for when to return.
Common sinus infection symptoms
- Facial pressure or pain, often worse leaning forward (especially over cheeks and forehead)
- Nasal congestion with thick mucus
- Mucus color change — clear → yellow → green over days
- Postnasal drip and cough, often worse at night
- Reduced sense of smell (anosmia)
- Mild headache and fatigue
- Ear fullness or muffled hearing
- Tooth pain in upper jaw (maxillary sinus pressure)
Note: green or yellow mucus by itself is not proof of bacterial infection — viral sinusitis also produces colored mucus as inflammation progresses.
Red flags — when you need in-person care today
Skip the video visit and seek emergency in-person care if you have any of:
- High fever above 102°F (38.9°C) with severe facial pain
- Severe swelling around eye or forehead (could indicate orbital or intracranial extension)
- Vision changes — double vision, decreased vision, severe eye pain
- Severe headache unlike anything you’ve had before
- Confusion, neck stiffness, or altered mental status
- Symptoms lasting ≥ 4 weeks without improvement (chronic sinusitis — needs ENT evaluation)
- Recurrent sinus infections (4+ per year)
- You are immunocompromised (cancer treatment, transplant, HIV, uncontrolled diabetes)
These red flags can indicate complications including orbital cellulitis, cavernous sinus thrombosis, or intracranial extension. Visit an ER or your ENT today. Our doctors will refund your visit if these are identified at the start of the call.
What happens in the $59 sinus video visit
Book your visit, pay $59, and within 15 minutes a bilingual COFEPRIS-licensed physician joins you on a secure video call.
The doctor will work through a structured sinus evaluation:
Symptom timeline. When did the cold-like symptoms start? Have they been steadily improving, plateauing, or getting worse? Did you have a period of improvement followed by worsening (the “double sickening” pattern that suggests bacterial superinfection)?
Symptom pattern. Facial pain location (forehead = frontal sinus, cheek = maxillary, between eyes = ethmoid)? Fever? Mucus color and consistency? Cough pattern?
Risk factors. History of allergies, deviated septum, prior sinus infections, recent dental work, recent flight, swimming or diving.
Examination. The doctor will ask you to show your face on camera in good light to check for visible swelling, ask you to lean forward to assess facial pain, and may ask you to look at the back of your throat with a flashlight.
Clinical impression. Based on the time course, symptom pattern, and exam, the doctor will determine whether your sinusitis is most consistent with viral or bacterial, and whether antibiotic treatment is clinically appropriate.
Treatment plans the doctor may recommend
If viral (most common)
Symptomatic care with clear red-flag instructions on when to return:
- Saline nasal irrigation (Neti pot or squeeze bottle) twice daily — reduces inflammation and mucus
- Pseudoephedrine or phenylephrine decongestant for short-term relief (caution with hypertension, anxiety)
- NSAID (ibuprofen 600 mg every 6 hours with food) for pain and inflammation
- Hydration — generous fluid intake
- Sleeping with head elevated
- Return for follow-up if symptoms persist ≥ 10 days without improvement or worsen after initial improvement — this is when the picture may shift toward bacterial
If bacterial — antibiotic options
When clinical picture suggests bacterial sinusitis, first-line antibiotic options under current guidelines:
| Antibiotic | Typical course | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Amoxicillin-clavulanate (Augmentin) | 875/125 mg twice daily for 5–7 days | First-line per IDSA; covers most relevant bacteria |
| Doxycycline | 100 mg twice daily for 5–7 days | First-line if penicillin allergy |
| Levofloxacin | 500 mg daily for 5 days | Reserved for treatment failure or beta-lactam allergy with concerns about doxycycline |
The doctor will discuss which option is appropriate based on allergy history, recent antibiotic exposure, and clinical picture. Both amoxicillin-clavulanate and doxycycline are widely available at Mexican pharmacies at lower retail price than US chain pharmacies.
How to fill the prescription
If you’re in Cabo San Lucas: CMC Pharmacy Cabo delivers the prescription to your hotel, villa, or AirBnB within 60 minutes. Free for Cabo Care+ members, $5 for others.
If you’re in the US: Licensed Mexican mail-order pharmacy delivers to your US address in 3–7 business days under the FDA personal-use rule. For an active sinus infection that warrants antibiotics today, this delivery window may be too slow — the doctor will then recommend a US urgent care visit and refund your $59.
For viral sinusitis symptomatic care, all recommended OTC items (saline rinse kit, decongestant, NSAID) are available at any US pharmacy without prescription.
