Symptoms, Safety & Diagnosis

Can hemorrhoids go away on their own?

Medically reviewed by Dr. Robert William, MD · Written by Kevin Schwaner · Updated July 2026

Quick Answer

Many mild hemorrhoids resolve within days to two weeks with conservative care: more fiber and water, less straining and toilet time, sitz baths, and gentle cleansing. Recurring or severe hemorrhoids are less likely to clear without addressing the causes, and internal vein support plus fiber help reduce how often they return. Persistent or bleeding hemorrhoids should be evaluated.

Mild hemorrhoids often settle on their own once you remove what is aggravating them. The core moves are softening the stool with fiber and water, keeping toilet time short and strain-free, taking warm sitz baths, and cleansing gently. Most flares improve within a few days to two weeks with that consistency.

What does not reliably self-resolve is the pattern. If you are on your third or fourth flare this year, the underlying vein weakness and lifestyle triggers are still in place, so the hemorrhoids keep coming back. That is where daily fiber and internal vein support earn their place, and where a doctor visit makes sense if symptoms persist beyond a couple of weeks or bleeding continues.

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Sources

  • NIH / NIDDK: Hemorrhoids
  • ASCRS Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Hemorrhoids
  • Alonso-Coello P, et al. Fiber for the treatment of hemorrhoid complications (systematic review & meta-analysis)

Related Questions

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*Informational only, not a substitute for professional medical advice. Any rectal bleeding should be evaluated by a doctor. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.