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FAQs on Overseas Vaccination Records & Travel

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Table of Contents

  • What vaccines are accepted for ingestion in the NIR?
  • How can I get my overseas vaccination records ingested?
  • What should I bring to the clinic to ingest my overseas vaccination records?
  • How can I check my vaccination records?
  • Are the vaccine doses I have received valid?
  • Do I need to restart my vaccination if I am late for any of my vaccine doses?
  • How can I receive more doses if I need to or wish to?

Overseas Vaccination Records

For the purpose of ingesting the vaccination records into the NIR, all vaccination doses can be accepted, regardless of how long ago they were taken. Combinations of different WHO EUL vaccines can also be accepted.

If you have a vaccination document (may be in a hardcopy or digital format) You may visit any of the following locations to have your records verified and ingested:

a) Any Joint Testing and Vaccination Centre (JTVC) on Mondays to Fridays from 9am to 6.30pm

  • To locate these JTVCs, please click here

b) Any clinic that offers this as a service.

  • A non-exhaustive list of such clinics can be found by using this link . Please call ahead to check if your preferred clinic offers this service and to book an appointment if needed. Please note that polyclinics do not provide this service.
  • Clinics will charge a fee for the time and manpower needed to provide this service and handle the ingestion of records. 

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COVID-19 international travel advisories

Visitors to the U.S. do not need to be tested or vaccinated for COVID-19. U.S. citizens going abroad, check Department of State travel advisories for the country you will visit.

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Find country-specific travel advisories, including COVID-19 restrictions, from the Department of State.

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LAST UPDATED: May 31, 2024

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Starting Today Fully Vaccinated Travelers Permitted to Enter U.S. via Land and Ferry Border Crossings

WASHINGTON – Starting today, foreign nationals who have been fully vaccinated for COVID-19 and have appropriate documentation will be permitted to enter the United States via land ports of entry (POEs) and ferry terminals for non-essential reasons such as tourism. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reminds these travelers to be prepared to (1) provide proof of their COVID-19 vaccination, as outlined on the  Centers for Disease Control (CDC)  website; and (2) verbally attest to their reason for travel and COVID-19 vaccination status during a border inspection.

“Today, after more than 18 months of pandemic-related travel restrictions, DHS is taking a critical step toward resuming normal travel,” said Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas. “Travelers who are fully vaccinated for COVID-19 and have appropriate documentation are now permitted to enter the United States via our land and ferry border crossings for non-essential reasons such as visiting friends and family and engaging in tourism. DHS continues to work closely with our international partners and domestic public health experts to sustainably resume travel while protecting our communities and economic security.”

DHS’s U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is working to prevent long lines at land POEs and ferry terminals as normal travel resumes. However, long lines are expected in the initial days following pent-up demand, and CBP will adjust resources as needed, while continuing to facilitate lawful trade and travel and protect our national security. Travelers are advised to expect longer-than-normal wait times, familiarize themselves with the new guidelines , and have appropriate documentation ready during a border inspection.

U.S. citizens are reminded to bring a  Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative  (WHTI)-compliant document, such as a valid U.S. passport, Trusted Traveler Program card, Enhanced Driver’s License, or Enhanced Tribal Card, when re-entering the United States and should be prepared to present a WHTI-compliant document if requested by a CBP Officer during a border inspection. Any non-citizen attempting to enter the United States through illegal means or without appropriate documentation may be subject to expulsion or removal.

To help reduce wait times and long lines, travelers can take advantage of  facial biometrics  and the  CBP One™ , which is a single portal for CBP mobile applications and services.

To learn more about the updated requirements for travelers, review the DHS fact sheet .

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Help! What Will I Need to Show When Traveling, and Where?

Proof of vaccination has become increasingly vital to accessing local restaurants and distant countries alike. Our columnist takes a deeper dive into what that means for travelers.

