Ibuprofen vs Acetaminophen: Which Should You Take?
Informational only — not medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider or pharmacist before taking any medication. In case of overdose call Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222 (US) or 911.

Ibuprofen and acetaminophen are the two most common over-the-counter pain relievers, and the main difference is simple: ibuprofen is an anti-inflammatory NSAID, while acetaminophen (the active ingredient in Tylenol) relieves pain and fever without reducing inflammation. That single distinction drives everything else — which one works better for your specific ache, how each affects your stomach, kidneys, and liver, and why the two can safely be combined. This guide compares them head to head so you can pick confidently, or use both when one alone isn’t enough.
Ibuprofen is sold as Advil and Motrin; acetaminophen is sold as Tylenol and is called paracetamol outside North America. Both are effective, inexpensive, and widely trusted. But they are not interchangeable, and the “best” one is the one that matches your symptom and your health history.
Ibuprofen vs acetaminophen: quick comparison
The table below summarizes the practical differences. The sections that follow explain what each one means for a real decision.
| Feature | Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) | Acetaminophen (Tylenol) |
|---|---|---|
| Drug class | NSAID | Analgesic / antipyretic (non-NSAID) |
| Reduces inflammation? | Yes | No (little to none) |
| Reduces fever? | Yes | Yes |
| Onset | About 20–30 min | About 30–60 min |
| Duration per dose | 6–8 hours | 4–6 hours |
| Best for | Sprains, arthritis, cramps, dental & injury pain | Headache, fever, general aches, sensitive stomach |
| Main organ risk | Stomach, kidneys, heart/blood pressure | Liver (in overdose) |
| Take with food? | Yes, reduces stomach upset | Not required |
| Typical OTC single dose (adult) | 200–400 mg | 500–1,000 mg |
How do ibuprofen and acetaminophen work differently?
The reason these two drugs feel similar but behave differently comes down to where and how they act.
Ibuprofen blocks enzymes called COX-1 and COX-2, which your body uses to make prostaglandins — signaling chemicals that produce pain, fever, and inflammation. By shutting down prostaglandin production at the site of injury, ibuprofen tackles all three, which is why it excels at swollen, inflamed pain. The same enzyme-blocking, however, removes prostaglandins’ protective jobs: guarding the stomach lining and maintaining blood flow to the kidneys. That is the root of ibuprofen’s side effects.
Acetaminophen works mainly in the central nervous system, raising the body’s pain threshold and acting on the brain’s temperature-control center to bring down fever. It has little effect on prostaglandins in the rest of the body, so it does not calm inflammation — and does not irritate the stomach or stress the kidneys the way NSAIDs can. Its weakness is in the liver: the body breaks acetaminophen down into a toxic byproduct that the liver normally neutralizes, but in overdose that safety system is overwhelmed. For a deeper look at the class distinction, see is Tylenol an NSAID?.
Which is better for pain?
The honest answer is it depends on the type of pain — specifically, whether inflammation is part of the picture.
Ibuprofen usually wins for inflammatory pain:
- Sprains, strains, and sports injuries
- Arthritis and joint flares
- Menstrual cramps (prostaglandins drive the cramping)
- Dental pain and pain after minor procedures
- Sore, swollen muscles
Acetaminophen is a strong first choice for:
- Tension headaches and many migraines
- General aches, colds, and flu discomfort
- Pain in people who can’t take NSAIDs (see below)
- Osteoarthritis pain in some patients, per doctor guidance
For everyday headache, studies find both work well, and acetaminophen is often preferred because it avoids NSAID stomach risk. For a swollen ankle or period cramps, ibuprofen’s anti-inflammatory action typically gives better relief. The brand-name version of this same comparison is covered in Advil vs Tylenol.
Which is better for fever?
Both are effective fever reducers (antipyretics), and clinical studies show similar overall results. The practical differences are timing and duration:
- Onset: both start working within roughly 30–60 minutes.
- Duration: ibuprofen typically lasts 6–8 hours per dose; acetaminophen lasts 4–6 hours, so it may need more frequent dosing.
For adults, either is fine for fever — choose based on your stomach and health profile. For children, both are used, but the dose is weight-based and the products differ by age; always follow the Drug Facts label and confirm with your pediatrician. Because they are different classes, some caregivers alternate them for a stubborn fever — see alternating Tylenol and ibuprofen for kids.
Which is easier on the stomach and kidneys?
This is where acetaminophen has a clear edge.
Because acetaminophen is not an NSAID, it does not irritate the stomach lining, does not raise the risk of ulcers or gastrointestinal bleeding, and does not reduce blood flow to the kidneys. That makes it the go-to option for people with sensitive stomachs, a history of ulcers, or kidney concerns.
