Drug Monograph

Amoxicillin

amoxicillin trihydrate — formerly marketed as Amoxil

Aminopenicillin (beta-lactam antibacterial) · Oral
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~1–1.5 h
Metabolism
Partially hepatic; ~60% excreted unchanged in urine
Protein Binding
~20%
Bioavailability
~75–90% (oral)
Tmax
1–2 h
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Aminopenicillin (beta-lactam)
Available Doses
250, 500 mg caps; 500, 875 mg tabs; 125–400 mg chewables; 200, 400 mg/5 mL suspension
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
Required when GFR <30 mL/min; avoid 875 mg dose
Hepatic Adjustment
Not generally required
Pregnancy
Category B — use if clearly needed
Lactation
Excreted in breast milk; caution (risk of infant sensitization)
Schedule
Not a controlled substance; Rx only
Generic Available
Yes (widely available since 1998)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Upper respiratory tract infections (otitis media, sinusitis, pharyngitis/tonsillitis)Adults and childrenMonotherapyFDA Approved
Lower respiratory tract infections (community-acquired pneumonia, acute bronchitis with bacterial superinfection)Adults and childrenMonotherapyFDA Approved
Genitourinary tract infections (uncomplicated UTI)Adults and childrenMonotherapyFDA Approved
Skin and skin structure infectionsAdults and childrenMonotherapyFDA Approved
H. pylori eradication (with clarithromycin + lansoprazole or lansoprazole alone)Adults onlyCombination (triple or dual therapy)FDA Approved

Amoxicillin is effective only against beta-lactamase-negative organisms. In infections where beta-lactamase-producing bacteria are suspected, amoxicillin-clavulanate should be used instead. For Streptococcus pyogenes pharyngitis, a minimum 10-day course is recommended to prevent acute rheumatic fever. Amoxicillin remains the first-line treatment for Group A streptococcal pharyngitis and acute otitis media per current IDSA and AAP guidelines.

Off-Label Uses

Endocarditis prophylaxis — AHA recommends amoxicillin 2 g orally 30–60 min before dental procedures in high-risk patients. Evidence quality: High (guideline-based).

Lyme disease (early localized) — IDSA recommends amoxicillin 500 mg TID for 14–21 days as an alternative to doxycycline. Evidence quality: High.

Anthrax post-exposure prophylaxis — CDC recommends amoxicillin 500 mg TID for 60 days as an alternative when ciprofloxacin/doxycycline cannot be used. Evidence quality: Moderate.

Dental abscess — Commonly used at 500 mg TID for 5–7 days; widely supported by dental practice guidelines. Evidence quality: Moderate.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Mild-moderate ear/nose/throat, skin, or GU infection500 mg q12h or 250 mg q8hSame1000 mg/dayContinue 48–72 h beyond symptom resolution
FDA PI Table 1
Severe ear/nose/throat, skin, or GU infection875 mg q12h or 500 mg q8hSame1750 mg/dayAlso use severe dosing for organisms with intermediate susceptibility
FDA PI Table 1
Lower respiratory tract infection (any severity)875 mg q12h or 500 mg q8hSame1750 mg/dayAll lower respiratory infections use the severe dosing regimen
FDA PI Table 1
Streptococcal pharyngitis (GAS)500 mg q12h or 250 mg q8hSame for 10 days minimum1000 mg/day10 days minimum to prevent acute rheumatic fever (FDA PI)
IDSA 2012 guideline first-line
H. pylori — triple therapy1 g q12h+ clarithromycin 500 mg q12h + lansoprazole 30 mg q12h2 g/day amoxicillin14-day course
FDA PI
H. pylori — dual therapy1 g q8h+ lansoprazole 30 mg q8h3 g/day amoxicillin14-day course; use when clarithromycin cannot be used
FDA PI
Endocarditis prophylaxis (off-label)2 g single doseSingle pre-procedure dose2 g30–60 min before dental procedure in high-risk patients
AHA 2021 guideline
Lyme disease — early localized (off-label)500 mg q8hSame for 14–21 days1500 mg/dayAlternative to doxycycline (preferred in pregnant women and children <8 years)
IDSA/AAN/ACR 2020 guideline

