There isn’t one national schedule
| Do this | Why |
|---|---|
| Use your province’s schedule | Timing and products vary by jurisdiction — and that’s the version that’s publicly funded. |
| Bring the record every time | So it can be updated and nothing gets double-counted or missed. |
| Book the next visit before leaving | On-time doses give the best protection. |
| Ask about catch-up | If anything was missed, there’s a path back on track. |
| Save the record | For childcare, school, travel, and future healthcare. |
Why the schedule is timed the way it is
Vaccination schedules are designed to protect children before they’re most likely to be exposed to serious diseases — and on-time doses give the best protection. Babies and young children aren’t just small adults: their immune systems, exposures, risks, and complications are different. Some vaccines are given early because infants are vulnerable; some later because the immune response is stronger then; some need multiple doses because protection builds in layers; some are boosters because immunity needs a reminder bell. The schedule isn’t just “shots” — it’s a carefully staged shield.
Use your province or territory’s schedule
Canada maintains national schedule summaries and a personalized schedule tool (last updated April 2026), but your child’s actual publicly funded schedule depends on where you live. Check sources in this order: your province or territory’s public-health schedule; your local public-health unit; your child’s doctor, nurse practitioner, pharmacist, midwife, or public-health nurse; Canada’s vaccination schedule tool; and the Canadian Immunization Guide for national guidance.
- Your province / territory’s public-health schedule.
- Your local public-health unit or office.
- Your child’s provider or a public-health nurse.
- Canada’s personalized vaccination schedule tool.
- A U.S. schedule.
- A province you used to live in.
- A screenshot from a parent group.
- A schedule printed five years ago, living in a drawer with old batteries.
The typical Canadian vaccine timeline
This is a general map, not a substitute for your province’s schedule — names, combinations, and ages shift by jurisdiction. Tap an age to see what usually happens and what each vaccine protects against.
What the vaccine letters mean
| Short name | Protects against |
|---|---|
| DTaP / Tdap | Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) |
| IPV | Polio |
| Hib | Haemophilus influenzae type b |
| HB | Hepatitis B |
| Rot | Rotavirus |
| Pneu-C / PCV | Pneumococcal disease |
| Men-C / ACYW | Meningococcal disease |
| MMR | Measles, mumps, rubella |
| Var | Varicella (chickenpox) |
| MMRV | Measles, mumps, rubella + varicella, combined |
| HPV | Human papillomavirus |
| Inf | Influenza |
| RSV Ab | Monoclonal-antibody protection against RSV for infants |
| COVID-19 | COVID-19, especially severe disease |
Vaccine records: keep them like tiny passports
You can find out which vaccines your child has had by checking the vaccine record; if there isn’t one, contact your provider or local public-health unit. Keep it somewhere safe and bring it to every appointment so it can be updated. The record might be a paper booklet, a yellow card, a printed or electronic public-health record, a clinic printout, a school record — or a mix of all of the above, because bureaucracy enjoys variety.
- For each vaccine, record: date given, vaccine name, lot number (if available), and the clinic or provider.
- Note the province or country where it was given, the next dose due, and any reaction or special instruction.
- To access an official record, contact your provider or your provincial/territorial public-health unit — Canada lists record-access links by province.
What if your child missed vaccines?
Missed vaccines happen. Babies get sick, families move, records vanish, newcomer children arrive on different schedules, and some appointments get eaten by life’s scheduling goblin. The important thing: if your child hasn’t had all the recommended vaccines for their age, they can still catch up. Book with a provider or public-health unit to work out which vaccines they’ve had, which are still needed, and when and where to get them.
Six steps back on track
- 01Gather every vaccine record you have paper, digital, out-of-country
- 02Contact your local public-health unit or provider and ask for a catch-up schedule
- 03Confirm whether school or childcare records need updating and book the first catch-up appointment
- 04Ask when the next doses are due before leaving don’t guess the intervals yourself
New country, or new province
If your child was vaccinated outside Canada, bring every record you have — a paper booklet, clinic card, hospital or school record, digital certificate, immigration medical-exam documents, and a translation if available. Schedules and vaccine names differ between countries; public health can review what counts here, what’s missing, and what catch-up to follow. If records can’t be verified, a child may be treated as unimmunized — frustrating, but the goal is protection and clear documentation.
School & childcare requirements
This is where local rules matter a lot. Some provinces require vaccine records for school; some require you to report vaccination status; some run school-based programs; some allow exemptions. The details aren’t national. In Ontario, the Immunization of School Pupils Act requires students to be vaccinated against nine designated diseases (or have a valid exemption), and parents — not providers — report to public health. B.C. has a Vaccination Status Reporting Regulation for K–12, with records held in the Provincial Immunization Registry. Quebec runs school-based programs where a parent or guardian consents for a child under 14.
- Does this province require vaccine records for school — and do I report them myself, or does the clinic?
- Is there an online portal? What vaccines are required or expected at this grade?