Ibuprofen, like all NSAIDs, can cause:
- Stomach upset, gastritis, ulcers, and bleeding — risk rises with higher doses, longer use, older age, alcohol, and blood thinners. Taking it with food helps.
- Reduced kidney function, especially in people who are dehydrated, older, or already have kidney disease.
- Higher blood pressure and added strain on the heart with regular use.
If NSAIDs are off-limits If your doctor has told you to avoid NSAIDs — because of ulcers, kidney disease, heart failure, uncontrolled high blood pressure, or a blood thinner — acetaminophen is usually the recommended alternative. Confirm your personal maximum with your provider.
Which is harder on the liver?
Here the trade-off reverses. Acetaminophen’s main serious risk is liver injury, and it happens when the daily maximum is exceeded — often accidentally, by combining Tylenol with cold and flu products that also contain acetaminophen.
The over-the-counter Extra Strength Tylenol label caps the day at 3,000 mg, with 4,000 mg as a traditional medical ceiling for healthy adults. Staying within the label, most people use acetaminophen safely for years. But because early overdose symptoms are mild or absent, respecting the limit matters — see Tylenol and liver damage and the maximum dose in 24 hours. Ibuprofen, by contrast, is not a major liver concern; its risks lie in the stomach, kidneys, and heart.
Who should be cautious with each?
Both drugs are generally safe for healthy adults at label doses, but specific groups should favor one over the other.
| Situation | Ibuprofen (NSAID) | Acetaminophen |
|---|---|---|
| Ulcers / GI bleeding history | Avoid or use with caution | Usually preferred |
| Kidney disease | Use with caution / avoid | Usually preferred |
| Heart failure / high blood pressure | Use with caution | Usually preferred |
| On blood thinners | Higher bleeding risk | Usually preferred |
| Liver disease | Often the safer choice | Use less; ask a doctor |
| Regular alcohol use | GI bleeding risk | Liver risk — limit dose |
| Pregnancy | Generally avoided, esp. 3rd trimester | Often first choice — see below |
| Asthma (NSAID-sensitive) | Can trigger symptoms | Usually tolerated |
During pregnancy, acetaminophen is commonly used as the first-choice pain reliever, while NSAIDs like ibuprofen are generally avoided — especially in the third trimester. Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest time and follow your OB-GYN’s guidance; more detail is in our pregnancy section. For alcohol, both carry cautions for different organs: ibuprofen for stomach bleeding, acetaminophen for the liver.
Can you take ibuprofen and acetaminophen together?
Yes — and this is one of the most useful facts on this page. Because ibuprofen and acetaminophen are different drug classes, processed by different organs, they do not “double up” on the same risks. Taking them together, or staggering them, can relieve moderate pain better than either alone, which is why hospitals and dentists often recommend the combination.
Two safe approaches:
- Together: take a dose of each at the same time.
- Staggered: offset them (for example, acetaminophen, then ibuprofen three hours later) to keep steadier relief between doses.
The key rule is to track each drug separately against its own daily maximum, since they don’t share a limit. For step-by-step timing and dose numbers, see can you take Tylenol and ibuprofen together? and the combined dosing guide.
- Swelling, sprains, cramps, arthritis: ibuprofen (if your stomach/kidneys/heart allow).
- Headache, fever, general aches: acetaminophen is a gentle first choice.
- Sensitive stomach, kidney issues, blood thinners, pregnancy: acetaminophen.
- Liver disease or heavy drinking: ibuprofen may be safer — ask your doctor.
- Pain not controlled by one: combine or stagger both.
Dosing basics for adults
Always follow the Drug Facts label on your specific product; the figures below are typical over-the-counter ranges for healthy adults.
- Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin): commonly 200–400 mg every 4–6 hours as needed, with food; do not exceed the label maximum (often 1,200 mg/day for OTC use without a doctor’s direction).
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol): Extra Strength is 1,000 mg (two 500 mg tablets) every 6 hours; stay at or below the label maximum of 3,000 mg/day for self-care.
For both, the real-world danger is combination products. Acetaminophen hides in cold, flu, sinus, and “PM” remedies; ibuprofen appears in some sinus and multi-symptom formulas. Read every panel and add up the total.
How each is processed by the body
Understanding where each drug goes explains its risk profile. Ibuprofen is absorbed quickly, works throughout the body’s tissues by blocking COX enzymes, and is cleared largely through the kidneys — which is why kidney health and hydration matter when you take it. Its action on the stomach lining is direct and local as well as systemic, so food buffers it.