Pediatric Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Mild-moderate ear/nose/throat, skin, GU (≥3 months, <40 kg)25 mg/kg/day q12h or 20 mg/kg/day q8hSame25 mg/kg/dayUse weight-based dosing until child reaches 40 kg
FDA PI Table 1
Severe infection or lower respiratory (≥3 months, <40 kg)45 mg/kg/day q12h or 40 mg/kg/day q8hSame45 mg/kg/dayHigh-dose regimen for severe or resistant infections
FDA PI Table 1
Acute otitis media — high-dose regimen (off-label)80–90 mg/kg/day divided q12hSame for 10 days (≤2 yrs) or 5–7 days (≥2 yrs)90 mg/kg/dayAAP 2013 guideline for AOM in high-resistance areas
Exceeds FDA PI — guideline-directed high-dose
Neonates and infants ≤3 months30 mg/kg/day divided q12hSame30 mg/kg/dayUpper dose limit due to immature renal function
FDA PI Section 2.3

Renal Impairment Dosing

GFR (mL/min)DoseFrequencyNotesSource
≥30Standard doseStandardNo adjustment neededFDA PI
10–30500 mg or 250 mgEvery 12 hoursDo NOT use 875 mg tabletFDA PI Table 2
<10500 mg or 250 mgEvery 24 hoursDo NOT use 875 mg tabletFDA PI Table 2
Hemodialysis500 mg or 250 mgEvery 24 hoursAdditional dose during and at end of dialysisFDA PI Table 2
Clinical Pearl: Time-Dependent Killing

Amoxicillin, like all beta-lactams, exhibits time-dependent bactericidal activity — efficacy correlates with the duration that free drug concentrations remain above the MIC (fT>MIC), not with peak concentration. This means dividing the total daily dose into more frequent intervals (e.g., TID rather than BID) may improve efficacy for infections with organisms near the susceptibility breakpoint, at the cost of adherence. For most community infections, BID dosing provides adequate fT>MIC and better compliance.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Amoxicillin is a semi-synthetic aminopenicillin that exerts bactericidal activity by irreversibly binding to penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), particularly PBP1A, PBP1B, and PBP3, on the inner surface of the bacterial cell membrane. This binding inhibits the transpeptidation step of peptidoglycan cross-linking during cell wall synthesis. The resulting structural weakness in the cell wall triggers autolytic enzymes that lyse and destroy the bacterial cell. Amoxicillin is effective against a range of gram-positive and gram-negative organisms but only those that do not produce beta-lactamases. When combined with clavulanic acid (a beta-lactamase inhibitor), the spectrum extends to beta-lactamase-producing strains of H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis, E. coli, and others.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionWell absorbed orally; bioavailability ~75–90%; Tmax 1–2 h; food does not significantly reduce extent of absorptionCan be taken with or without food; taking at the start of a meal reduces GI intolerance per FDA PI
DistributionVd ~0.3 L/kg (~20 L); protein binding ~20%; good penetration into respiratory tract, middle ear, sinuses, skin, urinary tract; poor CSF penetration unless meninges inflamedLow protein binding means most drug is free and pharmacologically active; excellent tissue penetration supports use across multiple infection sites
MetabolismPartially hepatic via oxidation, hydroxylation, and deamination; majority excreted unchangedMinimal hepatic metabolism means no dose adjustment needed in hepatic impairment and minimal drug-drug metabolic interactions
Eliminationt½ ~1–1.5 h; ~60% excreted unchanged in urine within 6–8 h via glomerular filtration and tubular secretion; removable by hemodialysisShort half-life requires BID–TID dosing; dose reduction required in severe renal impairment (GFR <30); probenecid blocks tubular secretion, prolonging half-life
SE

