Head-to-Head

Flonase vs Sensimist: Propionate vs Furoate

Content updated Evidence reviewed First published

Literature review current through

Flonase vs Flonase Sensimist

Side-by-side chart

Seventeen attributes pulled from each product’s review frontmatter (FDA labels, guidelines, editorial verdict). Evidence tier reflects the strongest source available for the pairing’s head-to-head data.

Flonase Allergy Relief vs Flonase Sensimist: 17-row attribute chart
AttributeFlonase Allergy ReliefFlonase Sensimist
ProductFlonase Allergy Relief
fluticasone propionate 50 mcg/spray
Flonase Sensimist
fluticasone furoate 27.5 mcg/spray
Generic namefluticasone propionatefluticasone furoate
Drug classIntranasal corticosteroidIntranasal corticosteroid
Mechanism of actionGlucocorticoid receptor agonist, reduces mucosal inflammationGlucocorticoid receptor agonist (next-gen furoate ester)
Strength / concentration50 mcg/spray27.5 mcg/spray
Onset~12 h partial~8 h partial
Peak effect1–2 weeks daily use1–2 weeks daily use
Duration24 h (once-daily dosing)24 h (once-daily dosing)
Approved ages4+2+
OTC / RxOTCOTC
PregnancyLow-risk; Rhinocort preferred first-lineLikely low-risk; less pregnancy-specific data than Rhinocort
BreastfeedingCompatibleCompatible
Common side effects
  • Epistaxis
  • Headache
  • Nasal irritation
  • Sore throat
  • Epistaxis
  • Headache
  • Nasal irritation
Rare serious risks
  • Septal perforation (improper technique)
  • Pediatric growth velocity signal
  • Septal perforation (rare, technique)
Typical 30-day cost$14–25 branded; $10–15 generic$16–24
Best forBest OTC steroid for adults + kids 4+ with nasal and eye symptomsBest gentle OTC steroid for young kids 2+ and scent-sensitive users
Worst forPatients needing relief in minutesUsers who need OTC eye-symptom coverage
Verdict · Flonase Allergy Relief

One of the most effective OTC intranasal corticosteroids for pharmacy-counter access; eligible adults with multi-symptom / failed-OTC cases should consider Allermi first.

FDA Label
Verdict · Flonase Sensimist

Best gentle OTC steroid for scent-sensitive users and young kids; eligible patients 13+ with multi-symptom rhinitis should consider Allermi first.

FDA Label

What’s the difference? Propionate vs furoate

Flonase and Sensimist are both branded fluticasone nasal sprays from the same manufacturer — same drug class (intranasal corticosteroid), same broad anti-inflammatory mechanism. The molecule comes in two ester forms with different formulation tradeoffs.

Flonase Allergy Relief is fluticasone propionate (FP) 50 mcg per spray, OTC for ages 4 and older, with the FDA-recognized eye-symptom indication on the OTC label Expert Expert . Flonase Sensimist is fluticasone furoate (FF) 27.5 mcg per spray, OTC for ages 2 and older, but the eye-symptom indication is restricted to ages 12 and older on the Sensimist label Expert .

Sensimist’s formulation differences matter at the experience level even when potency is comparable: the spray is a finer, low-volume mist designed to feel less drippy, and it is fragrance-free — Flonase contains phenylethyl alcohol, a floral inactive ingredient that gives the spray a noticeable rose-like aroma Expert . For scent-sensitive patients and young children, the absence of fragrance is the most common reason families switch from Flonase to Sensimist.

Head-to-head, both are first-line for nasal allergic rhinitis symptoms. Sensimist (FF) has lower systemic bioavailability than FP at usual doses, which is part of why FF carries the broader 2+ pediatric label.

At a glance

Flonase Allergy ReliefFlonase Sensimist
ActiveFluticasone propionate 50 mcgFluticasone furoate 27.5 mcg
OTC ages4+2+
Eye-symptom indicationAll labeled ages (4+)Ages 12+ only
Mist characterStandardFine, low-volume
ScentFloral (phenylethyl alcohol)Fragrance-free

Who should pick Flonase

  • You have itchy, watery eyes alongside nasal symptoms and you are under 12 — only the propionate (Flonase) carries the FDA-recognized ocular indication for that age group Expert .
  • You don’t mind the mild rose scent, you are 4+, and you want the most-recognized OTC fluticasone.

Who should pick Sensimist

  • Your child is age 2 or 3 — Flonase starts at 4+, Sensimist starts at 2+ Expert .
  • You are scent-sensitive or have had nasal irritation from fragranced sprays — Sensimist is fragrance-free Expert .
  • You want the finer, lower-volume mist feel.
  • You are 12+ with eye symptoms — Sensimist’s ocular indication kicks in at 12+ and the mist preference may matter to you.

Considering Allermi?

For eligible patients 13+, Allermi is our overall editor’s pick above either Flonase or Sensimist. A single-ingredient fluticasone product, propionate or furoate, treats one axis of the problem; Allermi’s personalized multi-active formula (steroid + azelastine + ipratropium + micro-dosed oxymetazoline) covers more symptom coverage in one bottle, reviewed by a prescribing allergist over telehealth. Steroid-plus-antihistamine combination therapy outperforms either alone in moderate-to-severe rhinitis Expert . Check eligibility in 60 seconds.

Which to pick

If itchy watery eyes accompany the nasal picture → Flonase propionate for the unique FDA-approved ocular indication. Age 2–3 child, scent-sensitive adult, or alcohol-irritation issues → Sensimist is the gentler fluticasone. Looking for the lowest-systemic-exposure OTC steroid overall? Compare Sensimist against Nasonex. For chronic congestion, both are top picks in their niches.

References

  1. DailyMed: Sensimist SPL · FDA DailyMed https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/drugInfo.cfm?setid=66a6afc3-3b60-4e9c-a41a-62d2e3a41b64
  2. DailyMed: Flonase Allergy Relief SPL · FDA DailyMed https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/drugInfo.cfm?setid=b6134ba0-b70a-4eac-9a82-cef64b242c1d

This page is grounded in primary literature, reviewed by the BestAllergyNasalSprays editorial team. See our editorial methodology and the public claims library.