Learn more about this condition that spreads easily. It causes intense itching, most often where the skin folds, such as around joints.
Update Date: 07.02.2026
Scabies is a skin rash. A tiny mite called Sarcoptes scabiei causes it. The mite burrows into the skin, causing intense itching. The need to scratch may be stronger at night.
Scabies can spread through close, long-term person-to-person contact. This may be within a family, child care group, school class, or a place where people live together, such as a nursing home or prison. Because scabies spreads easily, healthcare professionals often treat the whole family or any close contacts.
Scabies is easy to treat. Medicated skin creams or pills kill the mites that cause scabies and their eggs. But itching may go on for weeks after treatment.
Scabies symptoms include:
Scabies is often in the skin folds. But scabies can appear on many parts of the body. In adults and older children, scabies is most often found:
In infants and young children, scabies most often are on the:
If you've had scabies before, symptoms may start within a few days after getting the mites. If you've never had scabies, it can take up to six weeks for symptoms to start. You can still spread scabies even if you don't have symptoms yet.
Talk to your healthcare professional if you have symptoms of scabies.
Many skin conditions, such as dermatitis or eczema, also cause itching and small bumps on the skin. Your healthcare professional can find the cause of your symptoms and prescribe the right treatment.
A tiny, eight-legged mite causes scabies. The female mite burrows just under the skin. It makes a tunnel where it lays eggs.
The eggs hatch, and the mite larvae travel to the surface of the skin, where they become adults. These mites can then spread to other areas of the skin or to the skin of other people. The itching comes from the body's allergic reaction to the mites, their eggs and their waste.
Close skin-to-skin contact and, less often, sharing clothing or bedding with a person who has scabies can spread the mites.
Pets don't spread scabies to humans. The scabies mites that affect animals don't survive or reproduce in people.
Risk factors for scabies include:
A common complication of scabies is a bacterial infection. Scratching too much can break the skin and let in bacteria that cause the infection.
A worse type of scabies, called crusted scabies, may affect certain people including:
Crusted scabies makes the skin crusty and scaly. It affects large areas of the body. It spreads easily and can be hard to treat. People with crusted scabies need quick treatment with both a prescription pill and a skin cream.
People with crusted scabies have high numbers of mites. Crusted scabies might not itch, or itching may be mild.
To prevent scabies from coming back and to keep the mites from spreading to other people, take these steps:
To diagnose scabies, your healthcare professional looks at your skin for symptoms of mites. Your healthcare professional also may scrape a sample of sores on your skin to look at under a microscope. This shows if there are mites or eggs.
Scabies treatment involves killing the mites and eggs with a medicated cream or pill. There are several you can get with a prescription.
Because scabies spreads so easily, your healthcare professional may suggest treating all the people in your home and other close contacts. They need treatment even if they don't have symptoms of scabies.
Treatment for scabies often includes:
These medicines kill mites fast, but itching may not stop for weeks.
Healthcare professionals may prescribe other skin treatments for people who can't use these medicines or don't get relief from them.
Your skin might itch for weeks after scabies treatment. Taking allergy pills by mouth or using skin creams you can get without a prescription, such as calamine lotion, may ease itching.
Make an appointment with your healthcare professional if you or your child has symptoms of scabies.
Here's some information to help you get ready for your appointment.
Make a list of:
Some basic questions to ask about scabies include:
Your healthcare professional may ask you questions, such as:
Before your appointment, try medicines you can get without a prescription to ease itching. Allergy pills and calamine lotion may help. Ask your healthcare professional which medicines are safe for your child.
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