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What Drugs Should Not Be Taken With Benzonatate?

February 11, 2026


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Benzonatate is a prescription cough suppressant that works by numbing the stretch receptors in your lungs and airways. It is generally well tolerated when taken on its own. But when combined with certain other medications, it can increase drowsiness, slow your breathing, or worsen side effects like confusion. The main drugs to be careful with are opioids, benzodiazepines, antihistamines, other cough suppressants, muscle relaxants, sleep medications, and alcohol.

Why Do Drug Interactions With Benzonatate Matter?

Benzonatate can cause side effects like drowsiness, dizziness, and sedation on its own. When you add another medication that causes similar effects, those side effects can stack up. This is sometimes called an additive effect. What might be mild drowsiness from one medication can become heavy sedation or dangerously slowed breathing when two are combined.

Benzonatate is also chemically related to a group of local anesthetics like tetracaine and procaine. That means combining it with other numbing agents could amplify numbness in ways your body does not expect. This is one of the reasons your doctor or pharmacist needs to know every medication you take before starting benzonatate.

Opioid Pain Medications

This is one of the most important combinations to avoid. Opioids like oxycodone, hydrocodone, codeine, and morphine are central nervous system (CNS) depressants. They slow brain activity, which is how they reduce pain. But they also slow your breathing.

Benzonatate can add to that sedation. When the two are taken together, the risk of excessive drowsiness, confusion, and respiratory depression goes up. Respiratory depression means your breathing becomes dangerously slow or shallow. This is especially concerning if you are already taking higher doses of an opioid or if you are older.

If you need both a cough suppressant and a pain medication, your doctor can help find a safer combination or adjust your doses.

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Mixing these medications significantly raises your risk of dangerous respiratory depression because both drugs can slow your breathing. Most doctors prefer to find an alternative for one of the medications to avoid this interaction.

Benzodiazepines and Anti Anxiety Medications

Benzodiazepines like diazepam (Valium), lorazepam (Ativan), and alprazolam (Xanax) are commonly prescribed for anxiety, panic disorders, and insomnia. They work by calming the central nervous system. That calming effect is exactly what makes them risky alongside benzonatate.

Taking both together can lead to over sedation, impaired coordination, and difficulty thinking clearly. Other anxiety medications like buspirone and hydroxyzine can also increase drowsiness when combined with benzonatate. If you take any of these medications regularly, let your prescriber know before starting benzonatate. They may suggest a different cough treatment that does not carry the same risks.

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Combining these drugs can cause excessive sedation or confusion because they both act to calm the central nervous system. You should check with your doctor to see if your current dosage needs adjustment while you are using a cough suppressant.

Over the Counter Cough and Cold Medications

Many people reach for over the counter cold remedies without thinking twice. But several of these products contain ingredients that do not pair well with benzonatate.

Here are the main ones to watch for:

  • Dextromethorphan (DXM): This is found in many cough syrups and cold products. Although it works differently than benzonatate, taking both cough suppressants at the same time can over suppress your cough reflex. It can also increase the chance of dizziness and confusion.
  • First generation antihistamines: Medications like diphenhydramine (Benadryl) and doxylamine (found in Nyquil) cause significant drowsiness. Combining them with benzonatate adds to that sedation and can impair your ability to drive or stay alert.

The tricky part is that many combination cold and flu products contain multiple active ingredients. A single product might include both an antihistamine and a cough suppressant. Always read the label carefully, or ask your pharmacist to check before taking any OTC cold medication alongside benzonatate.

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Taking multiple cough suppressants can over-suppress your cough reflex, which is your body's natural way of clearing your airways. Many over-the-counter options also contain hidden antihistamines that intensify side effects like drowsiness.

Muscle Relaxants and Sleep Medications

Muscle relaxants like cyclobenzaprine and tizanidine are prescribed for pain and muscle spasms. Sleep medications, including prescription options like zolpidem (Ambien) and over the counter sleep aids, are designed to make you drowsy. Both of these drug categories are CNS depressants.

Combining them with benzonatate raises the risk of excessive sedation. You may feel extremely drowsy, confused, or unsteady on your feet. If you are taking a muscle relaxant or sleep aid, your doctor may recommend spacing them out from your benzonatate dose or choosing a different cough medication entirely.

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Combining these substances can lead to heavy sedation and confusion, potentially making it very difficult to wake up or stay alert. It effectively stacks the sedative effects of both medications on top of one another.

Local Anesthetics

This one is less commonly discussed, but still worth knowing. Benzonatate belongs to the same chemical family as local anesthetics like tetracaine, procaine, and lidocaine. If you are using other numbing agents, whether topical creams, dental anesthetics, or injectable local anesthetics for a procedure, combining them with benzonatate could amplify the numbing effect beyond what is expected.

This is a rare concern for most people. But if you have a dental appointment or a minor procedure scheduled while taking benzonatate, mention it to your provider so they can adjust accordingly.

MAO Inhibitors and Certain Antidepressants

Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) are an older class of antidepressants. While no direct interaction with benzonatate has been firmly established, MAOIs can affect how your body processes other drugs. Combining them with benzonatate may increase the risk of side effects like low blood pressure or heightened CNS effects.

Tricyclic antidepressants may carry a similar caution. If you take any type of antidepressant, it is a good idea to discuss this with your doctor before adding benzonatate.

Alcohol

Alcohol is a CNS depressant on its own. Drinking while taking benzonatate can intensify drowsiness, dizziness, and impaired coordination. It can also affect your ability to swallow the capsule properly. This matters because benzonatate capsules must be swallowed whole. If the capsule dissolves in your mouth, it can numb your throat and airway, which can lead to choking.

The safest approach is to avoid alcohol entirely while taking benzonatate.

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Drinking alcohol while using this medication can amplify dizziness and sedation to unsafe levels. Additionally, alcohol can impair your ability to swallow the capsule whole, which creates a choking hazard.

What Is Safe to Take With Benzonatate?

It is generally safe to take benzonatate with common pain relievers like acetaminophen (Tylenol) or ibuprofen (Advil). Decongestants like pseudoephedrine are also typically fine. Expectorants like guaifenesin (Mucinex), which help thin mucus, can usually be used alongside benzonatate without issues.

That said, always double check with your pharmacist, especially if you are taking a combination product that might contain hidden ingredients like antihistamines or dextromethorphan.

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You can typically use common pain relievers like acetaminophen or ibuprofen without concern, as they do not interact with your cough medication. Expectorants like guaifenesin are also usually acceptable for thinning mucus.

When Should You Talk to Your Doctor?

If you experience heavy drowsiness, confusion, hallucinations, difficulty breathing, or chest numbness while taking benzonatate with any other medication, seek medical attention right away. Even if a combination seems harmless, everyone responds differently. Your doctor or pharmacist is the best person to review your full medication list and confirm that benzonatate is safe for you.

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