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By Sarah Firshein

Dear Tripped Up,

I am writing with a simple question: What is an acceptable proof of vaccination for U.S. travelers? I have the C.D.C. card, but that’s just a piece of paper that anybody can easily recreate, and its authenticity cannot be verified in the same way as a passport or driver’s license. What if I am given this argument at the airport check-in counter? George

Dear George,

The physical C.D.C. card is precisely what you’ll need to travel anywhere that requires proof of vaccination. The much-publicized reports of counterfeiting are daunting to read about, but those are in the ultra-slim minority. If your card is real, you’ll be fine at the airport.

Because it’s likely you’ll be asked to show other virus-related documents and attestations while traveling, it’s important to stay on top of countries’ individual requirements. On a recent trip to France, Mari Hawkins, the president of the travel agency Gemini Travel based in Mount Kisco, N.Y., was asked to show her C.D.C. card at the Delta Air Lines check-in desk at Kennedy International Airport and again upon landing. She was also given general Covid-19 attestation forms to fill out on the inbound and outbound flights, though the one she filled out while heading to France, she said, was never collected.

Although the United States does not have a universal, countrywide digital health pass that stands in for the physical card, there are ongoing efforts by states and private businesses to ease the vaccination-verification process through digital means. United Airlines, American Airlines, British Airways and others have all rolled out varying technologies that allow passengers to upload proof of vaccination before a flight. In July, Clear, the biometrics company, began a digital initiative that allows Hawaii-bound tourists to upload their vaccination records directly into the Clear app, facilitating entry into the state and allowing them to bypass the 10-day quarantine. Two apps in New York — the statewide Excelsior Pass and NYC Covid Safe — prove vaccination status and ease entry into restaurants, gyms and other indoor settings.

We’re both fully vaccinated and hoping to go to Florence later this month. But Italy has just announced that a nationwide “green pass” is now required to enter museums, restaurants and other indoor venues. For Europeans with the E.U. digital Covid certificate , this should be no sweat. But for Americans, will C.D.C. cards suffice? If not, how do we get a substitute? If we can’t go into museums or restaurants, there is little point in going. Ann

In recent weeks, Italy and France have announced separate, yet similar, green pass requirements for indoor venues. The initiatives have sparked major protests across France but have been generally accepted in Italy.

They have also left those who work on the ground in travel and tourism perplexed, if not outright concerned about exactly the issue you raised: If vaccinated Americans can fly to these countries but can’t actually go inside venues once they’re there, will they bother going at all?

The situation in Italy is straightforward: According to recent ordinances issued by the Italian Ministry of Health, Americans can simply show their C.D.C. cards — no “conversion” to a “green pass” needed (nor possible). Unvaccinated Americans (or those without their C.D.C. cards) will have to present a virus test within 48 hours of entering an indoor venue.

Fundamentally, said Candice Criscione, who shares tips for planning family vacations in Italy on her blog the Tuscan Mom , “this is Italy’s message to Americans and other tourists: Get vaccinated before coming to visit. It’s too complicated and expensive to have to get an official Covid test every time you want to enter a museum or eat at a restaurant, and your vacation options will be extremely limited.”

Things have been a bit more complicated for tourists in France, which since July 21 has required a health pass to access public venues, including museums, with more than 50 people. In late July, one Times reader reported that he was turned away from a museum: “They will not accept my paper record,” he wrote.

Others have had no issues entering museums with C.D.C. cards. In an email, a spokeswoman for the Musée d’Orsay and the Musée de l’Orangerie, two major museums in Paris, said American vaccination cards would be accepted at both institutions.

“I get that it’s confusing,” said Meg Zimbeck, the founder of Paris by Mouth, which ran 1,000 food tours a year before the pandemic, and who has been monitoring the issue closely. “But what I’m emphasizing to everyone is that your C.D.C. card is probably fine. I’ve heard about one person in a hundred being turned away. And that’s because of an individual employee as gatekeeper.”

