The varicella shot is usually given at 12 to 15 months, then again at 4 to 6 years.
Most children get the chickenpox vaccine in two routine doses. The first comes in the second year of life. The second comes before or during the early school years. That timing is set to build strong protection before chickenpox tends to spread more easily in group settings.
If your child missed one or both doses, the schedule is often still easy to catch up on. You do not start the series over. You pick up from where things stopped, using the spacing rules for the child’s age.
Why The Vaccine Is Given In Two Stages
Chickenpox used to be a near-universal childhood infection. For many kids it was mild, but not for all. Some children ended up with skin infections, pneumonia, brain swelling, or a hospital stay. The vaccine cut those risks sharply, which is why it became a routine childhood shot in many places.
The first dose teaches the immune system what to look for. The second dose tightens that protection. In plain terms, one dose helps, and two doses do a better job at blocking illness and cutting the odds of a breakthrough case.
At What Age Is The Chickenpox Vaccine Given?
The routine ages are simple:
- First dose: 12 through 15 months
- Second dose: 4 through 6 years
That is the standard timing for healthy children in the United States. Some kids get a single-antigen varicella shot. Some get the combination MMRV shot, which covers measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella in one visit. Your child’s clinician will choose the form that fits the child’s age and history.
The age window matters. The first dose is not given before 12 months in the routine schedule. The second dose is then placed years later, when children are still young but closer to school entry and wider exposure.
Chickenpox Vaccine Timing By Age Group
Parents often ask the same thing in a few different ways: What if my toddler is due now? What if my preschooler only got one dose? What if my teen never got it? The answer depends on age and dose history.
Here is the routine schedule and the catch-up pattern in one place:
| Age Group | What Is Usually Given | Spacing Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Birth to 11 months | No routine varicella dose | Routine series starts at 12 months |
| 12 to 15 months | First dose | Routine starting window |
| 16 months to 3 years | Catch up first dose if missed | Give when due; second dose later |
| 4 to 6 years | Second dose | Routine booster window |
| 7 to 12 years | Catch up one or two doses if needed | 3 months between doses |
| 13 years and older | Catch up two doses if not immune | 4 weeks between doses |
| Previously had one dose only | Get the missing second dose | No need to restart series |
What Happens If A Dose Was Missed
Missed vaccine visits happen. Families move, records get messy, kids get sick on appointment day, and life rolls on. The good news is that the catch-up rules are clear.
If a child under 13 already got the first dose, the second dose is usually spaced at least three months later. If the person is 13 or older and still needs vaccination, the two doses are spaced at least four weeks apart. The CDC’s catch-up immunization schedule lays out those intervals clearly.
One detail saves a lot of stress: a delayed series does not need to be restarted. That applies to varicella just as it does to many other routine childhood vaccines.
When A Child May Not Need The Vaccine
Not every child needs a fresh varicella shot. Some already have proof of immunity. That can include a clinician-verified history of chickenpox, written vaccine records, or lab evidence in some cases. Families sometimes assume a rash years ago “must have been chickenpox,” but that is not always enough.
If the diagnosis was never confirmed, it is worth asking your child’s clinician to review the history. In many cases, vaccination is the simpler path when there is no solid record. The CDC’s varicella vaccine recommendations page spells out what counts as evidence of immunity and when catch-up vaccination is advised.
When The Vaccine May Need To Wait
Some children should wait, and some should not get the vaccine at all until a clinician checks the full picture. That is because the chickenpox vaccine is a live vaccine.
A delay or a different plan may be needed if a child:
- Has a weakened immune system
- Is getting high-dose immune-suppressing treatment
- Recently received certain blood products
- Has a severe allergy to a vaccine component
- Is moderately or badly ill on the day of vaccination
There can also be timing questions around pregnancy in older teens and adults, or around household contact with someone who is severely immunocompromised. Those cases need an individual decision with a licensed clinician.
Routine Vs Catch-Up Chickenpox Vaccine Ages
This table makes the routine schedule and the delayed schedule easier to compare at a glance.
| Situation | Recommended Dose Timing | What To Know |
|---|---|---|
| Healthy child on time | 12–15 months, then 4–6 years | Standard two-dose schedule |
| Child under 13 missed first dose | Give first dose now | Second dose follows by age and spacing rule |
| Child under 13 has one prior dose | Give second dose | Keep at least 3 months between doses |
| Age 13 or older, not immune | Two doses | Keep at least 4 weeks between doses |
Questions Parents Often Have About Timing
Can The Second Dose Be Given Earlier Than Age 4?
Yes, in some cases the second dose can be given earlier as long as the minimum interval is met and the child’s clinician agrees. Still, the routine schedule places that second dose at 4 through 6 years. That is the age range most families will see on the calendar.
What If My Child Is Starting School And Is Missing A Dose?
That is a common catch-up moment. Schools and childcare programs often require proof of immunization or a valid exemption, depending on local law. If a record shows only one dose, many children can get the second dose during a routine visit and get back on track.
Is One Dose Ever Enough?
One dose gives some protection, but the routine U.S. schedule uses two doses. That is the setup used to lower illness rates more sharply and cut down on breakthrough cases.
How To Check If Your Child Is Up To Date
If you are not sure where your child stands, pull together three things: the shot record, the child’s birth date, and any note about prior chickenpox illness. Then compare that record with the CDC’s chickenpox vaccination guidance.
If there is a gap, ask for a catch-up plan at the next visit. Most of the time, the answer is plain: give the missing dose, keep the right spacing, and move on. No reset. No extra doses just because the schedule slipped.
What The Schedule Means In Plain English
If you want the direct answer, here it is again: the chickenpox vaccine is usually given at 12 to 15 months and again at 4 to 6 years. Missed it? Catch-up vaccination is still on the table, with spacing based on the child’s age.
That makes this one of the easier vaccine schedules to track. Two doses. Two age windows. Clear catch-up rules. Once you know those numbers, the rest falls into place.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Catch-up Immunization Schedule for Children and Adolescents.”Used for delayed-dose spacing rules and the note that a vaccine series does not need to be restarted.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Varicella Vaccine Recommendations.”Used for routine dose ages, evidence of immunity, and age-based spacing for catch-up vaccination.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Chickenpox Vaccination.”Used for the routine two-dose schedule, vaccine age ranges, and general vaccine timing for children and older people who are not immune.
