A stone in the ureter can mimic a UTI with burning and urgency, but wave-like side or back pain and blood in urine lean stone.
Burning when you pee. That constant “I have to go” feeling. Pressure low in your belly. If you’ve had a urinary tract infection before, those sensations can feel familiar fast.
Here’s the twist: a kidney stone can trigger many of the same signals. A stone irritates the urinary tract as it moves, and your bladder can react like it’s under attack. So you can end up treating the wrong problem, delaying relief, or missing a problem that needs quick care.
This article helps you sort the overlap without guesswork. You’ll learn which signs point more toward a stone, which fit a UTI, what home clues mean (and what they don’t), and when it’s time to get checked the same day.
Can A Kidney Stone Feel Like A UTI? What Symptoms Share
Yes, the overlap is real. Both issues can cause:
- Burning or pain with urination
- Frequent trips to the bathroom
- Urgency, even when little comes out
- Lower belly discomfort
- Cloudy or odd-smelling urine
- Blood in urine (visible or only found on a test)
Kidney stones can also cause a constant need to urinate and pain while urinating, along with blood in urine and urine that looks cloudy or smells bad. Those are listed among common stone symptoms by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). NIDDK kidney stone symptoms lays out that overlap clearly.
UTIs can cause burning, frequent urination, lower belly pressure, cloudy urine, and fever. MedlinePlus includes these classic signs and also notes that back or side pain can happen too, which is why this can get confusing. MedlinePlus UTI symptoms is a solid snapshot of what people report.
So if the lists overlap, what actually separates them? Two things tend to do the heavy lifting: the pain pattern and the “whole-body” signs like fever and chills.
Pain pattern: The clue most people miss
UTI discomfort often sits low: pressure in the pelvis, a tender feeling over the bladder, or a burning sting during urination. The pain can feel steady through the day, with flare-ups when you pee.
Stone pain is more of a drama queen. When a stone moves into the ureter (the tube from kidney to bladder), pain can spike fast, then ease, then spike again. People describe it as coming in waves. It can start in the back or side under the ribs, then travel toward the lower abdomen or groin as the stone shifts position.
Mayo Clinic notes that kidney stone symptoms may start when stones move into the ureters, and can include serious pain, nausea, vomiting, fever, chills, and blood in urine. Mayo Clinic kidney stone symptoms is helpful when you want a plain-language checklist.
One more detail that matters: stone pain can show up even when you’re not peeing. A lot of people expect “burning = UTI,” then get thrown when the worst pain hits while sitting still or trying to sleep. Stones can do that.
Where the pain is felt
Location doesn’t diagnose you, but it can steer you:
- Stone lean: one-sided flank pain (side/back), pain that shoots toward the groin, pain that surges and eases.
- UTI lean: pelvic pressure, lower belly discomfort, burning mainly during urination.
Both can cause back pain. A kidney infection (a type of UTI that reaches the kidneys) can cause back or side pain with high fever, chills, nausea, and vomiting. Mayo Clinic breaks down UTI symptoms by where the infection sits in the tract. Mayo Clinic UTI symptom chart is a clean way to see that split.
Fever, chills, and feeling sick: A fast sorting tool
Fever changes the vibe. A simple bladder infection can cause fever, but high fever with chills, nausea, or vomiting raises concern for a kidney infection. That needs prompt care.
Stones can also come with nausea and vomiting, mostly because severe pain can make your stomach flip. Fever with a stone can mean something else is going on too, like infection plus blockage. That combo can turn serious quickly.
If you have fever plus back/side pain, don’t play “wait and see” for days. Get checked the same day.
Urine clues: What you can see at home
Urine changes are another overlap zone, but a few patterns can help.
Blood in urine
Pink, red, or brown urine can happen with stones. NIDDK lists blood in urine as a stone symptom, and Mayo Clinic also notes it as a common sign. A UTI can also cause blood in urine, so blood alone doesn’t pick the winner.
Still, blood paired with wave-like flank pain leans stone. Blood paired with burning, cloudy urine, and lower belly pressure leans UTI.