There have also been diverse anecdotes about French pharmacies’ ability to convert C.D.C. cards into scannable French QR codes. That process took Mallory Shaw, a luxury travel adviser and the owner of the Virtuoso-affiliated Trouvaille Yacht & Travel, around 10 minutes when she popped into a pharmacy between the Avenue des Champs-Élysées and the Tuileries Gardens in Paris.

Jodi Kennedy Gaffey, whose company the Epicurean Concierge organizes bespoke tours and experiences throughout France, had no issues using her C.D.C. card to gain entry into museums in Paris But she had zero luck when she tried to convert it into a French health pass at two different pharmacies in Provence in early August.

Unlike in the United States, there are no chain pharmacies in France. All are independently owned, and they have not been uniformly converting C.D.C. cards into French health passes. This has left tourists in trial-and-error mode — to varying success, as revealed by the firsthand anecdotes that Ms. Zimbeck has been collecting and publishing on the Paris By Mouth website .

“We’ve been seeing some ad hoc solutions where some pharmacies in touristy neighborhoods will say, ‘Sure, I’ll do it for 20 bucks,’” she said. “But it’s not an official thing. That’s why I’ve been telling people, ‘Look, if I were in your shoes, I wouldn’t spend an hour and a half trying to convert anything.’”

Last week, France started requiring the health pass for smaller indoor venues, including restaurants. And although the French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs has also instituted an official application process by which non-E.U. citizens who were vaccinated abroad can obtain the French pass (including a QR code linking to their vaccination status), for now the system will handle applications for foreigners already in France and will be made available to future arrivals on a rolling basis. There’s also little insight into how long processing time will take.

That’s why even visitors who apply for the health pass through official channels should also carry their C.D.C. cards.

“The bottom line is that France depends heavily on tourism and, as we all know, last year was horrific,” said Ms. Gaffey. “I have to think that restaurants and cafes will work with customers. It’s not in their best interest to turn people away who appear to be vaccinated.”

Be sure to have the physical card — not a photocopy or digital version — and a passport.

“Word is out that the C.D.C. paper card is OK, but it’s also about meeting the restaurant owner halfway: realizing they’re taking an order at the table next door, they’re trying to deliver a plate of food, they’re trying to take a check,” said Ms. Zimbeck. “So don’t make it hard on them by bringing a blurry Xerox.”

Sarah Firshein is a New York-based writer. If you need advice about a best-laid travel plan that went awry, send an email to [email protected] .

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How to prove your vaccination status when traveling internationally

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Even as the pandemic approaches its third year, there’s no such thing as a vaccination passport in the United States. So how do you prove that you’ve been vaccinated and boosted when you travel internationally?

I had to answer that question quickly when I landed recently on the Azorean island of São Miguel. Officials ushered arriving passengers into a long line and asked to see our Certificado de Vacinação, also known as the European Union’s “ digital green certificate .” I didn’t have one. And there is no U.S. equivalent.

“Unfortunately, given the patchwork approach to vaccine passports in the U.S. — with some states offering some form of vaccine passport and others banning vaccine passports — it would be nearly impractical for a foreign government to recognize a U.S.-based application,” explains Bob Bacheler, managing director of Flying Angels , a non-emergency medical transport service.

And so began an adventure that many Americans have probably experienced. How do you prove you’ve been vaccinated? Can you get a foreign vaccine passport? And what if you can’t prove you’ve been vaccinated?

I hoped the solution would be my Yellow Card, also known as the International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis. I wrote about the Yellow Card in an earlier column , and when I had my vaccine doses and booster shot, I asked the nurse to fill out my Yellow Card and my Centers for Disease Control and Prevention coronavirus vaccination record card.

The Azorean official accepted my Yellow Card. She also okayed my 19-year-old son’s Yellow Card. But when she opened my 16-year-old son’s card, she said we had “um problema.”

