If you moved to DFW and suddenly can't breathe, congratulations. You've discovered DFW allergies.
Why DFW is allergy hell:
- Cedar (mountain cedar from central TX blows north). Season: December-February.
- Oak pollen. Season: March-May. This is the big one.
- Ragweed. Season: August-November.
- Grass pollen. Season: April-June.
- Mold. Season: year-round thanks to humidity.
- Source: AAFA (Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America) ranks DFW as a top-10 allergy capital annually.
Best allergists in DFW:
- Allergy & Asthma Network of Texas (multiple) — extensive testing, immunotherapy. Source: Google Reviews 4.7/5.
- UT Southwestern allergy clinic — academic center, latest treatments. Source: utswmed.org
- Texas Health allergy specialists — throughout the network.
Over-the-counter arsenal:
- Flonase (fluticasone) nasal spray — START 2 weeks before your bad season. Game changer.
- Zyrtec (cetirizine) or Allegra (fexofenadine) — daily oral antihistamine. Claritin works too but is weaker for most DFW sufferers.
- Saline nasal rinse (NeilMed Sinus Rinse) — weird at first, life-changing.
Long-term solutions:
- Allergy shots (immunotherapy) — 3-5 year commitment, covered by most insurance. Closest thing to a cure.
- Sublingual drops — newer, can do at home. Ask your allergist.
DFW allergy forecast:
- Check pollen.com daily. Filter by Dallas or Fort Worth zip code.
- KVUE allergy forecast (kvue.com) covers central TX but relevant for cedar.
Sources:
- AAFA allergy capitals report
- pollen.com daily forecasts
- American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
Welcome to DFW. Buy stock in Flonase.
Agree or disagree?
If you just moved here and "never had allergies before" — give it one year. DFW will find your weakness.