How Many Vaccines Can You Get at Once?

Is It Safe to Get Multiple Vaccines at the Same Time?

Is It Safe to Get Multiple Vaccines at the Same Time?
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Vaccines have changed modern medicine, leading to a 99 percent decline in the incidence of more than a dozen potentially deadly diseases.

And the innovations keep coming.

Now, in addition to a yearly flu shot, you can get updated COVID-19 vaccines targeted to the latest circulating variants. Plus, if you’re 60 or older, you may be eligible for a vaccine to protect against RSV (respiratory syncytial virus), which can cause severe disease in the elderly and other vulnerable groups.

But let’s face it: Scheduling individual appointments for all these vaccines — not to mention other adult vaccines recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), such as the shingles vaccine and a tetanus or Tdap shot — is a hassle.

A way to simplify the matter is to get two vaccines at the same time — or even three. But is it safe? Do vaccines become less effective if you get more than one at a time? And what about side effects? Keep reading for answers to all your questions about getting two or more vaccines at a single visit to the doctor or pharmacy.

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How Many Vaccines Can You Get at Once?

Experts say it’s fine to get more than one vaccine at a time. “Theoretically, there’s not a maximum number of vaccines you can get at the same time if you’re willing to have sore arms — you could get four or five together,” says Sten Vermund, MD, PhD, a professor of public health, an infectious disease epidemiologist, and a pediatrician at the Yale School of Public Health in New Haven, Connecticut.

Ana Weil, MD, MPH, a researcher and infectious disease specialist with UW Medicine in Seattle, agrees, saying, “We have no reservations from a medical standpoint. There’s no upper limit to how many you can get at one time.”

In fact, certain scenarios require this approach, says Dr. Weil. “For example, in a medical situation where a person is going to have a compromised immune system in the future, they need to get a lot of vaccines at one time,” she says.

What would getting multiple vaccines at once look like in practice? If you’re in your fifties and plan to go this fall for your flu shot and COVID-19 shot, you may wonder if you could also request the shingles vaccine recommended by your doctor or pharmacist. You could get flu, COVID, and shingles vaccines at the same time, confirms Dr. Vermund.

And if you’re eligible and want to get your flu, COVID-19, and RSV shots together, that’s safe, too.

Are Vaccines Less Effective When You Bundle Them?

A vaccine doesn’t become less potent when it’s delivered in a group of immunizations, says Vermund. “They are equally effective whether you give them together or separately. The immune system sees the different protein fragments [used in traditional vaccines], or mRNA fragments [utilized in certain COVID-19 vaccines], as separate from each other,” he says.

“Our immune system is designed to sort all this out,” Vermund says. On an average day, the body might be exposed to multiple allergens, viruses, or bacteria, he explains, and a healthy immune system is able to recognize and mount some level of defense against each.

Note that there are two situations where vaccines cannot be given together:

  • People who have anatomic asplenia (who do not have a spleen) or functional asplenia (whose spleen is not functioning properly) or have HIV should not get the meningococcal vaccine (MCV4) and pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) together.
  • People should not get two different types of pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13 and PPSV23) at the same time.

What Are the Benefits of Getting 2 or More Vaccines in the Same Visit?

Studies suggest that the convenience of bundling vaccines makes this approach appealing among people of all ages. “The reality is that people are busy with jobs or school,” Vermund says. Research shows that scheduling and remembering to get recommended vaccines is often cited among reasons that children and adults don’t get needed shots.

“Our recommendation medically is often that people get the vaccines they need at the same time; that’s the most likely path to getting the vaccine. Even when a person intends to get all the recommended vaccines, not 100 percent of people are going to follow up,” says Weil.

“If you get a COVID vaccine and the flu vaccine on the same visit, it’s far more convenient,” says Vermund. Add in the new RSV vaccine for adults, if you are eligible, and “You could get all three of those at once,” says Vermund.

“That goes for the pneumococcal vaccine, the tetanus vaccine — all the most common adult vaccines can be given at once or in any combination,” he says.

What if You Don’t Want to Get a Couple of Vaccines at Once?

The question of whether to bundle vaccines is a personal choice, says Weil. “If people would like to space vaccines out, of course, that’s their prerogative to do so. Even if we recommend that people get the vaccines at the same time, people should do what makes the most sense for them,” she says.

Are There Worse Side Effects From Getting Multiple Vaccines at Once as an Adult?

The reality is that vaccines often have side effects, says Vermund. “A sore arm is the No. 1 side effect, which is typically a reaction of the body to the ingredients of a vaccine. Different people react differently to vaccines; many people have minimal to no substantial reaction, and others have a more robust reaction,” he says.