Cloudy or strong-smelling urine
Cloudy urine and strong odor show up a lot with UTIs. Stones can also irritate the tract and lead to cloudy urine, so this clue works best in a bundle, not alone.
Home test strips
Over-the-counter urine dipsticks can show things like leukocytes or nitrites. A positive result can line up with infection, but false positives and false negatives happen. A stone can cause blood, and irritation can raise markers too.
Use test strips as a nudge to seek care, not as a final answer.
Timing and triggers: How the story unfolds
Ask yourself how this started.
- Stone story: pain shows up fast, ramps up hard, comes in waves, may shift location over hours. You might pace, can’t get comfy, and feel the pain in one side.
- UTI story: urinary symptoms creep in over a day or two, with burning, urgency, frequency, and pelvic pressure as the main plot.
Both stories can blur. A small stone near the bladder can feel like a bladder infection. A UTI that climbs can feel like a stone. That’s why you pair the story with the red flags below.
Red flags that should push you to get checked now
These signs deserve urgent evaluation:
- Fever with shaking chills
- Severe flank pain that won’t let you sit still
- Nausea or vomiting that blocks fluids
- Visible blood in urine
- Trouble passing urine, weak stream, or you can’t pee
- Pregnancy with urinary pain or bleeding
- Single kidney, kidney disease history, or transplant history with new urinary symptoms
Mayo Clinic lists fever and chills as symptoms that can occur with kidney stones, and its UTI guidance links fever/chills and back/side pain to kidney involvement. Those combinations raise the stakes. Use the symptom sets as a safety check, not a self-diagnosis stamp.
How clinicians separate a stone from a UTI
In a clinic or urgent care, the first step is usually a urine test. It can show blood, signs of inflammation, and sometimes markers that point toward infection. If infection is suspected, a urine culture may be sent to identify bacteria and help match the right antibiotic.
If a stone is suspected, imaging may be used. Some settings use an ultrasound first; others use a CT scan based on symptoms and risk. The goal is to see if a stone is present, where it is, and whether it’s blocking urine flow.
The reason this matters: a blocked urinary tract plus infection can become dangerous fast. This is one situation where speed matters more than toughness.
| Clue | Stone more likely | UTI more likely |
|---|---|---|
| Pain pattern | Surges in waves, can be intense, hard to get comfortable | Steady burning or ache, worse during urination |
| Pain location | One-sided back/side under ribs, may move toward groin | Lower belly pressure, pelvic discomfort |
| Urinary frequency/urgency | Can happen, often stronger if stone is near bladder | Common and usually central to the complaint |
| Blood in urine | Common, can be visible or only on testing | Can happen, more common with bladder irritation |
| Cloudy or bad-smelling urine | Can happen from irritation | Common, especially with bacterial infection |
| Fever and chills | Concerning if present; may suggest infection on top of stone | More suggestive of kidney infection when paired with back/side pain |
| Nausea/vomiting | Common with severe stone pain | Can occur, more typical with kidney infection than bladder infection |
| Relief after peeing | Often no clear relief | Sometimes brief relief, then urgency returns |
| Onset | Can start suddenly and escalate fast | Often builds over a day or two |
What you can do at home while you arrange care
If symptoms are mild and there are no red flags, you can take a few steps that fit either situation while you line up evaluation.
Hydration, but don’t force it
Sip water and keep urine a lighter color if you can. If you’re vomiting or can’t keep fluids down, that’s a reason to seek care now.
Pain control
Over-the-counter pain relief may help, but follow label directions and avoid anything you can’t take based on your health history. If pain is severe or you have kidney disease, talk with a clinician before taking new meds.
Track the pattern
Write down:
- Where the pain started and where it is now
- Whether it surges in waves or stays steady
- Any fever (use a thermometer if you can)
- Any blood you can see in urine
- How often you’re peeing and whether you can empty your bladder
This makes the visit smoother and reduces missed details when you’re tired and hurting.