When he finished his vaccination series this summer, he had forgotten to ask the pharmacist to fill out the Yellow Card in addition to his CDC card.

“Look,” I murmured, barely able to keep my eyes open after more than 30 hours of flying. “Can't I just fill out the information on his Yellow Card?”

“No,” she insisted. It needed to be done by a medical professional.

Finally, I offered her his expired PCR test, taken almost four days previously in Los Angeles. She waved us through. In the van on the way to our hotel, I filled out my son’s Yellow Card with his CDC vaccine information.

But can you simply get a foreign vaccine certificate? Alan Oakes did. The retired magazine publisher from Laguna Hills, Calif., has made two trips to France since the pandemic started. This past summer, French authorities announced that foreign nationals could qualify for a TousAntiCovid pass — the France digital covid pass. In November, on their most recent visit, Oakes and his wife applied for the pass and received it. But they didn’t really need it.

“We showed our handwritten U.S.A. CDC pass and had no issues,” he says.

Andy Abramson, a frequent air traveler who runs a communications firm in Los Angeles, also obtained a French vaccine passport this past fall. He found that the QR code it generated allowed him to move between European countries.

Getting a vaccine passport in France is pretty straightforward. You can go to any pharmacy and pay about $40 to verify your status. You have to bring your passport and original vaccination certificate, then download the TousAntiCovid app. That’s what Jack Ezon, founder of Embark Beyond , a travel agency, did when he visited Paris recently.

An insider tip: Most luxury hotels in France will get a vaccine certificate for you. “Just drop your passport, vaccine certificate and fill out a form, and you’ll have a QR code delivered to your room,” Ezon says.

You can obtain an E.U. digital green certificate when you’re in Europe at a pharmacy or testing center. For example, if you’re headed to Barcelona this spring, you can apply for a certificate at any test center accredited by the Catalan Health Service, CatSalut. Readers have also reported that they have applied for a E.U. digital green certificate at French pharmacies. Paperwork requirements vary. Some will accept your U.S. cards as proof of vaccination, while others may require a PCR or antigen test.

If you can’t get a vaccine passport like the E.U.’s digital green certificate, you can always try to use the vaccination record you have. That’s right: the CDC card you were given when you were vaccinated. That’s what Jeff O’Hara​ did when he visited Germany recently. He found that the certificates were required almost everywhere he went.

“I had a picture of my CDC card saved on my phone,” he says. It worked every time, says O’Hara, who runs an event management firm in New Orleans. Just to be safe, O’Hara also recommends having an app such as Airside or VerifFly in case someone questions your card.

Craig Zapatka, co-founder of the travel planning site Elsewhere , says the stakes are pretty low once you’re in your destination country.

“There have been only a few very special incidents where our travelers have been rejected, and only in Western Europe,” he says. “But the incidents did not in any way affect the overall travel experience. They occurred at a nightlife event and a few cafes.”

And if you don’t have the proof you need? In São Miguel, where my sons and I had our paperwork trouble, the agent said we could take a quick antigen test, then enter the country. But I’ve also seen officials in Europe wave travelers through, even when their documentation isn’t perfect.

Maybe that’s the most important takeaway when it comes to foreign vaccine passports: In the end, having one may not even matter.

Read past Navigator columns

Do you need a second copy of your passport — and how do you get one?

What to do when a hotel closure impacts your trip

Health insurance for travelers: Which one is right for you?

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Destinations

Measles cases are increasing globally, including in the United States. The majority of measles cases imported into the United States occur in unvaccinated U.S. residents who become infected during international travel. A list of countries with confirmed measles outbreaks can be found on the Global Measles Travel Health Notice (THN) . Measles spreads rapidly in communities that are not fully vaccinated and may pose a risk to international travelers in places not included in the THN. CDC recommends all travelers get fully vaccinated against measles before traveling to any international destination.

a girl in airport walking.