Acetaminophen is absorbed fast and processed mainly by the liver. Most of it is broken down harmlessly, but a small fraction becomes a reactive byproduct (NAPQI) that the liver neutralizes using a protective molecule called glutathione. At normal doses this system keeps up easily. In overdose — or when glutathione is depleted by heavy alcohol use, fasting, or malnutrition — the byproduct can build up and injure liver cells. This is exactly why the daily maximum, and the cautions for drinkers and people with liver disease, exist. It’s also why there’s an antidote (acetylcysteine) that replenishes glutathione when given early.
Forms, brands, and generics
Both drugs come in many forms, and the generic is chemically identical to the brand — you’re paying for the name, not a better molecule.
Acetaminophen is sold as Tylenol and countless store brands. Forms include regular and extra-strength tablets and caplets, rapid-release gels, 8-hour extended-release (arthritis) caplets, liquid suspensions for children, chewables, and suppositories. On labels it may appear as acetaminophen or APAP.
Ibuprofen is sold as Advil, Motrin, and store brands, in tablets, capsules, liquid gels, and children’s suspensions and chewables. It also appears in some combination sinus and “PM” products.
A practical tip: buying the generic of either drug and reading the milligram strength on the Drug Facts panel is almost always cheaper than the brand and lets you control the exact dose. What matters is the active ingredient and the strength, not the logo.
Do they interact with other medicines?
Ibuprofen (an NSAID) has more interactions to watch:
- Blood thinners (warfarin, apixaban) — higher bleeding risk
- Aspirin — combining can raise GI bleeding risk and may blunt aspirin’s heart benefit
- Blood-pressure medicines (ACE inhibitors, ARBs, diuretics) — NSAIDs can reduce their effect and stress the kidneys
- Other NSAIDs — never stack two NSAIDs (for example ibuprofen plus naproxen or meloxicam)
- Some antidepressants (SSRIs) — added bleeding risk
Acetaminophen has fewer interactions, but two matter: alcohol (adds to liver load — see acetaminophen and alcohol) and warfarin (regular high-dose acetaminophen can nudge up bleeding measures). If you take regular prescriptions, review the full list with a pharmacist before choosing.
Common myths, cleared up
A few misconceptions send people to the wrong bottle:
- “Tylenol reduces swelling.” It doesn’t meaningfully. For inflamed injuries or arthritis, an NSAID is the anti-inflammatory tool — see is Tylenol an NSAID?.
- “Ibuprofen is stronger, so it’s always better.” Not for a plain headache or in someone who can’t take NSAIDs. “Stronger” depends on the pain type.
- “You can’t mix them.” You can — they’re different classes, and combining is a recognized strategy.
- “Doubling the dose doubles relief.” It mostly adds side effects. If one drug at label dose isn’t enough, adding the other drug is safer than exceeding either.
- “Acetaminophen is totally harmless because it’s OTC.” It’s very safe at label doses but is a leading cause of drug-related liver injury when the maximum is exceeded.
When should you see a doctor?
Over-the-counter pain relievers are meant for short-term, self-limited problems. Contact a healthcare provider if:
- Pain lasts more than about 10 days, or fever more than 3 days, without improvement
- Pain is severe, worsening, or comes with symptoms like chest pain, shortness of breath, a stiff neck, or confusion
- You need pain relief most days — chronic use of either drug deserves medical review
- You have kidney, liver, heart, or stomach conditions, or take blood thinners or multiple medications
- You notice warning signs of harm: black or bloody stools, severe stomach pain, or reduced urination (ibuprofen); or nausea with yellowing skin or eyes (acetaminophen)
Reaching regularly for the maximum dose is itself a reason to check in — it usually means the underlying problem needs a proper diagnosis rather than more medicine.
A quick worked example
Say you have a bad tension headache with no injury and a sensitive stomach. Reach for acetaminophen first — gentle on the stomach, effective for headache. Now say you twist your ankle playing sports: it’s swollen and throbbing. Here ibuprofen is the better tool because it fights the inflammation, taken with food. And if that ankle pain is severe, you can add acetaminophen on top for stronger relief, tracking each against its own limit. Same person, three different right answers — because the choice follows the pain.
Bottom line
In the ibuprofen vs acetaminophen decision, there is no single winner — there is the right tool for the job. Ibuprofen, an NSAID, is best for inflammatory pain like sprains, cramps, and arthritis but stresses the stomach, kidneys, and heart. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is gentler on the stomach and a fine first choice for headaches and fever, but the liver sets its limit. Match the drug to your symptom and health history, stay within each label maximum, and remember you can safely combine the two when one isn’t enough. When in doubt, ask a pharmacist — this is general information, not medical advice.