Adults may need urgent care at 103°F+; babies and kids can need help sooner, so age and symptoms guide the call.
A fever can feel scary because the number is so concrete. Still, a temperature reading is only one clue. Age, how fast the fever rose, how long it has lasted, and what else is going on in the body can change what that number means.
This article helps you sort “watch at home” from “get medical care now” using clear cutoffs, symptom triggers, and measurement tips.
What A Fever Is And What Counts As High
Many clinicians use 100.4°F (38°C) as a common cutoff for fever. People run a little different, and the measurement site can shift the reading. A rectal temperature tends to read higher than an armpit reading, and forehead scanners can drift if the room is cold or the skin is sweaty.
Fahrenheit And Celsius Conversions
- 100.4°F = 38.0°C
- 102.0°F = 38.9°C
- 103.0°F = 39.4°C
- 104.0°F = 40.0°C
- 105.0°F = 40.6°C
At What Temperature Does Fever Become Dangerous? For Adults And Kids
There isn’t one single “danger line” for each person. Medical advice uses a mix of temperature cutoffs and “how you look” signals. The cutoffs below match what large clinical sources tell people to do, and they line up with how urgent care and ER triage tends to work.
Adults
For many adults, 103°F (39.4°C) is a common point where a call to a clinician is advised, even if you can still drink fluids and stay alert. Mayo Clinic lists 103°F as a threshold to call a health care provider, and it lists symptom triggers that warrant urgent evaluation even at lower numbers. Mayo Clinic fever thresholds and warning signs summarizes those adult call points.
Once a reading hits 104°F (40°C), many sources treat it as “get medical care soon,” since dehydration and strain on the body can ramp up. If the number reaches 105°F (40.6°C) or more, treat it as urgent.
Infants Under 3 Months
In early infancy, a fever is treated differently because infections can progress fast and babies cannot show symptoms the same way older kids do. A rectal temperature of 100.4°F (38°C) or higher in an infant under 3 months is a reason to get medical care right away, even if the baby seems calm.
Babies And Children 3 Months And Up
For older babies and kids, the temperature still matters, yet the child’s behavior can matter more. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises calling if fever goes above 104°F (40°C) and also lists other “call now” situations. AAP advice on when to call for a child’s fever lays out those age-based triggers.
A temperature of 105°F (40.6°C) is treated as an emergency threshold in many pediatric guides, even in older kids, because that level can be linked with severe illness or heat-related problems.
Higher-Risk Adults
Older adults and people with immune suppression or serious heart or lung disease can need earlier medical advice. If you’re in that group, treat a persistent fever as a reason to contact your care team sooner than a healthy adult would.
Symptoms That Make A Fever Dangerous At Any Number
The thermometer can’t tell you everything. Some symptoms point to dehydration, low oxygen, brain irritation, or serious infection. If any of the signs below show up, seek medical care even if the temperature is not “high.”
- Trouble breathing, blue lips, or chest pain
- New confusion, fainting, hard-to-wake sleepiness, or a sudden change in speech
- Stiff neck with a strong headache
- Seizure, repeated shaking chills, or a child who cannot be soothed
- Signs of dehydration: dry mouth, no tears, low urine output, or dizziness on standing
- New rash with fever, or purple spots that do not blanch when pressed
When Heat Illness Is In The Mix
Heat illness can drive temperature up fast, and it can be dangerous even when the person had no infection to start with. If someone has a high temperature after time in a hot space, heavy exercise, or a car, treat it as urgent. Move them to a cooler place and seek emergency care.
How To Measure Temperature So The Number Is Trustworthy
A shaky reading can lead to the wrong call. A simple measurement routine gets you closer to the truth.
Pick The Best Site For Age
- Infants and young toddlers: Rectal readings are often treated as the reference standard in medical advice.
- Older children and adults: Oral readings can work well if the person can keep the thermometer under the tongue and has not had a hot drink or cold drink in the last 15–20 minutes.
- Any age: Ear and forehead devices can be handy, yet technique matters. Follow the device instructions and repeat if the number feels off.
- Armpit: This can read lower and is best used as a screening check, not a final answer.
