If you have LPR or silent reflux and you’re looking for a medication that actually helps — this is it. Gaviscon Advance, specifically the UK version, is the best medication you can take for LPR and the one I personally recommend to everyone I work with. It works nothing like the PPIs most doctors hand out. Instead of trying to reduce your stomach acid it creates a physical barrier that stops reflux from reaching your throat in the first place. For LPR that makes all the difference.
This guide covers everything you need to know — how it works, why the UK version specifically matters, what the clinical evidence shows, how to take it correctly, and where to get it if you’re not in the UK.
Key Takeaways:
- Gaviscon Advance (UK version) is the most effective medication for LPR — it works by creating a physical alginate raft, not by reducing acid
- The UK version contains 1000mg of sodium alginate per 10ml dose — the US version contains a fraction of this and works completely differently
- A randomised controlled trial (McGlashan et al.) showed significant improvements in LPR symptom scores at both 2 and 6 months
- A 2018 clinical study (Wilkie et al.) confirmed Gaviscon Advance alone is as effective as Gaviscon Advance plus a PPI — adding a PPI on top of it provides no additional benefit for LPR
- Alginate has been shown to be non-inferior to PPIs for LPR in a randomised controlled trial
- Take it 15–30 minutes after each meal and before bed for best results
Why Gaviscon Advance Is Different From Regular Gaviscon
Most people hear “Gaviscon” and think of a standard antacid you take when you get heartburn. Gaviscon Advance is a genuinely different product — it works through a completely different mechanism and it’s this difference that makes it so effective for LPR specifically.
Standard antacids neutralise stomach acid after it has already refluxed. Gaviscon Advance works by preventing the reflux from reaching your throat in the first place. It does this through something called an alginate raft — a foam-like gel layer that sits on top of your stomach contents and acts as a physical seal.
The key ingredient is sodium alginate, a completely natural extract from seaweed. When sodium alginate hits stomach acid it reacts and forms a thick gel that rises to the top of the stomach contents. This raft then physically blocks reflux from getting up through the lower oesophageal sphincter. It also displaces the postprandial acid pocket — the pool of highly acidic material that collects on top of stomach contents after meals, which is one of the main triggers of reflux episodes.
For LPR patients there’s something else the alginate does that’s really important — it binds to pepsin and bile that have already reached your throat, neutralises them and washes them back down into the stomach where they belong. This is the part that no PPI can do. PPIs reduce acid production but they can’t do anything about the pepsin already sitting in your throat cells causing damage. Gaviscon Advance can. You can read more about why pepsin matters so much in my complete LPR guide.
The UK Version vs the US Version — This Is Important
Here’s something that trips a lot of people up — and it genuinely matters so let me be clear about it.
The UK and US versions of Gaviscon are not the same product. Not even close. I get asked about this constantly and it’s the reason a lot of people in the US try “Gaviscon” for their LPR and say it did nothing. They used the wrong version.
The UK version has sodium alginate as its main active ingredient. That’s what creates the protective raft. The US version uses aluminium hydroxide instead — which is a standard antacid. It doesn’t form a raft, it doesn’t bind pepsin, it just neutralises a bit of acid. It’s a completely different product with the same brand name on the label.
| Gaviscon Advance (UK version) | Gaviscon (US version) | |
|---|---|---|
| Active ingredient | Sodium alginate 500mg / Potassium bicarbonate 100mg per 5ml | Aluminium hydroxide / Magnesium carbonate |
| Sodium alginate per 10ml dose | 1000mg | Negligible — listed as inactive ingredient only |
| Mechanism | Forms alginate raft, binds pepsin, displaces acid pocket | Standard antacid — neutralises acid only |
| Contains aluminium | No | Yes |
| Effective for LPR | Yes — clinically proven | No — wrong mechanism |
You need the UK version specifically. The good news is it’s easy to get on Amazon even if you’re outside the UK — it ships internationally without any issues.
The Clinical Evidence for Gaviscon Advance
I always back up what I recommend with the research and Gaviscon Advance is no exception. Here’s what the studies actually show.
