Dry Cough
干咳 · gān ké+16 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Cough Without Phlegm, Nonproductive Cough, Hacking Cough, Dry cough with little or no phlegm, Dry cough with little or no mucus, Dry cough with no phlegm or very scanty sticky phlegm, Dry cough with scanty sticky phlegm, Cough with little sputum, Dry cough with little or sticky sputum, Dry cough with little phlegm, Dry cough with no or scanty sticky sputum, Dry cough with no phlegm or phlegm that is scanty and sticky, Night Dry Coughing, Dry Cough Which Is Worse In The Evening, Dry Cough Intensifies At Night, Evening Exacerbation Of Dry Cough
A dry cough that starts suddenly in autumn with chills is a different condition from one that has lingered for months and worsens at night. TCM treats them with distinct formulas, and most acute dry coughs respond within a week, while chronic ones need longer to rebuild moisture.
About this page · what it is and isn't
What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe dry cough. Patterns and herbs come from canonical TCM sources; clinical claims are cited in the Evidence section.
What it isn't. A diagnosis. Me&Qi is an editorial team, not a licensed clinic. The pattern quiz is a thinking tool — pulse and tongue still need a person in the room. Anything in the Safety section should send you to a doctor, not a herb.
Last reviewed Jun 2026.
Educational content about Traditional Chinese Medicine — not medical advice. See a qualified practitioner for diagnosis and treatment.
Dry cough isn't a single condition in TCM - it's a family of five distinct patterns, each with its own cause and its own treatment. Two patterns come from outside: Exterior Dry Cold invading the Lungs and Dry-Heat or Dry-Fire, where dry air attacks the body. Three patterns develop from within: Lung Dryness, Lung Yin Deficiency, and Kidney and Lung Yin Deficiency - all reflecting a deeper loss of moisture that leaves the airways parched and irritable.
Each pattern produces a slightly different cough, from a sudden hacking in autumn to a chronic tickle that worsens at night. The right treatment depends on identifying which pattern you have. This page explains the differences and how TCM can help.
A dry cough is a cough that produces little or no mucus. It can be triggered by viral infections, allergies, asthma, acid reflux, certain medications, or environmental irritants like dry air or smoke. When it lasts less than three weeks, it is usually considered acute; beyond eight weeks, it becomes chronic.
Doctors typically investigate the cause with a physical exam, chest X-ray, or lung function tests. Treatment often targets the underlying condition - antihistamines for allergies, inhalers for asthma, or simply time and hydration for a post-viral cough.
Conventional treatments
Conventional care for a dry cough may include over-the-counter cough suppressants (dextromethorphan), lozenges, or humidified air. If a specific cause is identified, treatment might include antihistamines, nasal steroids, proton pump inhibitors for reflux, or bronchodilators. For persistent or severe coughs, prescription medications like codeine or gabapentin are sometimes used, though they carry side effects and dependency risks.
Where conventional treatment falls short
Cough suppressants work by dampening the cough reflex but do nothing to resolve the underlying dryness or irritation. They can cause drowsiness and, when used long-term, may mask a condition that needs different care. The conventional approach also rarely distinguishes between a dry cough brought on by cold, dry weather and one caused by internal heat or Yin deficiency - a distinction that is central to TCM treatment. This means many people cycle through remedies without lasting relief.
How TCM understands dry cough
In TCM, the Lungs are the organ most sensitive to dryness. They govern the body's Qi and control the opening and closing of the pores, but they also need a fine layer of moisture to keep the airways supple and the voice clear. When that moisture is stripped away - by external dry air or by internal deficiency - the Lung Qi rebels upward instead of descending, and a dry cough begins.
External causes are common in autumn or in heated indoor spaces. Cool, dry air can invade as a pathogen called Dry Cold, constricting the Lungs and producing a hacking cough with chills and no sweat. Warm, dry air creates Dry Heat, which consumes fluids more aggressively, leading to a scratchy throat, thirst, and sticky phlegm that is hard to bring up. Both are acute patterns that can resolve quickly once the invading dryness is dispersed and the Lungs are moistened.
Internal patterns develop more slowly. When Lung Yin - the cooling, moistening energy of the Lungs - becomes depleted through overwork, chronic illness, or smoking, the airways lose their natural lubrication. The cough becomes chronic, often worse at night, and may be accompanied by a dry throat, night sweats, or a feeling of heat in the palms.
If this deep deficiency drags on, it can pull on the Kidney Yin, which is the body's root reserve. Then the cough becomes even drier and is joined by low back soreness and fatigue. TCM treats each of these five patterns with its own specific herbal formula and acupuncture strategy.
