Most children get their first measles shot at 12–15 months, then a second dose before school entry, with earlier dosing used for travel or outbreak risk.
Measles spreads through the air and can hang around after an infected person leaves a room. The schedule is built to protect kids as soon as their immune system can respond well, then seal any gaps before they spend full days in busy classrooms.
If you’re sorting daycare forms, school rules, a family trip, or a missed appointment, the ages can feel confusing. They follow a clear logic tied to infant antibodies and how long-term immunity forms.
Why The First Dose Usually Starts After Age 1
Early in life, many babies carry antibodies passed from a pregnant parent. Those antibodies help early on. They can weaken the immune response to a live vaccine if it’s given too soon. The 12–15 month window is chosen because vaccine response is stronger for most children once those antibodies have faded.
The routine product is usually MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) or MMRV (adds varicella/chickenpox in some programs).
At What Age Measles Vaccine Is Given?
In the United States, CDC recommends a routine two-dose schedule:
- First dose: 12 through 15 months
- Second dose: 4 through 6 years (before school entry)
CDC notes the second dose can be given earlier than 4–6 years as long as it’s at least 28 days after the first dose. That flexibility helps with catch-up and travel planning. The timing and interval details are listed on CDC measles vaccination guidance.
In Canada, guidance commonly places the first measles-containing dose at 12–15 months. A second measles-containing dose is often scheduled at 18 months or later, with the goal of having two valid doses by school entry. Canada’s wording is in the Canadian Immunization Guide measles vaccine guidance.
Measles Vaccine Age Schedule For School Entry And Travel Plans
School entry matters because exposure goes up when kids share indoor air all day. That’s why many schedules place dose two before kindergarten or early elementary, even when dose one already protects most children.
Travel changes the math. Measles is still common in many parts of the world, and airports pack people together. If travel is coming up, ask your clinic early so timing and spacing can be lined up.
Early Doses For Higher-Risk Situations
Sometimes the standard timeline isn’t enough. Public health programs may advise earlier measles vaccination for infants who will travel internationally or during local outbreaks.
Infants 6–11 Months And International Travel
CDC travel guidance commonly recommends one early MMR dose for infants aged 6–11 months who will travel abroad. That dose can add short-term protection during a higher-risk window.
One catch: a dose given before age 12 months does not replace the routine series. Children who get that early dose still need two more doses on or after the first birthday, spaced correctly. This is explained in the CDC Yellow Book travel vaccine recommendations.
Outbreak-Driven Timing Changes
When measles cases appear in a region, public health may open extra clinics, recommend an early infant dose in specific settings, or move up dose two for young children who already had dose one. The exact plan depends on case patterns and local rules. Your clinic can confirm what will count as a valid dose for records.
Catch-Up If Your Child Is Late
Being late is common. The goal is to get two documented doses at valid ages with correct spacing. Most schedules do not restart the series.
Fast Catch-Up Basics
- If your child has 0 doses, dose one is given now, then dose two is scheduled after the minimum interval used in your program.
- If your child has 1 valid dose given on or after 12 months, the next step is usually dose two after the minimum interval.
In the U.S., catch-up spacing for MMR commonly uses a minimum of 28 days between doses. Programs may use different spacing for MMRV in certain ages, so it’s worth confirming the product used.
Table Of Ages, Situations, And What Counts
This table pulls the most common timing questions into one place. If you’re dealing with forms, the “what counts” column is the part that saves headaches later.
| Age Or Situation | Typical Recommendation | What That Dose Means |
|---|---|---|
| 6–11 months (international travel) | 1 early MMR dose | Extra protection; routine doses after 12 months are still needed |
| 12–15 months | Routine first MMR (or MMRV per program) | First long-term documented dose for most children |
| 18 months (common in Canada) | Routine second measles-containing dose | Completes the two-dose series early in life |
| 4–6 years (common in U.S.) | Routine second MMR dose | Raises coverage before school entry settings |
| Behind with 0 doses | Start now, dose 2 after minimum interval | No restart; spacing rules decide validity |
| Behind with 1 valid dose | Give dose 2 after minimum interval | After dose 2, most children are up to date |
| Outbreak in region | Public health may move up doses | Timing can shift while dose validity rules stay in place |
| Pregnancy | MMR not given during pregnancy | Live vaccine; vaccination is planned before pregnancy or postpartum |
Spacing Rules That Make A Dose Valid
Two doses only work as a record if each dose was given at a valid age and the interval between doses meets the minimum rule used in your program. This is where families get tripped up, especially when they’re trying to meet a deadline.
