Although most warts do typically go away on their own and may not require treatment, some do become painful, bothersome, rapidly spread, or don’t go away, even after several years, and do need to be treated.

Wart Treatments

The most common treatments that your pediatrician will likely try include freezing warts with liquid nitrogen, which is called cryotherapy, or applying cantharidin to warts. Both treatments should cause some blistering of the wart, causing it to come off, although multiple treatments are often necessary. The cantharidin treatments, which are not FDA approved in the US, have the benefit of usually being painless, although they can trigger a large, painful blister later that day. Your dermatologist might try a prescription-strength salicylic acid paste. Many parents also try to treat their children’s warts at home, which has become much easier now that home wart freezing kits are now available, such as Compound W Freeze Off, Dr. Scholl’s Freeze Away Wart Remover, or Wartner Wart Removal System. In addition to home cryotherapy, another home remedy that many parents use involves applying salicylic acid to warts, using OTC products such as Compound W Liquid Wart Remover or Dr. Scholl’s Clear Away One Step Salicylic Acid Wart Remover.

Duct Tape for Warts

An increasingly popular home wart remedy involves applying duct tape to warts. Using this duct tape treatment, you: Using the duct tape method for one or two months, some experts report that over 80% of people will find that their warts are gone, with many seeing signs of improvement in just 2 weeks. Although a newer study reported results that were not as impressive for duct tape, there may have been problems with this study, and many people still recommend giving duct a try.

Duct Tape Method Treatment Tip

Many kids don’t want to walk around with a gray piece of duct tape on their skin, especially if their wart is on their finger or some other part of their body that is easily visible. Using duct tape in their favorite color, such as red, pink, or blue, can make the duct tape method for treating warts a lot easier for your kids to handle, especially since they may need to keep the duct tape on for a month or two.