「五藏六府皆令人咳,非独肺也。…… 肺咳之状,咳而喘息有音,甚则唾血。」
"All five zang and six fu organs can cause cough, not only the Lung. ... The cough of the Lung is characterized by coughing with panting and audible breath sounds, and in severe cases, spitting of blood. This passage established the foundational TCM understanding that dry cough can arise from multiple organ imbalances, not just the Lung itself."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses dry cough
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner first asks when the cough started and what it feels like. A dry cough that appears suddenly in autumn or after exposure to dry, cool air points toward an external invasion. If it has been lingering for weeks or months and worsens at night, an internal deficiency pattern is more likely.
If the dry cough is accompanied by chills, a scratchy throat, a thin white tongue coating, and a wiry pulse, the picture fits Exterior Dry Cold invading the Lungs. This pattern is common in cool, dry seasons and responds to formulas like Xing Su San (杏苏散), which gently disperse cool dryness and moisten the lungs.
When the dry cough comes with a dry, sore throat, thirst, and sticky phlegm that is hard to bring up, the practitioner suspects Dry-Heat or Dry-Fire. The tongue may be redder with a thin yellow coating and the pulse feels rapid. This warm-dryness often appears in late summer or heated indoor environments, and calls for cooling, moistening herbs like those in Qing Zao Jiu Fei Tang (清燥救肺汤).
A broader pattern called Lung Dryness shows a dry, hacking cough with scanty or no sputum and a dry sensation deep in the chest. This can arise from unresolved external dryness or from early yin deficiency. The tongue appears red with little moisture. The practitioner will ask about thirst and skin dryness to gauge fluid loss and may recommend Sha Shen Mai Dong Tang (沙参麦冬汤) to nourish lung fluids.
If the dry cough has been present for a long time, worsens in the evening or at night, and the person also has a dry mouth and throat, Lung Yin Deficiency is the key pattern. The tongue is red with very little or no coating, and the pulse is thin and rapid. This internal deficiency requires deep nourishment of lung yin over a longer period.
When dry cough becomes chronic and is joined by night sweats, lower back soreness, and a feeling of heat in the palms and soles, the deficiency has deepened to involve both Kidney and Lung Yin. The kidneys fail to send moisture up to the lungs, leading to a stubborn dry cough. This pattern needs simultaneous support of kidney and lung yin.
TCM Patterns for Dry Cough
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same dry cough can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.
Find your pattern
Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.
- 1Your signs
- 2What makes it worse
- 3What helps
Which signs match your experience?
It is common to recognize parts of yourself in more than one pattern. For example, a dry cough that starts with a cold or dry weather can look like an external dryness pattern, but if it lingers for weeks and becomes worse at night, it may have shifted into Lung Yin Deficiency. The timeline is often the best clue.
Pay attention to whether you feel chilled or feverish, and whether the throat feels scratchy or truly sore and dry. External Dry Cold tends to bring a mild aversion to cold, while Dry-Heat creates more thirst and a warmer sensation. If there are no external signs at all and the cough is worse when you lie down or in the evening, think of internal deficiency.
Overlap between Lung Dryness and Lung Yin Deficiency is especially common. Lung Dryness can be an early stage, while Lung Yin Deficiency is a deeper, more chronic state. If you also notice night sweats, warm palms, or low back ache, the pattern is likely Kidney and Lung Yin Deficiency, which requires a more comprehensive approach.
Because these patterns can blend and shift, a professional diagnosis with tongue and pulse examination is invaluable. If your dry cough has lasted more than three weeks, or you cough up any blood, have chest pain, or feel short of breath, please see a healthcare provider promptly rather than trying to self-treat.
Exterior Dry Cold invading the Lungs
Dry-Heat or Dry-Fire
Lung Dryness
Lung Yin Deficiency
Kidney and Lung Yin Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address dry cough in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for dry cough
3 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
A classical formula used to treat autumn coughs with chills, thin phlegm, nasal congestion, and dry throat caused by cool, dry weather. It gently disperses the cold-dry pathogen from the body's exterior while restoring the Lung's ability to manage fluids and resolve phlegm.
A classical formula for dry, irritated lungs caused by warm-dry environmental conditions that have damaged both the moisture and Qi of the Lungs. It is commonly used for dry cough with no phlegm, wheezing, dry throat and nose, thirst, and mild fever, especially during dry autumn weather or after a feverish illness has dried out the respiratory system.