For LPR (Silent Reflux)
The main study is the randomised controlled trial by McGlashan et al., published in the Journal of Laryngology and Otology. They took 49 LPR patients and split them into two groups — one taking Gaviscon Advance four times daily, one getting no treatment. At both 2 months and 6 months the Gaviscon group showed significant improvements in their Reflux Symptom Index scores and in the objective laryngeal signs visible on laryngoscopy. The control group showed no meaningful improvement. That was the first proper trial to demonstrate Gaviscon Advance works specifically for LPR.
A prospective study by Wilkie et al. (2018) followed 100 consecutive LPR patients all taking Gaviscon Advance — some also on a PPI, some not. The key finding: adding a PPI to the Gaviscon Advance made no difference to outcomes. Gaviscon Advance alone was just as effective. Which again confirms that for LPR, the alginate is the important part — PPIs add nothing useful on top of it.
A non-inferiority randomised controlled trial (Pizzorni et al., 2022) compared alginate directly against omeprazole in 50 LPR patients. Both groups saw significant improvements over 2 months and the alginate performed at least as well as the PPI. Around 90% of patients in both groups saw meaningful symptom reduction. Not bad for something that works mechanically rather than pharmacologically.
There’s also a large-scale trial called TALGiTS (BMJ Open 2025) currently underway — the biggest trial of Gaviscon Advance for throat symptoms ever conducted. The fact that a trial of this scale exists reflects how strongly the evidence is pointing in alginate’s direction.
For GERD
For GERD the evidence is also solid. A randomised clinical trial (Reimer et al., 2016) found that adding Gaviscon Advance to a PPI in GERD patients who still had symptoms despite the PPI produced significant additional improvement. And a systematic review and meta-analysis confirmed alginate therapy provides superior benefit over placebo and standard antacids for GERD symptoms overall.
How Gaviscon Advance Works — The Three Mechanisms
It’s worth understanding exactly what Gaviscon Advance is doing once you take it. There are three things happening simultaneously:
1. The alginate raft — sodium alginate reacts with stomach acid to form a thick gel that rises to sit on top of your stomach contents. This raft physically prevents reflux from escaping upward, acting as a seal rather than relying on any chemical effect.
2. Displacement of the acid pocket — after meals a pool of highly acidic material collects near the top of your stomach close to the oesophageal junction. This is called the acid pocket and it’s one of the main sources of postprandial reflux. The alginate raft pushes this pocket downward and away from the junction, making it far less likely to reflux upward.
3. Binding of pepsin and bile — the alginate binds to pepsin and bile salts that have already reached the oesophagus or throat, neutralising them and clearing them back down into the stomach. For LPR patients this is particularly important because pepsin — not just acid — is responsible for most of the tissue damage causing your LPR symptoms.
How to Take Gaviscon Advance Correctly
This is something most people get wrong initially — including me when I first started using it. The timing matters more than most people realise.
Take it 15 to 30 minutes after eating, not immediately after. The reason is that 15 to 30 minutes post-meal is when digestion is most active and when the acid pocket is forming above your stomach contents. Taking Gaviscon Advance at this point means the raft forms at exactly the right moment to displace the acid pocket before reflux can occur. Taking it immediately after eating means it competes with food in the stomach and you get a weaker raft effect.
I used to take it straight after finishing a meal and wondered why it wasn’t helping as much as I expected. Once I shifted to waiting 20 minutes or so the difference was noticeable.
Recommended dosing for LPR:
- 10ml (2 teaspoons) of liquid, 15–30 minutes after each main meal
- 10ml before bed — really important for nighttime protection
- Try not to eat or drink for 30 to 45 minutes after taking it — eating too soon dilutes the raft
Liquid vs tablets: The liquid generally forms a more complete raft and is the better option day to day. The tablets are more convenient when you’re out and can’t carry liquid — same active ingredient, slightly less effective. I use liquid at home and keep tablets for when I’m travelling.
How Long Does Gaviscon Advance Last?
