Mycobacterium tuberculosis
remains the leading cause of death due to infection in humans. Although antibiotics are available to treat drug‐sensitive
M. tuberculosis
infections, the increasing incidence of drug‐resistant strains is threatening our ability to gain hold of this pandemic. In addition, recent research has highlighted that even the current standard of care antibiotics face multiple obstacles for reaching therapeutic concentrations at the site of infection. In this article, we detail the current standard of care for clinical tuberculosis (TB) disease, the chemistry, mechanisms of action, and mechanisms of resistance for the antibiotics used clinically to treat TB, the growing problem of antibiotic resistance, and other challenges associated with TB treatment, and host‐directed therapies as an additional approach to treatment. This article is meant to serve as the foundation to build from as the field addresses the dire need for continued development of new therapeutic strategies to treat TB.