Education5 min readBy Trace Cohen|Last updated: 2026-06-03

Botox and Antibiotics: Can Men Get Botox While on Antibiotics?

Quick Answer

Taking antibiotics and wondering if you can still get Botox? Most antibiotics are not a contraindication — but there's one class that is. Here's what men need to know about drug interactions before their appointment.

You have a Botox appointment scheduled and you're mid-course on antibiotics. Should you postpone? The answer depends on which antibiotic you're taking. Most antibiotics have no meaningful interaction with botulinum toxin — but a specific class of antibiotics does carry a warning worth knowing.

The One Antibiotic Class to Know About: Aminoglycosides

Aminoglycoside antibiotics — including gentamicin, neomycin, tobramycin, amikacin, and streptomycin — can potentiate (enhance) the effects of botulinum toxin. This is documented in Botox's prescribing information. The mechanism: aminoglycosides also inhibit neuromuscular transmission at the neuromuscular junction, and combining them with botulinum toxin can produce additive effects — meaning the Botox may spread further or have stronger effects than intended. The clinical result could be temporary muscle weakness beyond the treated area.

Important: Aminoglycosides are typically reserved for serious bacterial infections (gram-negative bacterial infections, certain respiratory infections) and are almost never prescribed for common conditions like UTIs, skin infections, sinusitis, or dental work. Most men on antibiotics are taking something in a completely different class.

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Antibiotics That Are Generally Safe with Botox

These common antibiotic classes are not documented as interacting with botulinum toxin:

  • Penicillins (amoxicillin, amoxicillin-clavulanate) — prescribed for dental infections, ear infections, skin infections
  • Cephalosporins (cephalexin, cefdinir) — prescribed for skin and respiratory infections
  • Macrolides (azithromycin, clarithromycin) — prescribed for respiratory and skin infections
  • Fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) — prescribed for UTIs and respiratory infections
  • Tetracyclines (doxycycline, minocycline) — often prescribed for acne in men; no documented neuromuscular interaction
  • Sulfonamides (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) — prescribed for UTIs and skin infections
  • Metronidazole (Flagyl) — prescribed for dental and GI infections

Should You Disclose Your Antibiotics at Your Appointment?

Always yes. Disclose all medications — including antibiotics — to your Botox provider before treatment. Experienced injectors ask this as a matter of routine. If you're on a common antibiotic for a minor infection, the provider will almost certainly confirm you're fine to proceed. If you're on an aminoglycoside for a serious infection, they'll recommend rescheduling. Either way, the provider makes this call with full information — not you guessing at home.

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The Broader Consideration: Active Infection

Even when the antibiotic itself isn't contraindicated, some providers prefer to postpone Botox when a patient has an active infection — not because of drug interaction, but because the immune system is already working and the body is not at its baseline. Minor infections (dental work, minor UTI, surface skin infection) are usually handled fine. Significant infections with fever or systemic symptoms are a different consideration. Your provider will guide this decision. [Find a provider who takes thorough medical histories](/find-botox-near-me) — it makes a meaningful difference.

Can You Get Botox Right After Finishing Antibiotics?

If you're completing a short course (5–10 days) and finishing before your appointment, you're generally fine to proceed. Aminoglycosides are cleared from the body relatively quickly after stopping, so completing a course several days before your appointment reduces any meaningful potentiation risk. Your provider will confirm the timing is appropriate. For elective cosmetic Botox, most providers prefer patients to be feeling well and post-infection before treatment — timing is flexible, so there's rarely a reason to rush.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can you get Botox while on antibiotics?

For most common antibiotics — penicillins, cephalosporins, macrolides, fluoroquinolones, tetracyclines — there is no documented interaction with Botox and it is generally safe to proceed. The one exception is aminoglycoside antibiotics (gentamicin, neomycin, tobramycin), which can potentiate botulinum toxin's neuromuscular effects. Always disclose all medications to your provider.

Does doxycycline interact with Botox?

Doxycycline is a tetracycline antibiotic commonly prescribed to men for acne, rosacea, and Lyme disease. There is no documented pharmacological interaction between doxycycline and botulinum toxin. Men taking doxycycline for acne and getting Botox is common and generally safe — but always disclose to your provider.

What medications should men avoid before Botox?

Beyond aminoglycoside antibiotics, men should avoid or discuss: blood thinners (aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen — can increase bruising), anticoagulants (warfarin, heparin), muscle relaxants, and certain neurological medications. The prescribing information for Botox lists several drug classes worth discussing with both your prescribing physician and your Botox provider.

Should I reschedule my Botox if I'm sick?

If you have a significant active infection — fever, significant inflammation, systemic symptoms — most providers recommend rescheduling. Minor infections with no fever, or an infection you're nearly through, are usually manageable. Call your provider's office to discuss — a 5-minute conversation will save you an unnecessary trip or an unnecessary postponement.

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