Medication Interaction Checker

Select the medications you're currently taking. We'll flag known dangerous interactions with the drugs the FDA has most commonly found in honey packs (sildenafil, tadalafil, and analogs). This is not a substitute for medical advice.

Editorial review by HoneyPackFinder Editorial (UCI School of Medicine) · Last reviewed · FDA honey data current as of

Medical disclaimer: This tool is educational and not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. In an emergency, call 911. For poison exposure, contact Poison Control at 1-800-222-1222. Report adverse events to FDA MedWatch.

Direct answer

Honey packs marketed for sexual enhancement frequently contain undeclared sildenafil or tadalafil, per FDA testing. Combining them with nitrates, alpha-blockers, or ritonavir can cause fatal hypotension. If you take cardiovascular, antihypertensive, or HIV/HCV medication, treat any honey pack as if it contains a full prescription-strength dose of sildenafil — and do not take it without consulting a pharmacist or prescriber.

Your Medications

⚠ Interaction Risk Detected

Based on your selection, combining a honey pack (with its likely undeclared sildenafil or tadalafil) with your current medications carries meaningful risk. Do not use any honey-pack product without first consulting a prescriber or pharmacist.

If you want the effect that honey packs are marketed for, request a proper prescription instead — your clinician will screen these exact interactions before prescribing.

Read full safety guidance →

Select any medication above that matches what you currently take to see the specific risk profile.

Interaction FAQ

FDA laboratory testing has repeatedly found undeclared sildenafil and tadalafil in honey-pack products sold in gas stations, adult stores, and online. If you have an interaction risk with those prescription drugs, the same risk applies to the honey pack — and is worse because the actual dose is unknown and unregulated. See the FDA Tainted Sexual Enhancement Products database for specific brand findings.
No. This is a first-pass screen based on the drugs the FDA has most frequently detected in tainted honey packs. A licensed pharmacist or prescriber is the correct person to evaluate your complete medication list. For emergencies, call 911 or contact Poison Control (1-800-222-1222).
From the FDA labels for sildenafil (Viagra) and tadalafil (Cialis), peer-reviewed pharmacokinetic literature indexed on PubMed, and FDA public notifications for specific honey-pack brands. Every interaction row on this page links to its primary source.