The Surprising Health Clues Hiding in the Color of Your Snot

The Surprising Health Clues Hiding in the Color of Your Snot

A Little Blood Goes a Long Way

Pink or red streaks in your mucus look worse than they are. The nasal lining is packed with tiny blood vessels, and they’re easy to irritate — aggressive nose blowing, dry indoor air, nasal sprays used too long. A small streak of blood mixed with mucus is the kind of thing that happens and then stops.

Heavy bleeding that doesn’t respond to gentle pressure is different. That warrants a call to your doctor. So does bleeding that keeps returning without an obvious cause. But a single pink tissue after a long week of cold symptoms? That’s just irritated tissue doing its thing.

Blonde woman holding a tissue to her nose, looking ill against a plain background.

Brown and Black Signal What Your Nose Cleared Out

Brown snot is almost always old blood. A small cut or raw patch inside your nose heals, and as the blood dries it oxidizes to brown. You’re seeing the aftermath of something that already fixed itself. There’s usually nothing to treat.

Black mucus reads scarier. Often it just means you’ve been somewhere dusty, smoky, or loaded with airborne particles — a construction site, a wildfire zone, heavy city pollution. Your nose filters that debris out and it shows up in your mucus. That’s the nose doing exactly what it’s designed to do.

The exception: black mucus that appears without an obvious environmental explanation. In rare cases it can indicate a fungal infection, and that one’s worth getting checked. If it lingers or comes with pain and swelling around your sinuses, don’t wait it out. See a doctor.

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