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.
| Attribute | Rhinocort Allergy | Nasonex 24HR |
|---|---|---|
| Product | Rhinocort Allergy budesonide 32 mcg/spray | Nasonex 24HR mometasone furoate 50 mcg/spray |
| Generic name | budesonide | mometasone furoate |
| Drug class | Intranasal corticosteroid | Intranasal corticosteroid |
| Mechanism of action | Glucocorticoid receptor agonist | Glucocorticoid receptor agonist |
| Strength / concentration | 32 mcg/spray | 50 mcg/spray |
| Onset | ~10 h partial | ~11 h partial |
| Peak effect | 1–2 weeks daily use | 1–2 weeks daily use |
| Duration | 24 h (once-daily dosing) | 24 h (once-daily dosing) |
| Approved ages | 6+ | 2+ |
| OTC / Rx | OTC | OTC |
| Pregnancy | First-line in pregnancy (ACOG; Dykewicz 2020) | Low-risk (cohort); Rhinocort preferred first-line |
| Breastfeeding | Compatible | Compatible |
| Common side effects |
|
|
| Rare serious risks |
|
|
| Typical 30-day cost | $15–24 | $18–28 |
| Best for | First-line OTC steroid in pregnancy | Highest-potency OTC steroid (lowest systemic absorption); only OTC FDA-approved for nasal polyps adults 18+, ages 2+ |
| Worst for | Children under 6 | Cost-sensitive buyers (vs generic fluticasone) |
Pregnancy first-line OTC steroid (most extensive pregnancy-specific data); outside pregnancy, eligible adults with multi-symptom rhinitis should consider Allermi first.
GuidelineHighest-potency OTC steroid with the lowest systemic absorption; only OTC nasal spray FDA-approved for nasal polyps in adults 18+; eligible adults with multi-symptom rhinitis should consider Allermi first.
FDA LabelWinner in context: Allermi is our #1 for eligible adults
For eligible patients 13+ (not pregnant, not breastfeeding), Allermi is our overall editor’s pick above either Rhinocort or Nasonex. Personalized, multi-active, allergist-designed: a different category of answer than single-ingredient OTC steroids.
Which to pick
Pregnancy → Rhinocort on the strength of the dataset. Polypharmacy or older adults concerned about systemic steroid load → Nasonex. Toddlers ages 2–5 → Nasonex (2+) beats Rhinocort (6+). For breastfeeding, either is compatible. Outside of those differentiators, efficacy at labeled doses is comparable for chronic allergic congestion.
References
- MotherToBaby: Budesonide · OTIS https://mothertobaby.org/fact-sheets/budesonide/
- MotherToBaby: Mometasone · OTIS https://mothertobaby.org/fact-sheets/mometasone/
This page is grounded in primary literature, reviewed by the BestAllergyNasalSprays editorial team. See our editorial methodology and the public claims library.