Specific situations

What to do if you miss a dose of medication

A missed dose is common and usually fixable. The instinct to 'double up' is often the real risk. Here's a calm walk-through — and when to call your pharmacist.

By Pill Reminder Kit editorial team · Published May 15, 2026 · Updated May 20, 2026 · ~4 min read

This is general information, not medical advice, and it cannot tell you what to do for your specific medication. Different drugs have very different rules for a missed dose, and the only reliable answers come from the label, the patient information leaflet, or your pharmacist. The goal of this guide is to help you stay calm, ask the right question, and make the next miss less likely.

First: don’t reach for the “double up” instinct

The most common reaction to a missed dose is to take two next time to “catch up.” For many medications that instinct is the actual risk — more so than the miss itself. A skipped dose is often a minor, recoverable event; an unplanned double dose can be a different and larger problem depending on the drug. This is precisely why the generic answer is “check the specific guidance,” not “take it as soon as you remember” — because that common rule is true for some medications and wrong for others.

Where the correct answer actually lives

For your specific medication, the trustworthy sources, in order of convenience:

If you took a double dose by accident and feel any new symptoms, treat that as a reason to contact a pharmacist, clinician, or your local emergency or poison service promptly — don’t wait it out to see.

A calm general approach

While the specifics vary, the calm process is consistent:

  1. Don’t panic and don’t auto-correct. A single miss is rarely an emergency. Resist the reflex to immediately double up.
  2. Check the specific rule for that medication using one of the sources above before taking anything extra.
  3. Follow that rule, then resume the normal schedule. Don’t keep shifting every subsequent dose to compensate.
  4. Log what happened. Note the miss so you and, if relevant, your clinician can see a pattern rather than a one-off.

Stopping the next miss

A single missed dose is normal. A pattern of missed doses is the thing worth fixing, and it usually has a structural cause rather than a willpower one. The durable fixes are well established:

The behavioral evidence behind these is covered in the medication adherence guide, night doses (the most-missed) have their own night-time guide, and caregivers managing someone else’s regimen should read the aging-parent setup guide.

How a reminder app fits in

A reminder app can’t tell you the safe action for a specific missed medication — and any app that confidently does should be treated with suspicion. What it can do is prevent the next miss and remove the “I’m not sure if I took it” uncertainty that leads to accidental double doses. That’s the realistic, honest scope: not clinical judgment, just fewer misses and a record you can trust.

Frequently asked questions

If I miss a dose, should I take it as soon as I remember?

Sometimes yes, sometimes no — it depends on the specific medication and how close the next dose is. Check the prescription label, the patient information leaflet, or ask your pharmacist for the rule for your drug.

Is it safe to take a double dose to catch up?

Often no. For many medications, doubling up is the riskier choice. Always check the specific rule for your drug before taking extra.

When should I call a pharmacist about a missed dose?

Whenever you're unsure, whenever the medication has explicit doubling-up warnings, and any time you accidentally took a double dose and feel any new symptoms.

How do I stop missing doses in the future?

Anchor the dose to an existing daily habit, keep the bottle visible at the anchor, set a reminder that names the specific medication, and log it with one tap. Patterns of missed doses are almost always structural — fix the structure.

Sources

  1. NHS. What should I do if I miss a dose of my medication?

Published May 15, 2026 · Updated May 20, 2026

Pill Reminder Kit is a wellness tool, not a medical device. Nothing on this page is medical advice. See our medical disclaimer for the full statement.