Ryaltris
Ryaltris
What is Ryaltris?
Ryaltris is a nasal spray that combines two medications, olopatadine hydrochloride and mometasone furoate. It is used to treat symptoms of allergic rhinitis, such as sneezing, runny nose, and nasal congestion.
Side Effects
- Red or white patches in your nose and throat
- Allergic reaction: Itching or hives, swelling in your face or hands, swelling or tingling in your mouth or throat, chest tightness, trouble breathing
- Fever, chills, cough, sore throat, body aches
Warnings
- Call your doctor if your symptoms do not improve or if they get worse.
- This medicine may weaken your immune system and make it more likely for you to get an infection. Avoid people who are sick. If you are exposed to chickenpox or measles, call your doctor right away.
- Keep all medicine out of the reach of children. Never share your medicine with anyone.
- Tell your doctor if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, or if you have liver disease, any type of infection (including a cold or the flu, tuberculosis, herpes infection of the eye), or a history of glaucoma or cataracts. Tell your doctor if you have had nose surgery, a nose injury, or a recent infection in your nose.
- This medicine may cause the following problems:Tears, ulcers, or bleeding inside the noseGlaucoma or cataractsAdrenal gland problemsSlow growth in children
Prescription savings · · · ·
What is Ryaltris ?
Ryaltris is a nasal spray that combines two medications, olopatadine hydrochloride and mometasone furoate. It is used to treat symptoms of allergic rhinitis, such as sneezing, runny nose, and nasal congestion.
- Red or white patches in your nose and throat
- Allergic reaction: Itching or hives, swelling in your face or hands, swelling or tingling in your mouth or throat, chest tightness, trouble breathing
- Fever, chills, cough, sore throat, body aches
- Blurred or change in vision, eye pain
- Heavy bleeding or bloody mucus from your nose, pain or sores inside your nose
- Slow growth in children
- Sleepiness or drowsiness
- Dark freckles, skin color changes, coldness, weakness, tiredness, nausea, vomiting, weight loss
- Call your doctor if your symptoms do not improve or if they get worse.
- This medicine may weaken your immune system and make it more likely for you to get an infection. Avoid people who are sick. If you are exposed to chickenpox or measles, call your doctor right away.
- Keep all medicine out of the reach of children. Never share your medicine with anyone.
- Tell your doctor if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, or if you have liver disease, any type of infection (including a cold or the flu, tuberculosis, herpes infection of the eye), or a history of glaucoma or cataracts. Tell your doctor if you have had nose surgery, a nose injury, or a recent infection in your nose.
- This medicine may cause the following problems:Tears, ulcers, or bleeding inside the noseGlaucoma or cataractsAdrenal gland problemsSlow growth in children
- This medicine may make you drowsy or less alert. Do not drive or do anything else that could be dangerous until you know how this medicine affects you.
- Your doctor will check your progress and the effects of this medicine at regular visits. Keep all appointments.
Ryaltris Coupons & Prices
Ryaltris
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Licensed U.S. providers · No insurance needed · Shipped to your door
Looking for a Ryaltris coupon? Ryaltris (olopatadine hydrochloride / mometasone furoate nasal spray) is a brand-name prescription that treats the symptoms of seasonal allergic rhinitis, or hay fever, in adults and children 12 and older. Because there is no generic version yet, the price can run high at the pharmacy. Enter your ZIP code above to see today's Rx.com cash price at pharmacies near you, and compare it against the manufacturer savings card so you pay the lowest amount available to you.
What is Ryaltris and how does it work?
Ryaltris is a combination nasal spray that pairs two medicines in one bottle: olopatadine, an antihistamine that blocks the H1 receptors involved in allergic reactions, and mometasone furoate, an intranasal corticosteroid that reduces inflammation in the nose. It is FDA-approved to treat the symptoms of seasonal allergic rhinitis (hay fever) — such as nasal congestion, runny nose, sneezing, and nasal itching — in adults and children 12 years of age and older. In clinical studies, patients using Ryaltris also saw improvement in associated eye symptoms, but relief of eye symptoms is a secondary study finding rather than part of the approved indication.
The usual dose is 2 sprays in each nostril twice daily. Ryaltris is sometimes used off-label for perennial (year-round) allergic rhinitis, but your provider will decide whether it is right for you. Always follow the directions on your prescription label.
Ryaltris cost: manufacturer savings card vs. Rx.com cash coupon
There are two main ways to lower what you pay for Ryaltris. The manufacturer savings card from the maker of Ryaltris is generally limited to people with commercial (private) insurance and comes with its own eligibility terms, which can change. To check current details, search for the Ryaltris savings card on the manufacturer's official website. Patients who are uninsured, on Medicare or Medicaid, or whose card is declined typically cannot use that card.
That is where the Rx.com cash coupon helps. It is a cash-price discount that does not require insurance, so it works whether you are uninsured, on a government plan, or simply told the manufacturer card does not apply to you. There is currently no generic version of Ryaltris, so shopping the cash price is the biggest lever most people have. Enter your ZIP above to see today's price at pharmacies near you, then bring the lower of the two options to the counter.
Ryaltris alternatives and how it compares
Ryaltris is one of two combination antihistamine-plus-steroid nasal sprays. The other is Dymista (azelastine / fluticasone), which works in a similar way. If your provider is considering your options, you may also hear about single-ingredient sprays:
- Intranasal steroids such as Flonase (fluticasone), Nasonex and mometasone, and fluticasone
- Intranasal antihistamines such as Astepro (azelastine), azelastine, and olopatadine
Several of these are available as lower-cost generics or over the counter, which can be an important savings option to discuss with your provider or pharmacist. Enter your ZIP above to compare cash prices across these choices.
Ryaltris safety and side effects
Ryaltris has no boxed warning. The most common side effects are dysgeusia (an altered or bitter taste), nosebleeds (epistaxis), and nasal discomfort. Ryaltris can also cause drowsiness (somnolence) in some people; use caution with alcohol, other CNS depressants, and when driving or doing other activities that need mental alertness until you know how it affects you. Because it is applied in the nose, it can rarely cause nasal ulceration or septal perforation, and should be avoided after recent nasal surgery or injury until the area has healed. Nasal or throat yeast infection (Candida) can occur.
As with all corticosteroids, prolonged use may raise the risk of infection or worsen an existing one (for example ocular herpes simplex or tuberculosis), and has been linked to glaucoma, cataracts, effects on the body's own steroid production, and slowed growth in children, who should be monitored. Rare allergic reactions can happen. This is general information, not medical advice — talk with your doctor or pharmacist about your health and any other medicines you take before starting Ryaltris.
This Ryaltris information was written and reviewed against authoritative U.S. medical sources — MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine), DailyMed, and FDA prescribing information — and checked for accuracy. It is provided for education and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.
Verify the official label: Ryaltris on DailyMed (FDA)
Reviewed against FDA labeling · Last reviewed July 2026
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Medical disclaimer: This information is provided for general educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a licensed physician, pharmacist, or other qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read here. If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately.