How Many Vaccines Can You Get at Once?

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.

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.”