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Mexico·Vaccinations

Mexico vaccinations for travellers

Required vaccines (yellow fever where applicable), recommended vaccines for the destination, and the practical travel-clinic timeline. Verify with a travel-health clinic; this is not medical advice.

Safe Trip Score
52Heightened risk
Vaccinations is a reference surface, not a single sub-score
Yellow fever
Not required

Recommended

  • Hepatitis A
  • Typhoid
  • Standard adult immunisations

Notes

  • Dengue endemic in coastal regions; mosquito-bite prevention.

Practical guidance

When to book the clinic

Book a travel-health clinic appointment 6 to 8 weeks before departure for Mexico. Several recommended vaccines (Hepatitis A and B, Japanese Encephalitis, rabies pre-exposure) need a multi-dose schedule that does not compress; the full course can take 4 to 6 weeks. Yellow fever specifically takes 10 days to confer immunity and certificates are only valid 10 days after the shot, so this one is non-negotiable on timing.

What “recommended” actually means

The 3 recommended vaccines above are the CDC and WHO guidance for typical travellers to Mexico. They’re not mandatory at the border; they protect against the diseases endemic to the region. Routine immunisations (MMR, dTaP, polio, COVID-19, annual flu) should already be current regardless of destination. Hepatitis A is the single highest-value travel vaccine for most destinations, transmitted through contaminated food and water, and worth getting even if you only plan to eat in established restaurants.

Cost and where to get them

UK NHS travel clinic is free for routine vaccines, charged at cost for travel-specific ones (yellow fever, Japanese Encephalitis, rabies). US travellers should expect $100 to $300 per dose at a travel clinic; many are not covered by standard health insurance. Cheaper option in some destinations: get yellow fever locally at a government clinic on arrival ($20 to $50 in most South American and African capitals) if your itinerary allows the 10-day window before your next entry. Always ask for the official yellow ICVP booklet, not a generic clinic slip.

Related for Mexico

This is not medical advice. Consult a travel-health clinic 6 to 8 weeks before travel for individual recommendations based on your itinerary, vaccination history, and personal medical factors.

More on Mexico

Read the Mexico healthcare and vaccinations chapter →

Mexico is the country where the headline number hides the most. Cancún, Tulum, Mérida, Mexico City’s historic centre, and Guanajuato are statistically as safe as Western European tourist zones; six other states sit at the US State Department’s highest do-not-travel tier. The competent traveller’s job is not to be afraid, it is to know which side of that line their itinerary sits on. This guide unpacks the state-by-state advisory map, the genuine cartel geography, and the much more frequent risks (hurricanes, earthquakes, road traffic, drink spiking) that actually shape what trip insurance covers.

Frequently asked about Mexico

What vaccinations do I need for Mexico?

Recommended vaccines for typical travellers to Mexico: Hepatitis A, Typhoid, Standard adult immunisations. Yellow fever is not required. Routine immunisations (MMR, dTaP, polio, COVID-19, flu) should be current regardless of destination. Verify with a travel-health clinic 6 to 8 weeks before departure.

Is yellow fever vaccination required for Mexico?

No, Mexico does not require yellow fever vaccination for entry. CDC still recommends it for travel to neighbouring endemic regions.

When should I get my travel vaccinations for Mexico?

Book a travel-health clinic 6 to 8 weeks before departure. Several recommended vaccines (Hepatitis A and B, Japanese Encephalitis, rabies pre-exposure) need a multi-dose schedule that does not compress; the full course can take 4 to 6 weeks. Yellow fever specifically takes 10 days to confer immunity and certificates are only valid after that window.