DrugPair

DrugPair safety checker

Drug interaction checker

Add medicines, supplements, fruits, foods, and drinks. DrugPair reduces trusted source data before AI explains it in plain English.

Check medicines, supplements, foods, drinks, and fruits

DrugPair checks trusted sources, applies local safety rules, then asks Doctor Pro AI to explain the results in plain English.

Examples

Selected items (0/10)

Add medicines to check for interactions

Start with two items — for example a prescription plus a food or supplement.

DrugPair provides educational safety information only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always ask a doctor or pharmacist before changing medicines, supplements, food, drinks, or prescription timing.

Check prescription medicines, over-the-counter drugs, supplements, foods, and drinks together.

Review source-backed safety information and locally curated interaction warnings in plain English.

Use the result to prepare better questions for a licensed doctor or pharmacist before changing treatment.

How the checker works

DrugPair normalizes items, retrieves compact public evidence, applies a limited curated rule set, and may use AI to explain the reduced evidence.

Evidence coverage varies. AI is an explanation layer, not a medical source or a guarantee of completeness.

Read the full methodology

Do not wait for an app in an emergency

For trouble breathing, collapse, severe bleeding, chest pain, severe confusion, or a suspected overdose, contact local emergency services or poison control now.

DrugPair is not an emergency service and cannot assess your personal condition.

Sources and editorial accountability

Written by DrugPair Editorial Team. Updated 16 July 2026. A licensed-clinician review is not yet documented; see the medical review policy.

Checker questions and limitations

Does a no-interaction result prove a combination is safe?

No. Databases and local rules can be incomplete, and DrugPair cannot account for every dose, condition, allergy, pregnancy, laboratory result, or personal risk. Confirm important decisions with a pharmacist or prescriber.

What does the AI do?

The AI turns reduced evidence into a plain-language educational explanation. It is not the source of the medical evidence and does not replace clinical judgment.

What should I do in an emergency?

For severe symptoms such as trouble breathing, collapse, severe bleeding, chest pain, or a suspected overdose, contact local emergency services or poison control immediately instead of waiting for an app result.

DrugPair provides educational safety information only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always ask a doctor or pharmacist before changing medicines, supplements, food, drinks, or prescription timing.