Gaviscon Advance typically provides protection for around 2 to 4 hours as the raft gradually breaks down and mixes with stomach contents.
This is why the bedtime dose matters. When you’re lying down for 7 or 8 hours gravity isn’t helping keep stomach contents in place and reflux risk is higher. The Gaviscon provides protection through the first few hours of sleep when the risk is greatest. If nighttime reflux is a problem for you, combining Gaviscon Advance before bed with a wedge pillow makes a real difference. For more on this check my article on acid reflux at night.
Gaviscon Advance Side Effects
One of the things I like most about Gaviscon Advance is how clean it is from a side effects perspective. Because it works physically rather than chemically it doesn’t interfere with your body’s chemistry the way PPIs do. No long-term risk to your kidneys, no impact on bone density, no interference with B12, magnesium or calcium absorption — all of which are concerns with long-term PPI use.
It also has no aluminium, unlike the US version. That’s worth knowing if you’re planning to take something regularly.
The main things to be aware of:
- It does contain sodium — worth knowing if you’re on a strict low-sodium diet, though the amount per dose is small
- The peppermint flavour version uses artificial peppermint flavouring, not real peppermint. Real peppermint relaxes the LES and makes reflux worse — but the artificial flavouring doesn’t have this effect, so either flavour is absolutely fine for LPR
- It manages reflux but doesn’t treat the root cause — more on this below
Where to Buy Gaviscon Advance (UK Version)

If you’re in the UK it’s available in any pharmacy and most supermarkets — just make sure the label says “Gaviscon Advance”, not plain Gaviscon or Gaviscon Double Action.
If you’re in the US, Canada or anywhere else the easiest option is to order the UK version directly from Amazon here. It ships internationally and arrives without any issues.
If for some reason you can’t get the UK version, look for any product that lists sodium alginate as an active ingredient — not as an inactive ingredient. The UK version has 500mg of sodium alginate per 5ml. If you can find a local alternative with at least 250mg per 5ml it will provide some benefit, though the UK version remains the gold standard. Check the label carefully because the same brand name can have completely different formulations in different countries — so look at the ingredients, not just the name on the box.
Does Gaviscon Advance Treat the Root Cause?
This is important to understand. Gaviscon Advance is an excellent tool for managing and reducing LPR symptoms but it’s not a standalone cure. It prevents reflux from reaching and damaging the throat but it doesn’t address whatever is causing the reflux in the first place.
For most people the root causes involve some combination of a weakened lower oesophageal sphincter, an acidic diet that keeps reactivating pepsin in the throat, eating too much at once, and eating too close to bedtime. Gaviscon Advance manages the symptoms — diet and lifestyle changes are what address the underlying causes.
This is why I always recommend using it as part of a broader approach rather than relying on it alone. Combined with the low acid diet and the lifestyle changes covered in my silent reflux treatment guide it’s genuinely powerful. Used on its own without addressing diet and lifestyle, symptoms are likely to come back once you stop taking it.
For a complete structured diet plan check the Wipeout Diet Plan. And if you want tailored guidance on your specific situation consider a private consultation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Gaviscon Advance the best medication for LPR?
Yes — in my experience and based on the clinical evidence, Gaviscon Advance (UK version) is the best medication available for LPR. Multiple trials have confirmed its effectiveness and a 2018 study showed it works just as well with a PPI as without one — meaning PPIs add nothing for most LPR patients. If you have LPR and you’re on PPIs without much improvement, switching to Gaviscon Advance as your primary medication is worth doing.
Why does it have to be the UK version?
Because the UK and US versions have completely different formulations. The UK version contains sodium alginate as its main active ingredient — that’s what creates the protective raft. The US version uses aluminium hydroxide, which is a standard antacid and doesn’t form a raft at all. They’re essentially different products with the same name on the packaging.
How quickly does Gaviscon Advance work for LPR?
The raft forms within minutes of taking it so you may feel some immediate relief. In clinical trials, significant improvements in LPR symptoms were observed at 2 months. Most people notice a meaningful reduction in symptoms within 2 to 4 weeks of consistent use alongside dietary changes.
