Online speculation about Fox News host Sean Hannity’s health reached a peak this week after viewers noticed visible changes to his face and voice during recent broadcasts, prompting the 64-year-old to issue a public explanation on Wednesday, June 24, 2026.
In a post on X, Hannity disclosed that he had sustained a pinched nerve in his neck during training and that the prednisone his doctor prescribed to treat the inflammation was behind both his raspy voice and the noticeable facial swelling that had drawn widespread attention.
Radio Show Address Came First
Before posting on social media, Hannity had already discussed the matter multiple times on “The Sean Hannity Show,” his nationally syndicated weekday radio program. On Monday, he asked frequent co-host Lynda McLaughlin whether his voice sounded improved, and she responded that America was relieved he was not suffering something more serious — a remark that drew laughter.
During that same broadcast, he explained that his physician had initially identified a sinus infection as the source of his laryngitis and had suggested he simply ride it out without medication. Hannity said he had been reluctant to start prednisone at all, describing it as medicine he did not want to take. He eventually began the course of treatment, which resolved much of the inflammation but introduced the visible side effects that caught viewers’ attention by the time his Tuesday night show aired.
Prednisone Side Effects Sparked the Concern
Prednisone is a corticosteroid widely used to control inflammation, but it carries well-documented cosmetic side effects, including fluid retention that can cause noticeable swelling in the face and neck. Hannity acknowledged both, attributing his raspier voice and significantly puffier appearance directly to the drug rather than to any underlying condition.
“Thanks to everyone who has checked in,” Hannity wrote on X. “I’ve already addressed this several times on my radio show, but while training, I developed a painful pinched nerve in my neck.”
He told his audience he was recovering well and had not stopped training, then capped the statement with a dry aside: that a few weeks on the medication had somehow attracted more attention than 30 years of ratings success.
Hannity also addressed critics who had expressed something more pointed than concern, writing that a pinched nerve, a raspy voice, and a puffy face were not, in his words, going to take him out anytime soon — including for those in what he called “the left-wing media” who had weighed in.
Viewers Noticed, and Social Media Followed
The online reaction had been building for days before Hannity’s post. Clips and still images from his Tuesday night broadcast spread widely across social media platforms, with users flagging his altered appearance and speculating about its cause. Left-wing commentator Kyle Kulinski posted on X, asking why Hannity looked, in his phrasing, dramatically heavier and impaired. An account called @BadFoxGraphics put January and June screenshots side by side, posing a simple question about whether Hannity was all right.
Comedian Josh Johnson, a host on “The Daily Show,” also weighed in, joking on social media about Hannity’s visibly enlarged cheeks. The commentary spanned partisan lines, drawing responses from political opponents and concerned viewers alike.
On Air as Controversy Swirled
The episode that drew the most attention featured Hannity interviewing Stephen Miller, senior Trump adviser and White House Deputy Chief of Staff, amid rising midterm tensions. Miller used the platform to sharply criticize Democratic candidates following progressive-backed victories in New York’s Democratic primaries on Tuesday, asserting that a vote for any Democrat empowered a party intent on dismantling the country’s security and way of life. Hannity himself questioned how two ideological camps so far apart could ever be reconciled.
Hannity is a staunch supporter of President Donald Trump and hosts both a primetime Fox News program and a podcast that frequently features administration allies. He is among the network’s most recognizable and longest-tenured on-air personalities, and the combination of his prominence and his visibly changed appearance ensured the speculation about his health traveled quickly — well beyond his usual audience, before he finally addressed it directly.