When it’s probably not “just a UTI”
People often assume burning means infection. A few scenarios push against that assumption:
- You have intense one-sided flank pain, even if urination also burns.
- You see blood in urine along with wave-like pain.
- You have repeated “UTIs” that never show bacteria on culture.
- Antibiotics haven’t helped after 48–72 hours, and pain is rising.
A stone can sit near the bladder and create urgency and burning without a true infection. That’s one reason urine testing and, at times, imaging matter.
What a confirmed diagnosis changes
Once you know what it is, the next steps look different.
If it’s a UTI
Treatment is usually antibiotics when bacteria are the cause, guided by symptoms and testing. You may also get advice on pain relief and hydration. If symptoms point to kidney infection, care tends to be more urgent and can involve stronger treatment.
If it’s a stone
Management depends on stone size and location, your symptoms, and whether urine flow is blocked. Small stones can pass on their own, with pain control and fluids. Some people are given medication to help the stone pass. Larger stones or ongoing blockage may need a procedure.
NIDDK’s stone guidance lists symptoms that can show up when stones affect urine flow, like trouble urinating or only passing small amounts. That’s a reason not to wait it out if you feel blocked.
| Situation | What to do | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Fever with back/side pain | Same-day urgent evaluation | Could be kidney infection or infection plus blockage |
| Severe wave-like flank pain | Urgent care or ER if uncontrolled | Fits ureter stone pattern; may need imaging and stronger pain relief |
| Visible blood in urine | Get checked soon | Stones and infections can do this; other causes exist too |
| Can’t pee or only dribbles | Emergency evaluation | Blockage can harm the kidney and raises risk if infection is present |
| Mild burning and frequency, no fever | Schedule evaluation and urine test | Testing guides treatment and avoids wrong meds |
| Vomiting or can’t keep fluids down | Urgent evaluation | Dehydration worsens symptoms and complicates care |
| Pregnancy with urinary pain | Contact obstetric care team promptly | Pregnancy changes risk and treatment choices |
| Repeat episodes or symptoms that keep returning | Ask about culture results and stone risk workup | Recurring issues may need targeted prevention |
How to lower your odds of each problem
You can’t control every risk, but a few habits tilt the odds.
For fewer UTIs
- Drink enough fluids so you’re not running on dark urine all day.
- Don’t hold urine for long stretches.
- If you’re prone to UTIs, ask a clinician whether you need a prevention plan based on your personal triggers.
For fewer stones
- Hydrate steadily through the day, not in one big burst at night.
- If you’ve passed a stone before, ask about stone analysis and urine testing. Prevention changes by stone type.
- Be cautious with extreme dieting patterns and dehydration-prone routines.
NIDDK’s stone overview lists causes and symptom patterns that can guide prevention planning after a confirmed stone.
A simple way to decide your next step today
If you have burning and urgency with no fever and no severe side/back pain, a urine test soon is a smart next move. It can confirm infection and guide treatment.
If you have wave-like one-sided flank pain, nausea with pain, visible blood in urine, or you can’t pee normally, treat it as urgent. Those patterns fit stones and also overlap with kidney infection, which needs prompt care.
If you’re stuck between the two, that’s normal. The overlap is why urine testing and, at times, imaging exist. The goal is quick relief and avoiding the few scenarios where waiting can go badly.
References & Sources
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK).“Symptoms & Causes of Kidney Stones.”Lists common kidney stone symptoms such as flank pain, blood in urine, urgency, and pain with urination.
- MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine).“Urinary Tract Infections.”Summarizes frequent UTI symptoms like burning, urgency, lower belly pressure, fever, and urine changes.
- Mayo Clinic.“Kidney stones: Symptoms and causes.”Explains how stone symptoms often begin when a stone moves into the ureter and can include severe pain, nausea, and blood in urine.
- Mayo Clinic.“Urinary tract infection (UTI): Symptoms and causes.”Breaks UTI symptoms down by location (kidney, bladder, urethra), including fever/chills with kidney involvement.