If you need help finding travel information:

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Complete List of Destinations

  • Afghanistan
  • American Samoa
  • Anegada (see Virgin Islands, British )
  • Anguilla (U.K.)
  • Antigua and Barbuda
  • Austral Islands (see French Polynesia (France) )

⇧ Top

  • Bahamas, The
  • Barbuda (see Antigua and Barbuda )
  • Bermuda (U.K.)
  • Bora-Bora (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • British Indian Ocean Territory (U.K.)
  • Burkina Faso
  • Burma (Myanmar)
  • Caicos Islands (see Turks and Caicos Islands (U.K.) )
  • Canary Islands (Spain)
  • Cayman Islands (U.K.)
  • Central African Republic
  • Christmas Island (Australia)
  • Cocos (Keeling) Islands (Australia)
  • Congo, Republic of the
  • Cook Islands (New Zealand)
  • Côte d'Ivoire
  • Curaçao
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Dominican Republic
  • Dubai (see United Arab Emirates )
  • Easter Island (Chile)
  • El Salvador
  • England (see United Kingdom )
  • Equatorial Guinea
  • Eswatini (Swaziland)
  • Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas)
  • Faroe Islands (Denmark)
  • French Guiana (France)
  • French Polynesia (France)
  • Galápagos Islands (see Ecuador )
  • Gambia, The
  • Gibraltar (U.K.)
  • Greenland (Denmark)
  • Grenadines (see Saint Vincent and the Grenadines )
  • Guam (U.S.)
  • Guernsey (see United Kingdom )
  • Guinea-Bissau
  • Holy See (see Italy )
  • Hong Kong SAR (China)
  • Isle of Man (see United Kingdom )
  • Israel, including the West Bank and Gaza
  • Ivory Coast (see Côte d'Ivoire )
  • Jersey (see United Kingdom )
  • Jost Van Dyke (see Virgin Islands, British )
  • Liechtenstein
  • Macau SAR (China)
  • Madeira Islands (Portugal)
  • Marquesas Islands (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Marshall Islands
  • Martinique (France)
  • Mayotte (France)
  • Micronesia, Federated States of
  • Montserrat (U.K.)
  • Moorea (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Myanmar (Burma) (see Burma (Myanmar) )
  • Netherlands, The
  • New Caledonia (France)
  • New Zealand
  • Niue (New Zealand)
  • Norfolk Island (Australia)
  • North Korea
  • North Macedonia
  • Northern Ireland (see United Kingdom )
  • Northern Mariana Islands (U.S.)
  • Papua New Guinea
  • Philippines
  • Pitcairn Islands (U.K.)
  • Puerto Rico (U.S.)
  • Réunion (France)
  • Rota (see Northern Mariana Islands (U.S.) )
  • Rurutu (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Saint Barthelemy
  • Saint Croix (see Virgin Islands, U.S. )
  • Saint Helena (U.K.)
  • Saint John (see Virgin Islands, U.S. )
  • Saint Kitts and Nevis
  • Saint Lucia
  • Saint Martin
  • Saint Pierre and Miquelon (France)
  • Saint Thomas (see Virgin Islands, U.S. )
  • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • Saipan (see Northern Mariana Islands (U.S.) )
  • São Tomé and Príncipe
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Scotland (see United Kingdom )
  • Sierra Leone
  • Sint Eustatius
  • Sint Maarten
  • Society Islands (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Solomon Islands
  • South Africa
  • South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands (U.K.)
  • South Korea
  • South Sandwich Islands (see South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands (U.K.) )
  • South Sudan
  • Swaziland (Eswatini) (see Eswatini (Swaziland) )
  • Switzerland
  • Tahiti (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Timor-Leste (East Timor)
  • Tinian (see Northern Mariana Islands (U.S.) )
  • Tobago (see Trinidad and Tobago )
  • Tokelau (New Zealand)
  • Tortola (see Virgin Islands, British )
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Tubuai (see French Polynesia (France) )
  • Turkmenistan
  • Turks and Caicos Islands (U.K.)
  • United Arab Emirates
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
  • Vatican City (see Italy )
  • Virgin Gorda (see Virgin Islands, British )
  • Virgin Islands, British
  • Virgin Islands, U.S.
  • Wake Island
  • Wales (see United Kingdom )
  • Zanzibar (see Tanzania )