Side Effects

1–10% Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Diarrhea / loose stools~3–5% (FDA PI: >1%; up to 9% with clavulanate co-formulation)Most frequently reported effect; rate is lower for amoxicillin alone than amoxicillin-clavulanate; usually mild and self-limiting; evaluate for C. difficile if persistent or bloody
Rash (non-allergic maculopapular)~3%Distinguish from true penicillin allergy; incidence dramatically higher (~70–100%) in mononucleosis patients — avoid amoxicillin with mono
Nausea~3%Reduced by taking at the start of a meal; dose-related
Vomiting~1%More common in pediatric patients and with higher doses
Vulvovaginal candidiasis~1%Due to disruption of normal vaginal flora; treat with topical or oral antifungals if symptomatic
Headache6–7% (H. pylori triple/dual therapy trials)Reported at higher rates in combination regimens; may relate to lansoprazole component
Serious Serious Adverse Effects (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Anaphylaxis~0.01–0.05% (1 in 2,000–10,000)Minutes to hours after dose; can occur on first exposureDiscontinue immediately; epinephrine, airway management; do not rechallenge; document penicillin allergy
Severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SJS, TEN, DRESS, AGEP)Very rareDays to weeksDiscontinue immediately; dermatology consult; supportive care; do not rechallenge
Clostridioides difficile-associated diarrhea (CDAD)~0.5–2%During or up to 2 months after treatmentStop amoxicillin; test for C. difficile toxin; treat with vancomycin or fidaxomicin if confirmed; avoid antiperistaltic agents
Drug-induced enterocolitis syndrome (DIES)Rare (mostly pediatric)1–4 hours post-dose (vomiting); diarrhea within 24 hDiscontinue; IV fluids if hypotensive; recognize as non-IgE mediated reaction; avoid re-exposure
Hemolytic anemia / agranulocytosis / thrombocytopeniaVery rareVariableDiscontinue; CBC with differential; usually reversible on cessation
Hepatic dysfunction (cholestatic jaundice, hepatitis)Very rareWeeksDiscontinue; monitor LFTs; usually reversible
SeizuresVery rare (primarily in renal impairment with high doses)VariableDiscontinue or reduce dose; manage seizure; assess renal function
CrystalluriaRare (reported in overdose)Hours to days at high dosesMaintain adequate hydration; reduce dose; monitor urine output and renal function
Discontinuation Discontinuation Rates
Monotherapy Trials
<3%
From Augmentin PI data (amoxicillin component): fewer than 3% of patients discontinued due to drug-related adverse reactions.
Overall Tolerability
Well tolerated
Amoxicillin is one of the best-tolerated oral antibiotics. GI effects (diarrhea, nausea) are the most common reasons for early discontinuation. Rash-related discontinuation is uncommon unless true allergy is suspected.
Mononucleosis Rash

A high percentage of patients with infectious mononucleosis (EBV infection) who receive amoxicillin develop a widespread erythematous maculopapular rash. This occurs in up to 70–100% of mono patients given amoxicillin and is thought to be immune-complex mediated, not a true penicillin allergy. However, it is clinically indistinguishable from allergic rash in the acute setting. The FDA PI explicitly states that amoxicillin should not be administered to patients with mononucleosis. Always consider mono in the differential before prescribing amoxicillin for pharyngitis, particularly in adolescents and young adults.

Int

Drug Interactions

Amoxicillin has a relatively favorable drug interaction profile due to its minimal hepatic metabolism. Interactions are predominantly pharmacokinetic (renal excretion) or pharmacodynamic (antagonism with bacteriostatic agents). The FDA PI identifies four key interactions.

