Written and medically reviewed by Chris Woods, MSN, APRN, FNP-C
This article reflects Chris’s real clinical experience treating common urgent-care conditions through NPCWoods Telemedicine. Content is reviewed for accuracy, updated over time, and paired with clear guidance on when text-based care is appropriate and when in-person care matters more.
Double board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner. Licensed in AZ, CO, GA, ID, IA, MT, NV, NM, NC, OR, UT. NPI 1285125468.
Published April 9, 2026. Last reviewed and updated April 9, 2026.
You text Chris directly. No AI triage, no call center, and no copy-paste handoff between strangers.
This article is educational only. For chest pain, trouble breathing, severe dehydration, confusion, or other emergencies, call 911 or seek urgent in-person care.
If you are dealing with burning, urgency, and that constant need to go, you probably do not want to sit in a waiting room for two hours to get the same antibiotics you have gotten before.
That is a fair question to ask: can I just get this handled online?
Here is the short version.
Quick Answer
In many cases, yes. A licensed provider can evaluate your UTI symptoms through telehealth and prescribe antibiotics if the situation calls for it. Most uncomplicated UTIs are straightforward enough for a virtual visit. But there are situations — like fever, back pain, or pregnancy — where you should be seen in person.
What Symptoms Usually Point Toward a UTI
If you are dealing with some combination of these, a UTI is likely what is going on:
- burning or pain when you pee
- feeling like you need to go constantly, even when little comes out
- peeing more often than normal
- cloudy, dark, or strong-smelling urine
- pelvic pressure or lower abdominal discomfort
The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) lists these as the hallmark symptoms of a lower urinary tract infection. Most UTIs stay in the bladder and urethra — and those are the ones that telehealth handles well.
5 Things to Know Before Getting UTI Antibiotics Online
1. You do not always need a urine test first. For uncomplicated UTIs with classic symptoms, providers often treat based on the symptom pattern. A urine culture may be recommended if the situation is more complex.
2. Telehealth is real medical care. A licensed provider evaluates your symptoms, reviews your history, and prescribes medication if appropriate — the same clinical process as an in-person visit.
3. Some situations need in-person care. Fever, flank pain, pregnancy, or recurring UTIs that are not responding to treatment may need a physical exam, lab work, or imaging.
4. The prescription goes to your pharmacy. If antibiotics are appropriate, the provider sends them to whichever pharmacy you prefer. You pick them up like any other prescription.
5. You can get started fast. At NPCWoods, most patients text in their symptoms and hear back the same day with a treatment plan.
When Telehealth Is a Good Fit for UTI Treatment
Telehealth works well for a straightforward lower UTI when:
- your main symptoms are burning, urgency, and frequency
- you do not have a fever
- there is no back pain or flank pain
- you are not pregnant
- your symptoms started within the last few days
- you have had UTIs before and this feels similar
When You Should Go In Person Instead
There are situations where telehealth is not the right fit. Go to urgent care or your primary care provider if:
- you have a fever over 101 degrees
- you have back pain, side pain, or flank pain
- you are nauseous or vomiting
- you see blood in your urine along with fever
- symptoms have been going on for more than a week without improvement
- you are pregnant
- you are male — UTIs in men usually need more workup
What a Telehealth Provider Will Actually Ask You
When you text in for a UTI evaluation, a provider is going to ask real clinical questions to make sure this is the right path:
- how long have you had symptoms?
- have you had UTIs before?
- any fever, chills, back pain, or nausea?
- are you pregnant or could you be?
- have you taken any antibiotics recently?
- any known drug allergies?
These questions help the provider rule out anything that would need in-person care and determine the right treatment if a prescription is appropriate.
Red Flags That Could Mean a Kidney Infection
A UTI that moves up to the kidneys is a different situation. The CDC and NIDDK both flag these warning signs:
- high fever or chills
- pain in the back, side, or groin area
- nausea or vomiting
- feeling significantly worse instead of better
If you are experiencing any of these, do not wait. Go to urgent care or an emergency room. Kidney infections can get serious fast and may need IV antibiotics or closer monitoring.
What You Can Do at Home While You Wait
These will not cure a bacterial UTI, but they can help with comfort while you are waiting on your treatment plan:
- drink plenty of water throughout the day
- urinate when you feel the urge — do not hold it
- avoid caffeine, alcohol, and spicy foods
- phenazopyridine (AZO) can ease burning temporarily
- ibuprofen or acetaminophen for pain
- a heating pad on your lower abdomen
These help manage discomfort but do not replace antibiotics if you have a bacterial infection.
Telehealth vs Urgent Care for a UTI
| Factor | Telehealth | Urgent Care |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | $59 flat fee at NPCWoods | $150 to $400+ depending on location |
| Wait time | Text in anytime, response often same day | 30 minutes to 3 hours in the waiting room |
| Prescriptions | Sent to your pharmacy if appropriate | Handed to you or sent to pharmacy |
| Lab tests | Not available — referral if needed | Urine test on site |
| Best for | Straightforward lower UTI symptoms | Fever, flank pain, complicated cases |
FAQ
Can I get antibiotics for a UTI without a urine test?
In many cases, yes. For straightforward lower UTIs with classic symptoms like burning, urgency, and frequency, providers often prescribe based on the symptom pattern. A urine culture may be recommended if symptoms are recurring, unusual, or not responding to treatment.
How fast can I get a prescription through telehealth?
At NPCWoods, most patients get a treatment plan and prescription — if appropriate — within hours of texting in. Many people hear back the same day.
What antibiotics are commonly prescribed for UTIs?
Common first-line options include nitrofurantoin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Your provider will choose based on your history, allergies, and local resistance patterns.
Does cloudy urine mean I definitely need antibiotics?
Not automatically. Urine color and clarity can change for many reasons including hydration, diet, and supplements. The full symptom picture matters more than any single sign.
The Bottom Line
Most straightforward UTIs can be evaluated and treated through telehealth. If your symptoms are burning, urgency, and frequency — without fever, back pain, or other red flags — a virtual visit is a practical way to get it handled fast.
If something feels more serious, go in person. That is always the right call when the situation warrants it.
You do not have to sit in a waiting room to get this sorted out.
Ready to get this sorted?
$59 flat-fee visit. No paperwork. No waiting room. Prescriptions when appropriate.
Reviewed by Chris Woods, MSN, APRN, FNP-C — Licensed Nurse Practitioner. Sources: NIDDK, CDC, MedlinePlus.