What is the best antibiotic for treating cellulitis?

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Last updated: November 6, 2025View editorial policy

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Best Antibiotic for Cellulitis

For uncomplicated cellulitis, cephalexin 500 mg four times daily for 5-6 days is the first-line treatment, targeting β-hemolytic streptococci which cause the vast majority of typical cellulitis cases. 1, 2

First-Line Treatment Algorithm

For Typical (Nonpurulent) Cellulitis

  • Cephalexin 500 mg four times daily is the preferred first-line agent 1, 2
  • Alternative β-lactams include penicillin or amoxicillin, all targeting streptococci 1, 2
  • For penicillin-allergic patients: clindamycin 300-450 mg four times daily 2, 3
  • Treatment duration: 5-6 days is as effective as 10 days, with extension only if no improvement occurs 1, 2

The rationale is straightforward: β-hemolytic streptococci cause the overwhelming majority of nonpurulent cellulitis, and β-lactam therapy succeeds in 96% of typical cases 4. MRSA is an unusual cause of cellulitis without purulent drainage 4.

When to Add MRSA Coverage

Reserve MRSA-active antibiotics only for cellulitis with specific risk factors: 1, 2

  • Penetrating trauma
  • Evidence of MRSA infection elsewhere or nasal colonization
  • Injection drug use
  • Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)
  • Purulent drainage (purulent cellulitis)

For MRSA coverage when indicated:

  • Clindamycin 300-450 mg four times daily (covers both streptococci and MRSA) 1, 2
  • Alternatively: TMP-SMX 1-2 double-strength tablets twice daily PLUS a β-lactam (not TMP-SMX alone, as its activity against streptococci is unreliable) 1, 2

Evidence Against Routine MRSA Coverage

Two high-quality randomized controlled trials definitively show that adding MRSA coverage to standard therapy provides no benefit for uncomplicated cellulitis:

  • A 2017 multicenter trial of 496 patients found cephalexin plus TMP-SMX achieved 83.5% cure versus 85.5% with cephalexin alone (no significant difference) 5
  • A 2013 trial of 146 patients similarly showed 85% cure with combination therapy versus 82% with cephalexin alone 6

This evidence strongly supports avoiding unnecessary MRSA coverage for typical cellulitis. 5, 6

Severe or Complicated Cellulitis Requiring Hospitalization

Hospitalize patients with: 1

  • SIRS or systemic toxicity
  • Altered mental status or hemodynamic instability
  • Concern for deeper/necrotizing infection
  • Severe immunocompromise
  • Failure of outpatient treatment

Intravenous options for hospitalized patients: 1

  • Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV every 8-12 hours
  • For severe infections with concern for gram-negatives: vancomycin plus piperacillin-tazobactam or a carbapenem 1
  • Alternative MRSA-active agents: linezolid 600 mg IV twice daily, daptomycin 4 mg/kg IV daily 1, 7

Critical Adjunctive Measures

Elevation of the affected extremity hastens improvement by promoting gravity drainage of edema 1, 2

Address predisposing conditions: 1, 2

  • Examine interdigital toe spaces for tinea pedis—treating fissuring and maceration reduces recurrence 1
  • Manage venous insufficiency, lymphedema, obesity, eczema 1

Consider systemic corticosteroids (prednisone 40 mg daily for 7 days) in non-diabetic adults with cellulitis 1, 2

Monitoring and Treatment Extension

  • Expect clinical improvement within 48-72 hours of starting antibiotics 2
  • Extend treatment beyond 5 days only if infection has not improved 1, 2
  • Blood cultures are not routinely recommended for uncomplicated cellulitis 1

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

Overuse of broad-spectrum antibiotics: The single most common error is prescribing MRSA-active antibiotics for typical cellulitis without risk factors 2, 4, 8

Prolonged antibiotic courses: Continuing antibiotics beyond 5-6 days when clinical improvement has occurred is unnecessary and increases adverse effects 1, 2

Failure to address underlying conditions: Not treating tinea pedis, venous stasis, or other predisposing factors leads to recurrent cellulitis 1, 2

Misdiagnosis: Many conditions mimic cellulitis (venous stasis dermatitis, contact dermatitis, eczema)—cellulitis presents with acute onset of erythema, warmth, swelling, and tenderness 4, 8

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Professional Medical Disclaimer

This information is intended for healthcare professionals. Any medical decision-making should rely on clinical judgment and independently verified information. The content provided herein does not replace professional discretion and should be considered supplementary to established clinical guidelines. Healthcare providers should verify all information against primary literature and current practice standards before application in patient care. Dr.Oracle assumes no liability for clinical decisions based on this content.

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