Quick answers
Wax builds up slowly, so the symptoms creep in rather than arrive overnight. The pattern most people describe includes:
Itchiness, faint ringing (tinnitus) and mild earache can appear too, though none of these is unique to wax.
A blocked feeling on its own usually points to wax. Pain, heat, discharge or fever point somewhere else. An ear that is actively painful, hot to the touch, weeping fluid or accompanied by feeling unwell suggests infection, and that needs your GP or NHS 111 rather than a wax clinic. Sudden, total hearing loss — especially with dizziness — should also be assessed medically the same day. If you're unsure which camp you fall into, call us on 01270 215837 and describe the symptoms; we'll tell you honestly whether we're the right service.
Every symptom above can have other causes — congestion after a cold, Eustachian tube problems, even a change in hearing itself. That's why our appointments start with an examination of both ears under bright magnification. Within a minute or two you'll know whether wax is genuinely the culprit, how much there is, and how deep it sits.
And if we find little or no wax? We tell you exactly that. We explain what we can see, advise on sensible next steps, and discuss everything with you before anything proceeds — that's our honest no-wax policy. If wax is confirmed, water-free microsuction can usually be done there and then, with most people seen within the same week of booking.
Examination of both ears is included — £50 one ear, £70 both. Usually seen within the same week at Crewe Pharmacy, Nantwich Road.