A classical formula for nourishing the Lungs and Kidneys when they have become too dry and hot internally. It is commonly used for chronic dry cough, sore throat, blood-tinged sputum, night sweats, and afternoon fevers caused by a deep depletion of the body's moistening fluids. The name means "Lily Bulb Decoction to Preserve the Metal," where "Metal" refers to the Lungs in TCM's Five Phase system.
Acute external patterns (Dry Cold or Dry Heat) often improve within 3-7 days of starting herbs and acupuncture. Lung Dryness and Lung Yin Deficiency may need 2-4 weeks for noticeable relief, with full resolution taking 4-8 weeks. Kidney and Lung Yin Deficiency is the slowest to respond - expect 6-12 weeks of consistent treatment to rebuild deep Yin reserves.
Treatment principles
Across all patterns, the central goal is to restore the Lungs' ability to descend Qi and to replenish moisture where it has been lost. For external invasions, treatment first disperses the pathogen - cool dryness with warm, moistening herbs like those in Xing Su San, and warm dryness with cooling, moistening herbs like those in Qing Zao Jiu Fei Tang. Acupuncture points such as Feishu BL-13 and Lieque LU-7 are used to open the chest and redirect Lung Qi downward.
For internal deficiency patterns, the approach shifts to nourishing Yin and generating fluids. Herbs like Bei Sha Shen and Mai Dong become central, and points like Zhaohai KI-6 and Taiyuan LU-9 are added to tonify Yin. Because many chronic dry coughs involve a mixed picture - some lingering dryness with underlying Yin deficiency - formulas are often customized to address both the surface and the root.
What to expect from treatment
During the first week of herbs and acupuncture, most patients notice the cough becomes less frequent and the throat feels less raw. For acute coughs, full resolution is common within 5-7 days. Chronic conditions improve more gradually: a reduction in night-time coughing and a moister throat are early signs that the treatment is working. Weekly acupuncture sessions are typical, with herbal formulas taken daily. As the cough subsides, the herbal formula may be adjusted to focus more on nourishing Yin to prevent recurrence.
General dietary guidance
Keep the throat moist by sipping warm water or pear juice throughout the day. Eat plenty of cooked, easily digestible foods - soups, stews, and steamed vegetables. Pears, especially Asian pears, are particularly beneficial for their lung-moistening properties. Avoid raw, cold foods and icy drinks, which can constrict the Lungs. Spicy, greasy, and deep-fried foods generate internal heat and should be minimized. A humidifier in your bedroom can also help protect the Lung's moisture while you sleep.
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
TCM can safely complement most conventional cough treatments. Herbal formulas are generally well-tolerated alongside over-the-counter suppressants or prescribed inhalers. If you are taking sedating cough medicines (codeine, dextromethorphan in high doses), discuss potential additive drowsiness with your practitioner. Always bring a list of your medications to your TCM consultation, and do not stop any prescribed medication without your doctor's guidance.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
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Coughing up blood or blood-streaked sputum — May indicate a serious lung condition that needs immediate evaluation.
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Difficulty breathing or shortness of breath at rest — Could signal pneumonia, a blood clot, or heart failure.
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High fever (above 39°C / 102°F) with chills — Suggests a severe infection like pneumonia.
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Sharp chest pain when coughing or breathing — Possible pleurisy, pneumothorax, or pulmonary embolism.
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Cough that persists more than 3 weeks without any improvement — Needs medical investigation to rule out underlying disease.
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Unexplained weight loss along with the cough — Can be a warning sign of tuberculosis or malignancy.
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Bluish lips or face — Indicates low oxygen levels - seek emergency care immediately.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
Dry cough during pregnancy often worsens because the growing fetus consumes Yin and Blood, deepening any pre-existing Yin deficiency. Patterns like Lung Yin Deficiency and Lung Dryness become more prominent, and the cough tends to be worse in the evening. Treatment leans toward gentle, moistening herbs such as Sha Shen, Mai Dong, and Sang Ye, which are generally considered safe during pregnancy.
Caution is needed with formulas that contain herbs like Ban Xia (Pinellia) - found in Xing Su San - which is traditionally contraindicated in pregnancy. Acupuncture can be a safer first-line approach, but points like Hegu LI-4 and Sanyinjiao SP-6 are usually avoided to prevent any risk of stimulating uterine contractions. Always work with a practitioner experienced in pregnancy care.
Most moistening and Yin-nourishing herbs used for dry cough - such as Mai Dong, Sha Shen, and Bai He - are gentle and considered safe during breastfeeding, with little risk of passing harmful substances into breast milk. However, formulas that contain strong, bitter-cold herbs or acrid dispersing herbs should be used cautiously, as they can alter the taste of milk or cause mild digestive upset in the infant.