Can I take Gaviscon Advance while on PPIs?
Yes — for GERD patients adding Gaviscon Advance to a PPI has been shown in trials to provide additional improvement. For LPR specifically, the evidence shows the combination is no better than Gaviscon Advance alone. If you’re currently on PPIs and want to come off them, Gaviscon Advance is a great medication to have in place during the taper. Read my guide on getting off PPIs safely for how to do this without a bad rebound effect.
Can I take Gaviscon Advance long term?
Yes — it’s safe for long-term use. Unlike PPIs there’s no concern about nutrient absorption, gut microbiome disruption or the cardiovascular and kidney risks associated with long-term PPI use. Most people use it consistently through the healing phase — typically 3 to 6 months — and then reduce the frequency as symptoms resolve.
Is the peppermint flavour version safe for LPR?
Yes — the peppermint flavour uses artificial peppermint flavouring, not real peppermint extract. Real peppermint relaxes the LES and worsens reflux but the artificial flavouring doesn’t have this effect. Either flavour is fine — pick whichever you prefer the taste of.
Does Gaviscon Advance work for GERD as well as LPR?
Yes — it works well for both, though it’s particularly suited to LPR. For GERD it reduces the frequency and severity of reflux episodes and can be used alongside PPIs for additional relief. For LPR it’s the primary recommended medication over PPIs because it directly addresses pepsin as well as acid.
Conclusion
Gaviscon Advance (UK version) is in my view the most important medication for anyone with LPR or silent reflux. It’s the one thing that made a real difference for me when I was at my worst with it and it’s what I consistently see helping people who’ve been struggling for months or years.
The key points: always use the UK version, take it 15 to 30 minutes after meals and before bed, and use it as part of a proper treatment approach rather than on its own. Combined with the low acid diet it’s genuinely powerful.
For the complete treatment approach check my article on silent reflux treatment and my personal account of how I cured my silent reflux. For a structured diet plan check the Wipeout Diet Plan.
Related articles:
- Silent Reflux Treatment — What Actually Works for LPR
- The Complete Guide to LPR — Causes, Symptoms and Treatment
- LPR Diet — What to Eat, What to Avoid and What to Drink
- How I Cured My Silent Reflux
- Getting Off PPIs Safely — Acid Rebound Guide
- GERD vs LPR — What’s the Difference?
- Alkaline Water for LPR
- Acid Reflux at Night
- The Stomach Sphincter’s Role in LPR
References
- McGlashan JA et al. (2009) “The value of a liquid alginate suspension (Gaviscon Advance) in the management of laryngopharyngeal reflux.” Journal of Laryngology and Otology. PubMed
- Wilkie MD et al. (2018) “Gaviscon Advance alone versus co-prescription of Gaviscon Advance and proton pump inhibitors in the treatment of laryngopharyngeal reflux.” European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 275(10):2515-2521. PubMed
- Pizzorni N et al. (2022) “Magnesium alginate versus proton pump inhibitors for the treatment of laryngopharyngeal reflux: a non-inferiority randomized controlled trial.” European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 279(5):2533-2542. PMC
- Reimer C et al. (2016) “Randomised clinical trial: alginate (Gaviscon Advance) vs. placebo as add-on therapy in reflux patients with inadequate response to a once daily proton pump inhibitor.” Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 43(8):899-909. PubMed
- O’Hara J et al. (2025) “Trial of alginates in throat symptoms (TALGiTS): protocol for a pragmatic, multicentre, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel, randomised controlled trial.” BMJ Open, 15(1):e087729. PMC
- Mazzoleni G et al. (2005) “An evaluation of the antireflux properties of sodium alginate by means of combined multichannel intraluminal impedance and pH-metry.” Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics. PubMed
- Ours TM et al. (2017) “Alginate therapy is effective treatment for GERD symptoms: a systematic review and meta-analysis.” Diseases of the Esophagus, 30(5):1-9. Full text
- Gelardi M et al. (2025) “Efficacy of dietary modifications and mucosal protectors in the treatment of laryngopharyngeal reflux: a multicenter study.” Frontiers in Medicine, 12:1488323. PMC
David Gray
Content Researcher & Author
David Gray founded Wipeout Reflux to address a critical gap in reflux management. His research synthesizes over 100 peer-reviewed studies on laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR), pepsin biology, and GERD pathophysiology. For LPR specifically—a condition most physicians misdiagnose—his work focuses on pepsin reactivation and why standard PPI therapy fails most patients. He develops evidence-based protocols targeting root causes of both LPR and GERD, integrating emerging research on sphincter dysfunction, dietary interventions, and newer clinical approaches. Wipeout Reflux represents practical application of clinical science for patients seeking real solutions.


