City Cast

Allergy Season Could Last Longer in Philadelphia

Brittany Valentine
Brittany Valentine
Posted on August 30
About 50 million Americans suffer from ragweed allergies. (Joanna McCarthy/Getty Images)

About 50 million Americans suffer from ragweed allergies. (Joanna McCarthy/Getty Images)

I’ve got some bad news. Health experts predict that allergy season will last longer this fall.

The culprit? Pollen from ragweed, a tooth-leafed member of the Ambrosia family. Ragweed season peaks in September, and pollen could remain at annoyingly high levels through early to mid-October. Yikes 😩

Chestnut Hill allergy specialist Manav N. Segal told The Philadelphia Inquirer that global warming is contributing to longer allergy seasons. In recent years, the first freezes in Philly have been arriving later than normal.

Is there any hope? Yes and no. Aerobiologist Estelle Levitin told the paper that if we get a lot of precipitation during the pollen season, it will lessen the intensity, as rain reduces pollen flight.

However, Philly had a particularly rainy June, and agronomy expert Andrew Frankenfield expects that this will actually boost ragweed crops.

What can we do?

  • Start taking over-the-counter allergy medication before the season starts
  • Limit time outdoors on high pollen count days
  • Wear masks outdoors
  • Shower and change clothes when returning indoors
  • Keep windows closed if possible
Hey Philly

Want to know what's happening in Philadelphia? Sign up for our free newsletter, Hey Philly. Packed with local news, curated event recs, local life hacks, and more, it's your daily toolkit for getting the most out of the city you love.

Urban Almanac

See All

The latest in Philly