Altitude sickness can happen when you're at a high altitude. It usually gets better in a few days with rest, but it can sometimes be life-threatening and need treatment.
You can get altitude sickness if you're in a place that is at a high altitude (usually more than 2,500 metres above sea level).
You're more likely to get it if you travel or climb to a high altitude quickly.
You can get it in places like:
- Mount Everest in Nepal
- Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania
- some places in the Alps
- La Paz in Bolivia
You cannot get altitude sickness in the UK.
Check your travel risk
Symptoms of altitude sickness usually start 6 to 10 hours after being at a high altitude.
The main symptoms include:
- a headache
- loss of appetite
- feeling or being sick
- feeling tired or exhausted
- dizziness
- difficulty sleeping
Sometimes, the symptoms can develop into more serious symptoms that can be life-threatening.
If you're at a high altitude and have symptoms of altitude sickness or feel unwell:
- tell someone who you're travelling with that you do not feel well
- rest at the same altitude until you feel better – do not travel or climb to a higher altitude
- you can take anti-sickness medicine or painkillers such as ibuprofen or paracetamol to ease symptoms
Symptoms of altitude sickness usually get better in 1 to 3 days.
If your symptoms have gone and you feel better, you can travel or climb to a higher altitude.
Get medical help immediately if:
You are at a high altitude and you or someone else:
- have symptoms of altitude sickness and feel very unwell
- are confused
- have problems with balance or coordination
- are seeing or hearing things that are not real (hallucinations)
- feel short of breath, even when resting
- have a cough or are coughing up frothy or bloody spit
- have blue or grey skin, lips, tongue or nails (on brown or black skin this may be easier to see on the palms of the hands or the soles of the feet)
- are very sleepy or difficult to wake
Go to a lower altitude straight away (around 300 to 1,000 metres lower) if you can.
Altitude sickness usually gets better without treatment if you rest.
You may be given medicine to help ease symptoms.
If your symptoms are more serious, you may be given:
- steroid medicine
- medicine to lower your blood pressure
- oxygen through a mask
Rarely, you may need to be treated with oxygen in a special air-tight chamber (hyperbaric chamber) to increase the level of oxygen in your blood.
There are some things you can do to help reduce your risk of getting altitude sickness.