Acupuncture is an excellent alternative for nursing mothers who prefer to avoid herbs entirely. The treatment focus remains on nourishing Yin and moistening the Lungs, using points like Feishu BL-13, Taiyuan LU-9, and Zhaohai KI-6, which do not interfere with lactation.
In children, a dry cough often follows an external invasion of Wind-Dryness or a lingering low-grade heat after a fever. Their Lungs are delicate and easily damaged by dryness, so the cough can persist even after the initial illness resolves. The most common TCM patterns are Lung Dryness and the early stages of Lung Yin Deficiency, often with a red throat and dry lips.
Herbal dosages are reduced to one-quarter to one-half of the adult dose depending on age and weight. Gentle, moistening formulas like a simplified Sha Shen Mai Dong Tang (without heavy tonics) are preferred. Acupuncture can be replaced with acupressure or pediatric tuina on points like Feishu BL-13 and Lieque LU-7, which children tolerate well and which effectively soothe a dry, hacking cough.
Older adults are particularly prone to chronic dry cough because Yin naturally declines with age. Kidney and Lung Yin Deficiency becomes the dominant pattern, often accompanied by low back soreness, dry skin, and a cough that worsens at night. The cough is usually deep, weak, and hard to shake off.
Treatment must go slowly and gently. Herb doses are typically reduced to about two-thirds of the standard adult dose to avoid taxing a weakened digestive system. Polypharmacy is a real concern, so a practitioner must review all medications for potential interactions. Acupuncture is often well-tolerated and can be combined with gentle dietary therapy - such as pear or white fungus soup - to steadily rebuild Yin without overwhelming the body.
Evidence & references
Research on TCM for dry cough specifically is limited, but studies on acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine for chronic cough show encouraging results. A 2019 systematic review of acupuncture for chronic cough found that acupuncture improved cough severity and quality of life compared to sham or medication, though the authors noted that many trials had small sample sizes and risk of bias.
Chinese herbal formulas like Qing Zao Jiu Fei Tang and Sha Shen Mai Dong Tang have been studied in Chinese-language RCTs for post-infectious dry cough and chronic bronchitis, with reports of reduced cough frequency and faster recovery. However, these trials rarely meet Western methodological standards, and large, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies are still needed to draw firm conclusions.
Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「燥伤肺胃阴分,或热或咳者,沙参麦冬汤主之。」
"When dryness damages the Yin of the Lung and Stomach, causing either fever or cough, Shā Shēn Mài Dōng Tāng governs it. This is a direct classical reference linking dry cough to Yin deficiency and providing the foundational formula still used today."
Wēn Bìng Tiáo Biàn (Systematic Differentiation of Warm Diseases) by Wú Jū Tōng
Volume 1, Upper Jiao Chapter
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for dry cough.
Yes, especially if conventional treatments haven't worked. A lingering dry cough often signals an internal pattern like Lung Yin Deficiency or Lung Dryness, which TCM addresses by nourishing the moisture of the Lungs rather than just suppressing the cough. Many people see improvement within two to four weeks of herbs and acupuncture, though deeper deficiencies may take longer.
Favour moistening foods like pears, apples, honey, white fungus, lily bulb, and tofu. Warm soups and congee are gentle on the throat. Avoid spicy, fried, or greasy foods, alcohol, and coffee - these are drying and can irritate the Lungs further. If your cough is from a cold-dry pattern, warm drinks and ginger can help; if from heat, cool water and pear juice are better.
In most cases, yes, but always inform both your TCM practitioner and your doctor about everything you are taking. Some herbs have mild sedative effects and could increase drowsiness if combined with codeine or similar drugs. A qualified herbalist will adjust the formula to avoid any overlap and ensure safety.
Many people feel some throat comfort and reduced coughing immediately after a session, but lasting relief builds over several treatments. For acute dry coughs, 2-3 sessions may be enough. Chronic cases typically require weekly acupuncture for 4-6 weeks alongside herbs to address the root deficiency.
In TCM, night-time is when Yin energy should be most active, cooling and moistening the body. If you are already Yin-deficient, the balance tips further, and the Lungs become even drier. This is why a cough from Lung Yin Deficiency or Kidney and Lung Yin Deficiency often intensifies in the evening or when lying down. Treatment focuses on rebuilding Yin to correct this pattern.
Yes, children respond well to TCM, but the dosage and formula must be tailored to their age and constitution. Pediatric formulas are gentler and often come as granules or syrups. Always consult a practitioner experienced in treating children, and never give adult doses.
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