ModerateProbenecid
MechanismBlocks renal tubular secretion of amoxicillin
EffectIncreased and prolonged amoxicillin blood levels
ManagementCo-administration not recommended per FDA PI; historically used therapeutically to boost levels but now considered unnecessary with standard dosing
FDA PI
ModerateOral anticoagulants (warfarin)
MechanismDisruption of gut flora producing vitamin K; possible altered warfarin metabolism
EffectAbnormal prolongation of PT/INR reported
ManagementMonitor INR more frequently during and shortly after amoxicillin course; adjust anticoagulant dose as needed
FDA PI
ModerateAllopurinol
MechanismUnknown; may be allopurinol-related or due to hyperuricemia
EffectIncreased incidence of skin rash when both drugs used together
ManagementWarn patients about increased rash risk; monitor skin closely; consider alternative antibiotic if rash history exists
FDA PI
MinorOral contraceptives
MechanismAmoxicillin may alter gut flora, reducing enterohepatic recirculation of estrogens
EffectTheoretical reduced efficacy of combined oral contraceptives
ManagementCounsel patients to use backup contraception during amoxicillin course per FDA PI, though clinical significance remains debated
FDA PI
MinorBacteriostatic antibiotics (chloramphenicol, macrolides, sulfonamides, tetracyclines)
MechanismBacteriostatic agents inhibit bacterial growth, reducing the active replication needed for beta-lactam bactericidal effect
EffectTheoretical antagonism of amoxicillin’s bactericidal activity; demonstrated in vitro
ManagementClinical significance not well documented; avoid concomitant use where possible; exception: H. pylori triple therapy with clarithromycin is an established effective regimen
FDA PI
MinorMethotrexate
MechanismPenicillins may reduce renal tubular secretion of methotrexate
EffectIncreased methotrexate levels and potential toxicity
ManagementMonitor methotrexate levels if co-administered; watch for signs of toxicity (mucositis, myelosuppression)
Clinical Practice / Lexicomp
Laboratory Test Interference

Amoxicillin may cause false-positive urine glucose results when using copper sulfate-based tests (Clinitest). Glucose tests based on enzymatic glucose oxidase reactions (Clinistix) are recommended instead. Amoxicillin may also cause a transient decrease in plasma estriol, estradiol, and conjugated estrone levels in pregnant women, which could interfere with certain prenatal monitoring assays.

Mon

Monitoring

Amoxicillin does not require routine laboratory monitoring for most short-course treatments in healthy patients. Monitoring focuses on clinical response, signs of hypersensitivity, and potential complications in prolonged or high-dose regimens.

  • Clinical response 48–72 h after initiation
    Routine
    Assess for symptom improvement. If no clinical response by 48–72 hours, reconsider diagnosis, obtain cultures if not already done, and consider treatment change. Continue treatment at least 48–72 h beyond symptom resolution.
  • Renal function Baseline in at-risk patients; before prolonged courses
    Trigger-based
    Obtain creatinine/eGFR before prescribing in elderly, patients with known renal disease, or when high-dose or prolonged therapy is planned. Adjust dose for GFR <30 mL/min.
  • Allergic reactions Throughout treatment
    Routine
    Counsel patients to report rash, urticaria, swelling, or breathing difficulty immediately. Distinguish non-allergic maculopapular rash (common, especially with viral infections) from true hypersensitivity.
  • GI symptoms / C. difficile Throughout and up to 2 months post-treatment
    Trigger-based
    Evaluate new-onset watery or bloody diarrhea for C. difficile infection. CDAD can present during or up to 2 months after treatment.
  • INR (with warfarin) Within 3–5 days of starting amoxicillin
    Trigger-based
    Check INR early in course if patient is on warfarin. Adjust anticoagulant dose as needed; re-check after amoxicillin is completed.
  • CBC, LFTs Only for prolonged courses (>2 weeks)
    Trigger-based
    Monitor periodically during prolonged use (e.g., endocarditis treatment) for hematologic abnormalities (leukopenia, eosinophilia) and hepatic dysfunction (elevated AST/ALT). Usually reversible on discontinuation.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • History of serious hypersensitivity to amoxicillin or other beta-lactams — including anaphylaxis, SJS, TEN. Cross-reactivity with cephalosporins is estimated at 1–2%, primarily with first-generation cephalosporins sharing similar R1 side chains.

