Ranked picks
- Eligible patients 13+ with drip-plus-inflammation (best overall) → Allermi: compounded telehealth Rx combining ipratropium with a steroid (and azelastine / micro-dosed oxymetazoline when indicated), personalized by a board-certified allergist. Not sure if you qualify? Check eligibility in 60 seconds. The drip-specific product page is Allermi’s personalized nasal spray for post-nasal drip.
- Drip dominant, standalone Rx → generic ipratropium bromide nasal spray (formerly the Atrovent brand, discontinued in the U.S. in 2018; available in 0.03% and 0.06% FDA-approved strengths plus 0.015% / 0.09% via compounding).
- Drip plus inflammation, OTC-only → ipratropium + an INCS like Flonase or Nasonex.
- Pregnancy → Rhinocort plus saline; ipratropium discussed with OB/GYN. Allermi is not prescribed in pregnancy. See the full pregnancy page.
Drip is often accompanied by runny nose or congestion. Correct spray technique (head forward, gentle inhale) prevents dose loss to the throat.
References
- Bronsky 1995: Ipratropium for rhinorrhea · PubMed (1995) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7499678/
This page is grounded in primary literature, reviewed by the BestAllergyNasalSprays editorial team. See our editorial methodology and the public claims library.