Complete comparison guide for parents
| Feature | Amoxicillin | Azithromycin (Z-Pack) |
|---|---|---|
| Antibiotic class | Penicillin | Macrolide |
| Treatment duration | 7-10 days | 3-5 days |
| How often | Every 8 hours (3x daily) | Once daily |
| With food? | Either way | 1hr before or 2hr after meals |
| Storage | Refrigerate | Room temperature OK |
| Common side effect | Diarrhea | Stomach pain, nausea |
| Taste | Generally good (bubblegum) | Can be bitter |
Amoxicillin is the first choice antibiotic for most common childhood infections:
Azithromycin is typically used when:
Overusing azithromycin when amoxicillin would work contributes to antibiotic resistance. Azithromycin resistance is increasing, which is why doctors reserve it for specific situations.
Neither is "stronger" - they work differently. Amoxicillin kills bacteria directly, while azithromycin stops bacteria from multiplying. The right antibiotic depends on the type of infection and bacteria involved.
Yes! Azithromycin is a completely different antibiotic family (macrolide) than amoxicillin (penicillin). There is no cross-allergy, making it a safe alternative for children with penicillin allergies.
They are not typically taken together. If one antibiotic isn't working, your doctor may switch to the other or try a different option like Augmentin.
Amoxicillin leaves the body quickly, so it needs to be given every 8 hours to maintain effective levels. Azithromycin stays in tissues longer, so once daily is sufficient.
Get accurate amoxicillin or azithromycin dosing in mg and ml
Go to Dose Calculator