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Infectious mononucleosis — the FDA PI states amoxicillin should not be administered to patients with mono due to the very high incidence of rash. While not a true allergy, it can confound future penicillin allergy assessments.
  • History of mild penicillin rash (non-severe) — consider penicillin allergy testing before re-exposure; many patients labeled “penicillin allergic” can safely receive amoxicillin after evaluation.

Use with Caution

  • Severe renal impairment (GFR <30 mL/min) — dose reduction required; avoid 875 mg tablet.
  • Phenylketonuria — chewable tablets contain aspartame (phenylalanine). Oral suspension and standard tablets do not contain phenylalanine.
  • History of GI disease, particularly colitis — increased risk of C. difficile-associated diarrhea.
  • Concurrent warfarin therapy — increased INR monitoring required.
  • Concurrent allopurinol — increased rash incidence.
FDA Safety Warning Anaphylaxis and Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reactions

Serious and occasionally fatal anaphylactic reactions have been reported in patients on penicillin therapy, including amoxicillin. Although anaphylaxis is more frequent following parenteral therapy, it has occurred with oral penicillins. These reactions are more likely in individuals with a history of penicillin hypersensitivity or sensitivity to multiple allergens. Before initiating therapy, careful inquiry about prior reactions to penicillins, cephalosporins, or other allergens is essential. If an allergic reaction occurs, amoxicillin must be discontinued immediately and appropriate therapy instituted. Severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SJS, TEN, DRESS, AGEP) have also been reported — any progressive rash should prompt immediate discontinuation.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Amoxicillin is an antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections. It does not work against viral infections (such as the common cold or flu). Taking antibiotics when they are not needed contributes to antibiotic resistance — a growing public health concern.

How to Take

Take amoxicillin at evenly spaced intervals (every 8 or 12 hours as prescribed). It may be taken with or without food, though taking it at the start of a meal can reduce stomach upset. Complete the entire prescribed course, even if symptoms improve before the medication is finished. If using the oral suspension, shake well before each dose and measure with a proper dosing device (not a household spoon). Chewable tablets must be chewed completely before swallowing.