I am in perimenapause and have slight heartburn but reflux,constant need to clear throat ,hoarseness and blocked nose,GP has given me lansoprazole but read low acid is common in menapause causing reflux also-very confused of what to take
I think Gaviscon is your best bet and some diet changes to avoid trigger foods.
Thank you for this information.
My problem is a hoarse voice. It comes and goes.
Now on acid free diet and taking Gaviscon Advance through the day and last thing at night.
Thanks Jean 🙂 Keep that up, it definitely should help!
I also have high blood pressure and am concerned with the high sodium content in Gaviscon. Would you be willing to tell us the name of the similar product that you are looking into so we can do our own research? Thank you.
I am currently doing some research into some similar products and hopefully will be doing an article on them soon. As for alternatives it’s always worth checking similar antacid liquids. The important ingredients to look for as I mentioned is alginate. 1000mg (1g) per 2 teaspoons is the dosage in Gaviscon advance. If you can get one with less sodium and even 500mg of the aliginate that would likely still be quite effective.
hi David!
I have nighttime LPR. I used to wake up wheezing and choking from it. Im currently taking Gaviscon -the US version which has antacid in it.I take 10 ml before bedtime. It helps. Now I would like to switch to this Gaviscon Advance, which is not an antacid. How do I switch?I know Gaviscon can cause acid rebound…so as im taking now 10 ml every night..do I have to wean myself off it or can i just simply use start using tonight the Gaviscon Advance? Im so afraid of the rebound-not particularly the burning senation but because of the asthamic-like symptoms i used to get..:(
Thanks for your advice
Judit
Hi Judit, I don’t think you should worry about rebound switching from the US to the UK gaviscon. If you really want to be safe you can start with 1 teaspoon of each for a few days if you prefer and then completely switch to the uk gaviscon. The uk gaviscon does have some antacid ingredients like potassium carbonate which will act as an antacid so switching over I highly doubt will give you any rebound effect.
Hi David!
Thanks for your answer. I have also bought your diet, i hope that helps too!Right now Im on the 4th day of UK Gaviscon….and i take about 10 ml at night before bed. It works perfectly for my nighttime reflux-i wake up without wheezing!
However during the day sometimes i feel shortness of breath and sometimes I have to yawn and take some deep breath….could it be because im not taking the gaviscon during the day? or could it be an acid reboud symptm from US Gaviscon? I have read that rebound symptoms usually starts day 3,4.. after stopping the previous medication.
Im from Hungary-and here the doctors really dont know much of LPR-all …so im very grateful that i found your site!
Thank you
Judit
Hey Judit,
You are welcome and thank you for buying the guide. I don’t think you would get too much if any rebound from the gaviscon that you took before. Maybe it’s worth trying take gaviscon during the day after meals. You could try it out 2 spoonfuls after meals let’s say 2 meals per day and see what happens. I think it would help you.
Hello sorry I am replying on someone elose post. I have burning throat and yellow phlegm in the morning that has and nasty odor. And I have tried lansprazole with famotidine and gaviscon advance in between and I am still really burning bad. Like nothing makes a difference. Can you help me in anyway to why this may be happening. Thank you
It’s hard to know what is the root cause without having testing done but if it is LPR then a low acid diet should help along with gaviscon as mentioned here.
