us Health & medical scares painful blistering rash • blister rash one side • rash in a band • stripe rash on skin • one sided rash pain • burning tingling then rash • shingles symptoms • possible shingles • new blistering rash adult • rash wraps around torso • rash on one side only • sudden skin blisters • nerve pain with rash • rash with stinging pain • worried it is shingles • rash near eye concern • band of blisters • skin blisters and pain What to do if…
What to do if…
you develop a new painful blistering rash in a band on one side of your body
Short answer
Assume this could be shingles and get same-day medical care (primary care, urgent care, or telehealth). Face/eye rashes need urgent evaluation.
Do not do these things
- Do not wait several days to see what happens if it’s painful, blistering, and one-sided.
- Do not apply steroid creams, antibiotic ointments, numbing gels, or “home remedies” unless a clinician specifically advises it.
- Do not scratch, pick, or pop blisters.
- Do not let others touch the rash. Avoid skin-to-skin contact between the rash and people at higher risk (pregnant people who aren’t immune to chickenpox, newborns, or anyone immunocompromised).
- Do not share items that directly touch uncovered blisters (like towels or clothing used on the rash). Prioritize covering the rash and hand hygiene; wash laundry normally.
What to do now
- Get same-day care and say “possible shingles.”
Call your doctor, use telehealth, or go to urgent care today. Say: “New painful blistering rash in a band on one side of my body. Started [time/date].” Antiviral treatment is most effective when started early (often within about 72 hours). - Treat face/eye area as urgent.
If the rash is on your forehead, eyelid, around the eye, or nose, arrange urgent same-day evaluation. Go to the ER if you have red/painful eye, light sensitivity, blurred vision, or you can’t access same-day care quickly. - Document it for the clinician.
Take clear photos (close-up and wider shot) and write down when pain/tingling started and when the rash/blisters appeared. - Cover the rash and prevent spread.
Keep it clean, dry, and covered with a non-stick dressing or loose clothing. Wash hands after any contact. The main spread risk is from blister fluid contacting someone who isn’t immune to chickenpox. - Use basic pain control that’s safe for you while arranging care.
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol) can help (follow the label; avoid doubling with combination cold/flu products).
- Cool compresses and loose clothing can reduce discomfort.
- Flag higher-risk situations immediately.
Tell the clinician urgently if you are pregnant, immunocompromised (chemo, transplant meds, high-dose steroids/biologics), have a widespread rash, fever with severe headache/neck stiffness, or feel significantly unwell.
What can wait
- You don’t need to prove what it is before seeking care—describe the pattern and timeline.
- You don’t need to make big decisions about work/school right now; first get assessed and ask about precautions (especially if you work with high-risk people).
- You don’t need major cleaning—focus on covering the rash and avoiding direct contact with blister fluid.
Important reassurance
This pattern (painful, one-sided, band-like blisters) is a recognized presentation of shingles, and many people recover well—especially when they get prompt evaluation and protect the rash.
Scope note
This is first-step guidance for the next few hours. Ongoing care (medication choices, follow-up, and return-to-work advice) should come from your clinician.
Important note
This guide cannot diagnose you. A new painful blistering rash—especially near the eye/face—needs prompt medical assessment. If you have vision changes, confusion, severe headache with feeling very unwell, or rapidly worsening symptoms, seek emergency care.