Completing the Course
Tell patientTake all of the amoxicillin prescribed to you, even if you feel better after a few days. Stopping early can allow bacteria to survive and develop resistance, which can make the infection harder to treat in the future.
Call prescriberIf your symptoms have not improved after 48–72 hours of treatment, or if they worsen at any time during the course.
Allergic Reactions
Tell patientAmoxicillin belongs to the penicillin family and can cause allergic reactions in some people. If you have ever had an allergic reaction to penicillin or cephalosporin antibiotics, inform your prescriber before taking this medication.
Call prescriberStop taking amoxicillin and seek immediate medical attention if you develop hives, swelling of the face or throat, difficulty breathing, or widespread skin rash with blistering or peeling.
Diarrhea
Tell patientMild diarrhea is common with antibiotics and usually resolves after you finish the course. Taking a probiotic may help. Stay well hydrated.
Call prescriberContact your prescriber if diarrhea is severe, bloody, or accompanied by stomach cramps and fever. This can be a sign of a serious intestinal infection (C. difficile) that may occur during or up to 2 months after finishing antibiotics.
Skin Rash
Tell patientIf you develop a rash while taking amoxicillin, notify your prescriber. Not all rashes from amoxicillin are allergic reactions — some are caused by viral infections — but your prescriber needs to assess whether it is safe to continue.
Call prescriberStop the medication immediately if the rash spreads rapidly, involves blistering or peeling, or is accompanied by fever, mouth sores, or joint pain.
Oral Contraceptives
Tell patientAmoxicillin may reduce the effectiveness of hormonal birth control pills. Use an additional form of contraception (such as condoms) during the antibiotic course and for 7 days after completing it.
Call prescriberIf you have concerns about contraceptive coverage or if you miss a birth control pill while on amoxicillin.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. AMOXIL (amoxicillin) prescribing information. USAntibiotics, LLC. Revised May 2024. FDA Label (PDF) Primary source for all dosing, indications, adverse reactions, drug interactions, and renal adjustment data.
  2. Amoxicillin capsules prescribing information. Northstar Rx LLC. DailyMed / NLM. FDA Label Current generic capsule labeling with DIES warning added 2024.
Key Clinical Trials / Systematic Reviews
  1. Shulman ST, Bisno AL, Clegg HW, et al. Clinical practice guideline for the diagnosis and management of group A streptococcal pharyngitis: 2012 update by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis. 2012;55(10):e86-e102. doi:10.1093/cid/cis629 IDSA guideline recommending amoxicillin as first-line treatment for GAS pharyngitis with 10-day course.
  2. Lieberthal AS, Carroll AE, Chonmaitree T, et al. The diagnosis and management of acute otitis media. Pediatrics. 2013;131(3):e964-e999. doi:10.1542/peds.2012-3488 AAP guideline recommending high-dose amoxicillin (80–90 mg/kg/day) as first-line for acute otitis media.
  3. Lansbury L, Lim B, Baskaran V, Lim WS. Co-infections in people with COVID-19: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Infect. 2020;81(2):266-275. doi:10.1016/j.jinf.2020.05.046 Context for appropriate antibiotic stewardship; demonstrates low co-infection rates challenging empiric amoxicillin use in viral respiratory illness.
Guidelines
  1. Wilson WR, Gewitz M, Lockhart PB, et al. Prevention of viridans group streptococcal infective endocarditis: a scientific statement from the AHA. Circulation. 2021;143(20):e963-e978. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000000969 AHA guideline recommending amoxicillin 2 g as first-line endocarditis prophylaxis before dental procedures in high-risk patients.
  2. Lantos PM, Rumbaugh J, Bockenstedt LK, et al. Clinical practice guidelines by the IDSA, AAN, and ACR: 2020 guidelines for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of Lyme disease. Clin Infect Dis. 2021;72(1):e1-e48. doi:10.1093/cid/ciaa1215 Lyme disease guideline listing amoxicillin 500 mg TID for 14–21 days as alternative to doxycycline for early localized disease.
  3. Chey WD, Leontiadis GI, Howden CW, Moss SF. ACG clinical guideline: treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection. Am J Gastroenterol. 2017;112(2):212-239. doi:10.1038/ajg.2016.563 ACG guideline for H. pylori eradication including amoxicillin-based triple and quadruple therapy regimens.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Akhavan BJ, Khanna NR, Vijhani P. Amoxicillin. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2023. NCBI Bookshelf Comprehensive clinically oriented review of amoxicillin pharmacology, PK parameters (~20% protein binding, t½ ~61 min, ~60% renal excretion), and clinical use.
  2. Drawz SM, Bonomo RA. Three decades of beta-lactamase inhibitors. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2010;23(1):160-201. doi:10.1128/CMR.00037-09 Authoritative review of beta-lactamase mechanisms; contextualizes why amoxicillin requires clavulanate for beta-lactamase-producing organisms.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Paintaud G, Allegaert K, Gras-Champel V, et al. Non-linear absorption pharmacokinetics of amoxicillin: consequences for dosing regimens and clinical breakpoints. J Antimicrob Chemother. 2016;71(10):2909-2917. doi:10.1093/jac/dkw237 Population PK analysis demonstrating dose-dependent (saturable) absorption of amoxicillin with implications for dosing regimen selection.
  2. Spyker DA, Rugloski RJ, Vann RL, O’Brien WM. Pharmacokinetics of amoxicillin: dose dependence after intravenous, oral, and intramuscular administration. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1977;11(1):132-141. doi:10.1128/AAC.11.1.132 Early PK study establishing Vd (~0.3 L/kg), oral bioavailability (~77%), and elimination parameters for amoxicillin.