Fever Thresholds By Age And What To Do
This table pulls the most-used cutoffs into one place. It pairs the number with the next step. If symptoms from the red-flag list are present, skip straight to medical care.
| Age Or Situation | Temperature Trigger | What To Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| Under 3 months | ≥ 100.4°F (38.0°C) rectal | Get medical care right away |
| 3–6 months | Fever with poor feeding or low energy | Call a pediatric clinician the same day |
| 6–24 months | Fever lasting 24+ hours with no clear source | Call for advice; monitor hydration and behavior |
| Any child 3 months+ | ≥ 104°F (40.0°C) | Call a pediatric clinician; urgent care if not improving |
| Any child or teen | ≥ 105°F (40.6°C) | Emergency care |
| Adults | ≥ 103°F (39.4°C) or fever lasting 3+ days | Call a clinician; urgent care with red flags |
| Adults | ≥ 104°F (40.0°C) | Urgent medical care, especially with dehydration |
| Any age | High-end readings near 106°F (41.1°C) | Emergency care |
When you’re unsure which bucket fits, use a tiebreaker: how the person looks and behaves. An adult who is alert, drinking, and peeing can sometimes monitor at home with a clinician call. A baby who seems limp, won’t feed, or has fewer wet diapers needs faster care.
For adult self-care and “get help” triggers, the UK’s guidance on fever spells out when to contact urgent services if home care is not working. NHS advice on fever in adults lists symptoms and escalation steps that match common triage practice.
Why Fever Can Turn Risky
Fever is part of the immune response. The body raises its set point and you may feel hot, chilled, sweaty, or wiped out. That reaction can help fight infection, yet it also increases fluid loss and energy use.
Risk rises when the temperature is high, when the fever lasts, or when the fever is paired with dehydration or organ strain. Cleveland Clinic notes that untreated temperatures above 105.8°F (41°C) can be dangerous, in part because organs can start to malfunction at that level. Cleveland Clinic notes on high fever risks explains that risk band.
Common Causes In Daily Life
- Viral infections, like colds and flu
- Bacterial infections, like strep throat or a urinary infection
- Overheating and heat illness
The same number can come from many causes, so temperature alone can’t diagnose what’s happening.
Home Care That Keeps Fever From Spiraling
Home care is about comfort, hydration, and watching the pattern. Lowering the number is not always necessary if the person is alert and drinking. Treat the person, not the display on the thermometer.
Hydration And Cooling Habits
- Offer frequent sips of water, oral rehydration solution, broth, or clear soups.
- Dress in light layers and keep the room cool, not cold.
- Skip ice baths and alcohol rubs. They can cause shivering and can make the body work harder.
Fever Medicine Basics
Acetaminophen or ibuprofen can help with aches and help someone drink and rest. Follow the label for dosing, and use the child’s weight when a pediatric label says so. Avoid aspirin in children and teens due to the risk of Reye’s syndrome.
When To Get Urgent Care Or Emergency Help
Use the temperature cutoffs as one trigger, then add the symptom list as the second trigger. If either one points to urgent care, act on it.
Same-Day Medical Care Triggers
- Adult fever at or above 103°F (39.4°C)
- Child fever at or above 104°F (40°C)
- Fever that is rising fast across repeated checks
- Fever with dehydration signs
Emergency Triggers
- Any infant under 3 months with 100.4°F (38°C) or higher
- Any age with a fever at 105°F (40.6°C) or higher
- Seizure, severe confusion, stiff neck, trouble breathing, or blue lips
- Signs of heat illness with a high temperature
Quick Scenarios To Help You Decide
These patterns mirror how clinicians triage fever calls.
| Scenario | Watch Closely At Home | Get Medical Care |
|---|---|---|
| Adult with 101–102°F, drinking, alert | Fluids, rest, recheck, treat discomfort | If fever lasts 3+ days or symptoms worsen |
| Adult with 103°F | Hydrate while you plan the next step | Call a clinician the same day; urgent care with red flags |
| Child with 102°F who is playful and drinking | Monitor, focus on fluids and sleep | If child becomes hard to wake or stops drinking |
| Child with 104°F | None | Call pediatric clinician; urgent care if not improving |
| Baby under 3 months with 100.4°F+ | None | Emergency evaluation |
| High temperature after heat exposure | Move to cool place while help is on the way | Emergency care |
A Simple Rule Set For The Next Time
If you want one clean way to act without overthinking it, use this set of checks:
- Check age first. Under 3 months changes the whole decision.
- Check the number next. 103°F for adults and 104°F for kids are common “call today” lines.
- Scan for red flags. Breathing trouble, stiff neck, seizure, dehydration, or confusion means urgent care.
- Track the pattern. A fever that climbs, lasts, or keeps returning is a reason to get medical advice.
- Focus on fluids and comfort. A calmer, hydrated person tends to do better while you sort the cause.
References & Sources
- Mayo Clinic.“Fever – Symptoms & causes.”Lists adult call thresholds and symptom warning signs.
- American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org).“Fever: When to Call the Pediatrician.”Gives age-based fever guidance and when to seek care for children.
- NHS.“High temperature (fever) in adults.”Explains adult self-care and when to seek medical help.
- Cleveland Clinic.“Fever.”Describes risks linked with high body temperature.