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Exit Notification / Disclaimer Policy

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cannot attest to the accuracy of a non-federal website.
  • Linking to a non-federal website does not constitute an endorsement by CDC or any of its employees of the sponsors or the information and products presented on the website.
  • You will be subject to the destination website's privacy policy when you follow the link.
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IMAGES

  1. A checklist for safe travels

    safe travel vaccination check portal

  2. Travel Vaccination Clinic

    safe travel vaccination check portal

  3. Digital COVID Vaccine Record for Travel, Work, & School

    safe travel vaccination check portal

  4. Travel vaccinations guide

    safe travel vaccination check portal

  5. Infographic. Vaccination for international travellers

    safe travel vaccination check portal

  6. All about Covid-19 vaccination certificates

    safe travel vaccination check portal

VIDEO

  1. safe travel hack! ✈️

  2. Manila To Singapore + New Travel Requirements September 2022

  3. Ramazan subsidy program Eligibility Check portal

  4. Travel Safe

COMMENTS

  1. Travelers' Health

    CDC Travelers' Health Branch provides updated travel information, notices, and vaccine requirements to inform international travelers and provide guidance to the clinicians who serve them.

  2. Safetravel Portal

    Safetravel Portal

  3. MOH

    A: Please bring along your personal identification documents (e.g. NRIC, FIN or passport) and overseas vaccination certificates, which can be in original hard copy or a digital copy. The certificates should clearly list your personal identifiers (e.g. full name, date of birth, passport number) and details of the vaccine doses you have taken (e ...

  4. ICA

    All returning Singaporeans, Singapore permanent residents and foreigners entering Singapore are required to submit their Singapore Arrival Card with health declaration online via the SGAC e-Service before arriving in Singapore.

  5. Frequently Asked Questions: Guidance for Travelers to Enter the U.S

    Effective November 8, 2021, new air travel requirements applied to many noncitizens who are visiting the United States temporarily. These travelers are also required to show proof of COVID-19 vaccination. All air travelers, including U.S. persons, must test negative for COVID-19 prior to departure. Limited exceptions apply. See CDC guidance for more details regarding air travel requirements.

  6. Health Declaration No Longer Required for Vaccinated Singapore

    2. Given the volume of traffic at the land checkpoints, to provide greater convenience for fully vaccinated Singapore residents and LTP holders arriving via these checkpoints, in particular those who commute across the border daily for employment and studies, the Government will lift the health declaration requirement for these travellers from 15 April 2022, if they meet the following conditions:

  7. ICA

    4. Proof of vaccination is key to a foreign visitor's eligibility to travel under the VTL or other Safe Travel Lanes into Singapore. Travellers may be required to produce a vaccination certificate to prove that they are fully vaccinated with a World Health Organisation Emergency Use Listing (WHO EUL) COVID-19 vaccine as part of entry application and immigration checks.

  8. PDF Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS)

    an acceptance letter issued by the Safe Travel Office (STO) confirming that the traveller's vaccination certificate has been verified using the Vaccination Check Portal (see Annex A for sample); or

  9. COVID-19 international travel advisories

    To visit the U.S., you do not need to be tested or vaccinated for COVID-19. U.S. citizens going abroad, check with the State Department for travel advisories.

  10. Starting Today Fully Vaccinated Travelers Permitted to Enter U.S. via

    "Today, after more than 18 months of pandemic-related travel restrictions, DHS is taking a critical step toward resuming normal travel," said Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas. "Travelers who are fully vaccinated for COVID-19 and have appropriate documentation are now permitted to enter the United States via our land and ferry border crossings for non-essential reasons ...