If you receive multiple vaccines at the same time, any side effects you might have could all occur at the same time, says Weil. “It doesn’t mean that those side effects are worse from an individual vaccine, but if they happened at the same time, you can imagine that that might cause more symptoms,” she says.

If you have a history of having strong reactions and uncomfortable side effects with vaccines, you may want to space your vaccines out rather than getting two or more at once, says Vermund.

If you decide to space out the three vaccines typically administered in the fall (flu, COVID-19, and RSV for those who are eligible), it would make sense to get the RSV vaccine first, says William Schaffner, MD, a professor of preventive medicine and health policy in the division of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee. “That’s because the data indicate that the protection it provides should extend through the entire winter and may well even extend into the next winter season,” he says.

Can You Get 2 Vaccines in the Same Arm?

Two shots, two arms? That all depends on your preference, says Vermund. “Some people find it less painful to do one in each arm, but others are reluctant to have a sore left arm and a sore right arm at the same time,” he says.

If one of your shots is a COVID-19 vaccine, a recent study published in the journal eBioMedicine found that the immune response is stronger if you get it in the same arm as your previous COVID-19 vaccine.
But a different study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation found that COVID vaccines were more effective if people alternated arms. So the jury is still out on this point.

Is It Okay to Treat Any Side Effects From Vaccines?

“An ice pack is a tried-and-true measure to reduce local inflammation. That is a way of reducing the inflammation and pressure in the arm and often adequate to relieve discomfort,” says Vermund.

For more generalized symptoms, NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) like ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), acetaminophen (Tylenol, others), and aspirin can be used as directed by your provider, he says. “Some people report feeling overall fatigue after the COVID vaccine. In that case get some rest and typically you’ll feel better by the next day,” says Vermund.

Serious side effects from vaccines are extremely rare, affecting often only one or two people out of one million vaccine doses, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Signs of a severe allergic reaction can include difficulty breathing, swelling of the face and throat, a fast heartbeat, a bad rash all over the body, and dizziness and weakness. If you experience this type of reaction after a vaccine, call 911 or go to the nearest hospital.

Do I Really Need to Get So Many — or Really, Any — Vaccines?

Perhaps because there’s no one alive today who can remember a world before vaccines existed, the protection that immunization gives us can often be taken for granted as part of modern life.

“Many of us in the medical community think vaccines are the No. 1 technology that has reduced mortality for adults and children in the 20th century,” says Vermund.

“And coming into the 21st century we’re equally enthusiastic because we have some new technologies that are quite effective at confronting diseases that we previously weren’t able to combat via vaccination,” he adds.

The Takeaway

  • Getting more than one vaccine at a time is safe and can be a good way to efficiently manage your healthcare appointments.
  • After getting multiple vaccines at once, you are more likely to experience side effects like arm soreness.
  • Ease any discomfort with remedies like over-the-counter pain medication or an ice pack.

Resources We Trust

EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Resources
  1. Andrew FE et al. Vaccination Greatly Reduces Disease, Disability, Death, and Inequity Worldwide. Bulletin of the World Health Organization. February 2008.
  2. Vaccine Information for Adults: What Vaccines Are Recommended for You. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. June 12, 2024.
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Jane Yoon Scott, MD

Medical Reviewer

Jane Yoon Scott, MD, is an infectious disease physician and an assistant professor of medicine at Emory University in Atlanta. Dr. Scott enjoys connecting with her patients, empowering them to understand and take ownership of their health, and encouraging them to ask questions so that they can make informed and thoughtful decisions.

She graduated with the highest honors from the Georgia Institute of Technology, then received her MD from the Medical College of Georgia. She completed her internal medicine residency training and chief residency at Temple University Hospital, as well as a fellowship in infectious diseases at Emory University. She is board-certified in both internal medicine and infectious diseases.

When she is not seeing patients, Dr. Scott works with neighboring health departments to promote public health, especially to communities that have been historically underserved. She also teaches medical trainees and lectures medical students at the Emory University School of Medicine.

In her free time, Dr. Scott appreciates a good coffee shop, weekend hikes, playing guitar, strolling through cities, sampling restaurants, and traveling to new places.

Becky Upham, MA

Becky Upham

Author

Becky Upham has worked throughout the health and wellness world for over 25 years. She's been a race director, a team recruiter for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, a salesperson for a major pharmaceutical company, a blogger for Moogfest, a communications manager for Mission Health, a fitness instructor, and a health coach.

Upham majored in English at the University of North Carolina and has a master's in English writing from Hollins University.

Upham enjoys teaching cycling classes, running, reading fiction, and making playlists.