I take the european standard version of gaviscon 10ml before going to bed. I want to stop using it since I am feeling quite well lately (due to better nutrition) but now I am affraid that stopping it will cause rebound. How scientifically proven is this thing ? I mean what s the best way to come out of taking it and not have rebound of acid ?
Rebound in mostly prominent in PPI tablets and to a lessen extent H2 blockers. Gaviscon again even less so than that, so the rebound effect would be much less. Ideally you can lower it over the space of a few days and see how you fair.
I’m a bit concerned about the salt content in gavison. It does have a high sodium content warning on the bottle. I watch my salt intake as my blood pressure is moderately high although I am not on any medication. Is there any other product that you know of that works as well?
Yes I am aware of another similar kind of product which I am currently looking into trying myself and some other people with LPR. If it turns out to be effective I will likely be doing an article on it and my thoughts in comparison to gaviscon.
I, too, have high BP and am concerned about high sodium content (also the price to ship it from the UK). I just found your blog today, now, and I’m wondering if there is an alternative to the UK Gaviscon. You mentioned in 2020 you were looking into something else. Have you published anything on this and where might I find it. Thanks.
Yes there are a couple alternatives, for example one is called Reflux Gourmet and is more accessible in countries like the US.
I agree! What are your thoughts on the steam inhalation of high pH alkaline water? I read where one man said he stumbled across a cure doing this. He said 5 minutes inhalation twice a day did it for him. Thank you for your blog!
Hey Suzie, Yes I have heard of it and in theory it should help neutralise any pepsin in your sinuses in particular. I personally feel though you must be taking some other action like I mention on my site to stop the acid. If you do that alongside a diet and taking the gaviscon I think it could help speed on recovery for some people. Hope this helps 🙂
Hi Suzie,
I’m just curious as to where you read that? My main issue is shortness of breath/chest pressure and feel like the Pepsin could be in my lungs. This does sound like something that can help.
I think it will help your sinuses and is at least worth trying.
Yes, but Gaviscon advance contains saccharin which has been proven to cause cancer. If they would use stevia extract, then it would be more safe to consume.
I have done some minor research on the saccharin before. Apparently it’s completely safe to take. I’m not worried about it especially it’s only a small amount used in the Gaviscon, there are much other worse things included in other medicines and foods/drinks I am sure.
Do you know why the UK formula for gaviscon advanced is not avaliable in the USA? Is the company just not offering it in the USA or does it have something to do with the FDA?
I’m not sure really. I believe the US have their own version but it isn’t made up the same. It has very little of the sodium alginate which is the important ingredient and it also contains aluminium which isn’t ideal either. I believe Gaviscon are thinking more of treating the major market which is for GERD more so than LPR so their focus on that – the standard Gaviscon is still effective for normal acid reflux and GERD whereas for LPR it isn’t as effective.
I’m betting that adding the alginate cuts into the profit margins. And profit is king here in the U.S. :/
Yeah you could be correct on that. Though I am not certain. It does seem weird to omit it though because it’s both natural and effective.
This is such a good blog, very informative. I’m on omeprazole currently in the evening at 7.30ish. Is it best not to take them at the same time, or leave a gap between it and the gaviscon advance?
Thank you Lucy. The best time to take omeprazole is 30 minutes before you eat and the best time to take gaviscon advance is 30 minutes after you eat. That would be the ideal way to take them.
Before I was having heart burns which along the line stopped, however I was still having indigestion and bloating. My throat and tongue burns really bad when I finish eating. I even noticed the back of my tongue began to whiten. I went to the hospital and was diagnosed with gastritis, now I understand the root cause of my reflux but the medication the doctor gave me does not improve my symptoms. My throat, tongue and even my ears burn after eating. Also I feel my throat becomes more dry in the middle of the night when I’m asleep. What is really causing this chronic sore throat, will the gaviscon help?
Well if you believe you have LPR with a lot of the common symptoms it’s definitely worth trying Gaviscon advance. Based on the couple of symptoms you mentioned it definitely could help you.
Can you take it while your doing pantoprazole ?
Yes absolutely you can.