  11. What to Know About Testing and Vaccine Requirements for Travel

    Here's everything you need to consider about testing and vaccinations before you travel within the U.S. or internationally.

  12. How Do I Show Proof of Vaccination When Traveling?

    Proof of vaccination has become increasingly vital to accessing local restaurants and distant countries alike. Our columnist takes a deeper dive into what that means for travelers.

  13. PDF CAAS Circular 09/2022 ENTRY APPROVAL AND VACCINATION REQUIREMENTS FOR

    (a) an acceptance letter issued by the Safe Travel Office (STO) confirming that the traveller's vaccination certificate has been verified using the Vaccination Check Portal (see Annex Cfor sample); or

  14. Need travel vaccines? Plan ahead.

    Check CDC's destination pages for travel health information. Check CDC's webpage for your destination to see what vaccines or medicines you may need and what diseases or health risks are a concern at your destination.

  15. Which Vaccines Are Required To Travel?

    Vaccinations can keep you healthy while you travel. But how do you know what immunizations you need? And how do you get them? Find out.

  16. Accessing My Vaccination Certificate and Vaccination Certificate QR

    The vaccination certificate will include information about the date (s) of COVID-19 vaccine administration, vaccine manufacturer, lot number, and clinic (vaccine administration site) name.

  17. PDF Airline Checklist: How to Confirm Proof of COVID-19 Vaccination (as

    First check if the passenger is a Covered Individual. Covered Individuals (i.e., noncitizen nonimmigrants) are those who are required to present proof of being fully vaccinated against COVID-19 before boarding a flight to the U.S. from a foreign country to meet the requirements of the Amended Order Implementing Presidential Proclamation on Safe Resumption of Global Travel During the COVID-19 ...

  18. V-safe

    After you register, V-safe will send you personalized and confidential health check-ins via text messages or emails to ask how you feel after vaccination. Completing health check-ins and sharing how you feel, even if you don't experience side effects after vaccination, helps CDC's vaccine safety monitoring efforts and lets others know what to expect in the days and weeks following vaccination.

  19. How to prove your vaccination status when traveling internationally

    Even as the pandemic approaches its third year, there's no such thing as a vaccination passport in the United States. So how do you prove that you've been vaccinated and boosted when you ...

  20. Traveler Advice

    Advice for travelers before, during, and after their trips. Includes different types of travelers, reasons for travel, and tips for staying safe and healthy during travel.

  21. Immunization Services, History and Records

    Stay up to date on your vaccines and stay protected against Flu, COVID-19, shingles, and more. Schedule today and view vaccine records at Walgreens.com.

  22. ICA

    Entering, Transiting and Departing. Reside, Study and Work in Singapore. e-Services and Forms. Check Status / Make Appointment. Travellers will need to take note of border requirements or restrictions that are in place. Please click the buttons below for more details on entering, transiting or departing Singapore.

  23. VSAFE User Login Page

    Welcome to V-safe. Username (Email or Cell Phone) Password. Login. Change/Forgot password. This warning banner provides privacy and security notices consistent with applicable federal laws, directives, and other federal guidance for accessing this Government system, which includes all devices/storage media attached to this system.

  24. Destinations

    Destinations. Measles cases are increasing globally, including in the United States. The majority of measles cases imported into the United States occur in unvaccinated U.S. residents who become infected during international travel. A list of countries with confirmed measles outbreaks can be found on the Global Measles Travel Health Notice (THN).

  25. Department of Human Services (DHS)

    Department of Human Services (DHS) Our vision is that all Pennsylvanians live safe, healthy, and independent lives, free of discrimination and inequity. Apply for Benefits via COMPASS. Other ways to apply.

  26. Home

    <p>We're the home base of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Explore the services and resources offered by your government.</p>