What patients say
★★★★★ “I had 12 days of sinus misery before booking. Dr. Díaz did a thorough evaluation, said the time course + double-sickening pattern strongly suggested bacterial, and prescribed Augmentin. Felt human again in 36 hours. The bilingual care was a relief.”
— Tom J., Houston (visiting Cabo)★★★★★ “What I appreciated most: she did NOT just hand out antibiotics. She walked me through why my case was probably still viral, gave me a clear symptomatic plan, and told me exactly when to come back. Best $59 ever — most US urgent care would have just prescribed and moved on.”
— Rachel S., Phoenix
Frequently asked questions
Will I definitely get antibiotics for my sinus infection?
No — and that’s a feature, not a bug. About 90% of acute sinusitis is viral, and antibiotics don’t help viral infections. Our doctors follow CDC and IDSA stewardship guidance: antibiotics when clinical picture suggests bacterial, watchful waiting plus symptomatic care when picture suggests viral. Over-prescribing antibiotics for viral sinusitis contributes to antibiotic resistance and unnecessary side effects.
What’s the “10-day rule” for sinus infections?
Most viral sinus infections improve within 7–10 days. If your symptoms are persistent without improvement at 10 days, or if you initially improved and then got worse (the “double sickening” pattern), bacterial sinusitis is more likely and antibiotic treatment may be warranted.
My mucus is green — does that mean I need antibiotics?
Not necessarily. Mucus color reflects inflammation, not necessarily bacterial infection. Both viral and bacterial sinusitis can produce yellow or green mucus. Time course and other clinical features matter more than color alone.
Can you prescribe steroids for my sinus infection?
Oral corticosteroids are not routinely recommended for uncomplicated sinusitis. Intranasal corticosteroids (fluticasone, mometasone) may help with symptom relief, especially in patients with allergic background — the doctor will discuss whether an OTC option (fluticasone, mometasone, both available at Mexican and US pharmacies without Rx) is appropriate.
What if I have allergies that look like a sinus infection?
Allergic rhinitis can mimic sinusitis — congestion, postnasal drip, facial pressure. The doctor will ask about seasonal pattern, eye itching, and triggers. If allergic rhinitis is the likely picture, the treatment plan focuses on antihistamines, intranasal corticosteroids, and saline rinses rather than antibiotics.
How long until I feel better with antibiotics?
For bacterial sinusitis, most patients feel meaningfully better within 48–72 hours of starting first-line antibiotics. If you don’t improve by 72 hours, return for re-evaluation — your case may need a different antibiotic or imaging.
Can I get a Z-Pak (azithromycin) for my sinus infection?
Azithromycin is no longer recommended as first-line for bacterial sinusitis due to high S. pneumoniae resistance rates. Current guidelines favor amoxicillin-clavulanate, doxycycline, or levofloxacin.
What if my sinus infection is from a recent flight or scuba diving?
Barotrauma-related sinusitis is more often viral or inflammatory, and pressure-related congestion can mimic infection. The doctor will assess time course and whether decongestant + saline rinse is sufficient before considering antibiotics.
Can a child be treated for sinus infection by video?
Children age 2+ can be evaluated by video with a parent present. Antibiotic choice and dosing differ in pediatric cases — the doctor will discuss accordingly. Children under 2 require in-person evaluation.
What if my sinus infection keeps coming back?
Recurrent or chronic sinusitis (4+ episodes per year, or symptoms lasting > 12 weeks) needs work-up by an in-person ENT, including imaging (CT of sinuses) and evaluation for underlying causes (deviated septum, polyps, allergies, immunodeficiency). We will recommend ENT follow-up rather than repeated antibiotic courses.
Related pages
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Cabo Walk-In Clinic provides international telemedicine consultations from COFEPRIS-licensed Mexican physicians under Norma Oficial Mexicana NOM-024-SSA3-2012. Not a substitute for ongoing primary care or any condition requiring in-person evaluation. Sinus infection evaluation by video is appropriate only for uncomplicated cases; see red flags section above. For emergencies call 911 or visit your nearest ER. We do not prescribe Schedule II controlled substances.
Authority sources: Mayo Clinic — Acute sinusitis · CDC — Antibiotic prescribing and use · COFEPRIS.
Medical content reviewed by Dr. Juan Ramón Díaz Ordaz, MD — COFEPRIS Cédula Profesional 98432761. Last reviewed 2026-06-16.