- Are exemptions available, and what’s the process? What school-based vaccines will be offered, and what consent form is needed?
Vaccine safety & side effects
Most side effects are mild and temporary — soreness, redness or swelling at the site, mild fever, fussiness, sleepiness, or reduced appetite, and sometimes a mild rash after MMR or varicella-containing vaccines. Serious allergic reactions are rare, which is why clinics ask you to wait about 15 minutes afterward. Health Canada and the Public Health Agency closely monitor reports of side effects; Canada’s adverse-events system (CAEFISS) continuously watches safety, flags increases in known reactions, and surfaces anything needing investigation.
Making appointments easier — and answering worries
A vaccine appointment doesn’t need to be a tiny opera of dread. Plan ahead, bring a distraction, hold and talk to your child, stay calm, and wait ~15 minutes afterward. For babies, breastfeeding during needles is safe even for newborns and reduces pain — it combines holding, sweet taste, and sucking. Topical anesthetics (EMLA, Ametop, Maxilene) are available without prescription and can reduce pain when applied before the appointment.
- Feed before, and offer breast, bottle, or soother during/after if allowed.
- Easy-access clothing; hold securely and calmly.
- Honest, simple words: “It will pinch, then it’s done.” Don’t say “it won’t hurt.”
- Praise the coping: “That was hard and you did it.”
- Explain what the vaccine protects against; let them ask questions.
- Use a topical anesthetic; encourage slow breathing or looking away.
- Tell the provider if they faint with needles.
- Bring questions to a provider or public-health nurse — not the loudest comment section.
Questions parents often ask
- more than one?Yes — multiple vaccines are commonly given at one visit. It cuts appointments and protects on time. Ask which are being given and whether any need spacing.
- a cold?Mild illness isn’t always a reason to delay, but fever or moderate/severe illness may change timing. The clinic screens before vaccinating.
- premature?Premature babies often follow chronological-age schedules, but the details matter — ask your paediatrician or public-health nurse.
- allergies?Tell the provider about all serious allergies and any previous vaccine reactions before the appointment. Don’t guess — they can check ingredients.
- immunocompromised?Some vaccines may not be recommended or may need special timing; close contacts should stay up to date to help protect them.
- travelling?Travel can change timing — some vaccines may be recommended earlier or additionally. Contact a travel clinic well before you go.
Common mistakes
- 01 · wrong provinceUsing another province’s (or country’s) schedule. Use your local one.
- 02 · who reports?Assuming the clinic reports to school. In some places — like Toronto under the ISPA — parents report records themselves.
- 03 · lost recordsKeeping only one paper copy. Keep paper and digital, and know how to access the official record.
- 04 · no catch-up askNot asking about catch-up after a missed dose. Catch-up exists — use it.
- 05 · school-day scrambleWaiting until school registration to find the record. Don’t add emergency record archaeology to a paperwork blizzard.
- 06 · free ≠ automaticAssuming “free” means “automatic.” You still need appointments, records, and sometimes reporting.
- 07 · no prep for needle fearNot preparing a needle-anxious child. Pain- and anxiety-reduction work — use them early.
The Canadian childhood immunization tracker
One place for the whole schedule. Everything you tick or type is saved on this device, and Print gives you a clean copy for the diaper bag, the fridge, or a caregiver. Childcare and school will ask for this someday — and a tracker beats record archaeology every time.
Official sources & the final takeaway
Use your province’s schedule, not a chart from elsewhere. Bring the record to every visit and update it. Book the next appointment before you leave. Ask about catch-up if anything was missed, and keep records for childcare, school, and travel. The alphabet soup gets friendly once you decode it — and the schedule is a staged shield, not a pile of random shots.
Official resource box
The Government of Canada’s parent page on childhood vaccines, timing, records, and catch-up.
SourceBuild a schedule by province/territory, birth date, and grade; see the routine P/T schedule tables.
SourceThe clinical reference for routine vaccines, timing, doses, and special situations.
SourceHow to find, keep, and access a child’s vaccine record, with links by province and territory.
SourceWhat’s normal, when to seek urgent help, and how Canada monitors vaccine safety.
SourceCanadian Paediatric Society parent resources on vaccines, safety, and common concerns.
SourcePractical resources, including topical anesthetics and reducing vaccination pain.
SourceWhat’s required for school under the ISPA, and how parents report records.
SourceB.C.’s Vaccination Status Reporting Regulation and the Provincial Immunization Registry.
Source- Government of Canada — childhood vaccination — Schedule, records, safety & catch-up (Reviewed Jun 2026)
- Canadian Immunization Guide — Routine vaccines, timing & doses (Reviewed Jun 2026)
- Provincial/territorial routine schedule tables — Funded schedules by jurisdiction (Reviewed Jun 2026)
- Caring for Kids (CPS) — Parent immunization resources (Reviewed Jun 2026)
- Provincial school programs — Ontario ISPA, BC reporting, Quebec consent (Reviewed Jun 2026)
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