Blood in Urine (Hematuria) — What It Means
For educational purposes only — not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider. For adults 18+.
Seeing blood in your urine is alarming — and while the cause is often something treatable, it's always a sign worth taking seriously. This guide explains hematuria and why it needs a doctor's review.
What blood in urine can mean, the difference between visible and microscopic blood, the common and less common causes, why it should never be ignored, and the signs that mean prompt or urgent care.
What's inside
- →What hematuria is — visible vs microscopic
- →Common causes — UTIs, stones & more
- →When it's more serious — why to check
- →What a doctor checks — the work-up
- →Never ignore it — even if it stops
- →Urgent signs — when to act fast
For educational purposes only
This guide is educational information about vaginal and urinary health — it is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a qualified doctor. It does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. Many intimate and urinary symptoms overlap, so see a doctor for an accurate diagnosis rather than self-treating — especially for a first infection, symptoms during pregnancy, or anything that recurs or won't clear. Seek urgent care for a fever with back or side pain, vomiting, blood in your urine, severe pelvic pain, or symptoms that worsen quickly, as a urinary infection can spread to the kidneys. In an emergency call 911.