In the U.S., the minimum interval between two MMR doses is at least 28 days. Some programs use different minimum spacing for MMRV in certain ages. Clinics track this in their immunization systems, but it’s still smart to ask the question out loud before you leave.
- Ask what product is being used: MMR or MMRV.
- Ask if today’s dose will count: valid age, valid spacing, valid documentation.
- Ask when the next eligible date is: so you can book it before you forget.
Table For Deadlines, Delays, And What To Do Next
Use this when the schedule isn’t the issue and timing is. The wording keeps you on track when you’re talking to a clinic, school, or travel clinic.
| Deadline Pressure | What To Ask The Clinic | What You’re Trying To Confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Daycare wants proof this month | “Is dose one valid today for our program?” | Valid age and correct entry on the record |
| School registration packet is due | “Can dose two be given now and still count?” | Minimum spacing from the first dose is met |
| Trip is booked in a few weeks | “Does my child need an early travel dose?” | Whether a 6–11 month travel dose applies or catch-up is needed |
| Only one dose is on record | “What’s the first date dose two is eligible?” | Exact next date so you can schedule it |
| No records can be found | “Do we vaccinate, or do we check immunity?” | What your program accepts as proof for school or work |
| Outbreak notice at daycare or school | “Is an accelerated plan recommended for my child’s age?” | Whether timing shifts for dose one or dose two in your region |
Who Needs A Different Plan
MMR is a live attenuated vaccine. It’s safe for most children. Some people need a tailored approach.
Pregnancy
MMR is not given during pregnancy. If someone is found to be non-immune during pregnancy, vaccination is usually offered after delivery. If you’re planning pregnancy and you lack immunity, ask about vaccination before trying to conceive.
Severe Immunocompromise
People with certain immune conditions or immune-suppressing treatments may not be able to receive live vaccines. Clinicians may time vaccination before treatment starts, check immunity, and use extra precautions during outbreaks.
Recent Blood Products
Some blood products can interfere with live vaccine response for a period of time. If a child received a transfusion or immune globulin, the clinic may adjust timing so the dose works as intended.
Side Effects Parents Usually See
Most children have mild effects like soreness where the shot was given, a low fever, or a mild rash days later. These usually pass on their own.
Signs of a severe allergic reaction are rare, but they need urgent care. If your child has trouble breathing, swelling of the face or throat, or widespread hives soon after vaccination, get emergency help.
Records, Proof, And Planning Around Deadlines
Keeping records is as practical as getting the shot. Take a clear photo of the immunization record and store the original somewhere safe. If you switch clinics, request records before you move.
If your child needs proof for school, camp, or travel, ask your clinic to confirm two things: the doses are valid for your region, and the spacing meets the rules. That prevents a last-minute surprise when a form is reviewed.
Why Some Countries Start Earlier Than 12 Months
Not every country starts at 12 months. In settings with higher measles transmission, earlier vaccination can be used to protect infants sooner, with a later second dose to raise coverage. This is part of why travel advice can differ from routine local schedules.
WHO summarizes global timing options and when earlier vaccination can be used in its WHO measles vaccine position paper.
MMR Timing At A Glance
If you want a simple checklist, stick to this: get dose one after the first birthday, get dose two on your region’s timeline, and use an early travel dose only when risk calls for it.
If you want a plain overview of MMR and who should be up to date, see CDC MMR vaccine information.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Measles Vaccination.”Gives routine measles vaccine timing and notes on acceptable dosing intervals.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Travel Vaccine Recommendations for Infants and Children.”Explains early MMR dosing for infants 6–11 months traveling abroad and the need for revaccination after age 12 months.
- Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).“Measles Vaccines: Canadian Immunization Guide.”Describes routine measles-containing vaccine timing and catch-up guidance in Canada.
- World Health Organization (WHO).“Measles Vaccines: WHO Position Paper – April 2017.”Summarizes global timing options and when earlier measles vaccination can be used.
