Vaccinations offered from the practice

NHS vaccination schedule

Vaccines for babies under 1 year oldAgeVaccines

8 weeks

6-in-1 vaccine
Rotavirus vaccine
MenB vaccine

12 weeks

6-in-1 vaccine (2nd dose)
Pneumococcal vaccine
Rotavirus vaccine (2nd dose)

16 weeks

6-in-1 vaccine (3rd dose)
MenB vaccine (2nd dose)

Vaccines for children aged 1 to 15AgeVaccines

1 year

Hib/MenC vaccine (1st dose)
MMR vaccine (1st dose)
Pneumococcal vaccine (2nd dose)
MenB vaccine (3rd dose)

2 to 15 years

Children's flu vaccine (every year until children finish Year 11 of secondary school)

3 years and 4 months

MMR vaccine (2nd dose)
4-in-1 pre-school booster vaccine

12 to 13 years

HPV vaccine

14 years

Td/IPV vaccine (3-in-1 teenage booster)
MenACWY vaccine

Vaccines for adultsAgeVaccines

65 years

Flu vaccine (given every year after turning 65)
Pneumococcal vaccine
Shingles vaccine (if you turned 65 on or after 1 September 2023)

70 to 79 years

Shingles vaccine

75 to 79 years

RSV vaccine

75 years and over

COVID-19 vaccine (usually given in spring and winter)

Vaccines for pregnant womenWhen it's offeredVaccines

During flu season

Flu vaccine in pregnancy

Around 20 weeks pregnant

Whooping cough (pertussis) vaccine

From 28 weeks pregnant

RSV vaccine

Extra vaccines for at-risk people

Some vaccines are only available on the NHS for groups of people who need extra protection.

See vaccines for at-risk babies and children

See vaccines for people with underlying health conditions


















Important

If you're starting college or university, you should make sure you've already had:

  • the MenACWY vaccine – which protects against serious infections like meningitis. You can still ask your GP for this vaccine until your 25th birthday.
  • 2 doses of the MMR vaccine – as there are outbreaks of mumps and measles at universities. If you have not previously had 2 doses of MMR, you can still ask your GP for the vaccine.
  • the HPV vaccine – which helps protect against genital warts and cancers caused by the human papilloma virus (HPV), such as cervical cancer.

Date Published: 11th May, 2025
Date Last Updated: 11th May, 2025