Need a Michigan vaccine record for school, childcare, college, work, travel, immigration paperwork, healthcare employment, or your own family file? Michigan uses the Michigan Care Improvement Registry, commonly called MCIR. Adults can often use the Michigan Immunization Portal, while child records usually require a doctor, local health department, or MCIR record request route.
To get Michigan immunization records, start with the Michigan Immunization Portal if you are 18 or older, or contact your doctor, pharmacy, or local health department if you need a child’s record. The official Michigan registry is MCIR, the Michigan Care Improvement Registry.
Official adult portal: Michigan Immunization PortalIf the portal cannot match your record, that does not always mean you were never vaccinated. Your record may be under a previous name, old address, different birth-date entry, provider office, pharmacy account, military record, school record, or another state registry.
💉 Immunization Record Tools
Free interactive tools to find, verify, and plan your vaccine records — all data verified May 2026
🏛️ Instant State IIS Record Finder
Select your state to get the official portal link, phone number, app availability, and exact turnaround time — all verified May 2026.
🔎 Where Should I Look for My Records?
Answer 4 quick questions and get a personalised ranked list of exactly which sources to check first for your situation.
🔬 Titer Test Need Calculator
Select your situation to see exactly which titer tests you need, accepted immunity thresholds, and current self-pay costs.
⚡ Emergency Record Guide — How Long Do You Have?
Select your deadline and get a step-by-step, time-specific action plan to get your records as fast as possible.
What Is MCIR for Michigan Immunization Records?
MCIR stands for Michigan Care Improvement Registry. It is the official Michigan immunization registry used to store and retrieve vaccine record information submitted by healthcare providers, pharmacies, local health departments, and other approved users.
Official source: MCIR.orgFor most Michigan residents, MCIR is the record source behind the Michigan Immunization Portal. Adults may be able to download their State of Michigan immunization record online, while parents looking for a child’s record usually need a pediatrician, local health department, or record request process.
Public record help: MCIR public access pageUse the Michigan Immunization Portal if you are age 18 or older and have accepted government ID.
Open portalChild records are not pulled through the adult portal. Start with the pediatrician or local health department.
Child record guidanceMichigan schools and childcare programs use immunization documentation and waiver rules managed through state and local processes.
School and childcare infoMichigan Immunization Portal for Adults 18 and Older
The Michigan Immunization Portal is the fastest official online route for many adults. The portal asks adults to sign in with MiLogin and upload an image of a government-issued ID such as a driver’s license, state ID, or U.S. passport.
Official portal: Michigan Immunization PortalThe portal is designed for adults age 18 or older. If your name or address has changed, the portal may not match your MCIR record correctly. In that case, use MCIR’s public request guidance or the Request to Change Information process.
MCIR public portal help: Request an immunization record| Portal item | What it means | Practical tip |
|---|---|---|
| MiLogin | You sign in or create a Michigan account before retrieving the record. | Use an email you can access while completing the portal process. |
| Government ID | Driver’s license, state ID, or U.S. passport may be used for identity matching. | Use a clear photo and the same legal name connected to your vaccine record. |
| Age 18+ | The online portal route is for adults requesting their own record. | For a child’s record, contact the child’s doctor or local health department. |
| No match found | The portal could not confidently match your ID to a registry record. | Check previous names, old addresses, provider records, and MCIR change/request forms. |
How To Get Michigan Immunization Records Step by Step
Use this order. It starts with the fastest route and then moves to backup options for children, missing records, name changes, pharmacy vaccines, and out-of-state records.
- If you are 18 or older, try the Michigan Immunization Portal. Sign in with MiLogin and follow the portal steps to request your own MCIR immunization record.
- Use a valid government ID. Have a driver’s license, Michigan state ID, other state ID, or U.S. passport ready. Make sure the name and date of birth are clear.
- For a child or dependent, call the pediatrician first. Ask the child’s doctor or clinic for the MCIR immunization record. The adult portal is not the normal route for child records.
- Contact your local health department. Local health departments can help with MCIR record access, school records, waivers, and records when a provider is closed or unavailable.
- Use the MCIR Immunization Record Request Form if needed. MCIR provides a public form route for requesting a copy of your immunization record or a child’s record.
- Check pharmacy and provider portals. Look in MyChart, hospital portals, CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Meijer, Walmart, Costco, Kroger, or the pharmacy where the shot was given.
- Check another state if the vaccine was not given in Michigan. MCIR may not contain vaccines given in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Florida, California, New York, or another state unless they were later added.
- Save a PDF and printed copy. Once you get the record, save it as a clearly named file and keep a printed copy for school, work, travel, or personal records.
How Parents Get a Child’s Michigan Immunization Record
Parents and guardians usually cannot use the adult Michigan Immunization Portal to pull a child’s record. MCIR directs child or dependent record requests through the child’s pediatrician, local health department, or MCIR Immunization Record Request Form.
Official child/dependent record help: MCIR FAQsIf your child needs proof for childcare, preschool, kindergarten, seventh grade, sports, camp, or a new school district, ask for a current MCIR immunization record. Bring any old paper records, pharmacy printouts, out-of-state records, or foreign vaccine documents so the provider or local health department can review them.
School and childcare requirements: MDHHS school and childcare immunization information| Child record need | Best first step | What to ask for |
|---|---|---|
| Childcare or preschool | Pediatrician or local health department. | Current MCIR immunization record for childcare entry. |
| Kindergarten | Doctor’s office before registration week. | Record showing required vaccine doses or valid waiver process. |
| Seventh grade | Provider or health department. | Updated MCIR record after required adolescent vaccines. |
| New to Michigan | Bring old state or foreign record to a Michigan provider. | Review and entry into Michigan records if appropriate. |
| No pediatrician | Local health department. | Record lookup, vaccine review, or next vaccine appointment. |
Michigan Immunization Record Form: When You Need It
Some people search for a Michigan immunization records form because the portal does not match their record or because they need a child’s record. MCIR provides an Immunization Record Request Form that can be used to request a copy of your immunization record or your child’s record.
Official form page: MCIR public formsUse the form carefully. Include a clear copy of the identification requested by MCIR or the local health department. If you want the record emailed instead of mailed, follow the instructions exactly and include that request in the body of the email when required.
MCIR help and FAQ: MCIR frequently asked questionsMichigan School, Childcare, Preschool and Waiver Records
Michigan has school, preschool, and childcare immunization requirements. For families, the practical need is simple: schools and childcare programs may ask for a current immunization record or valid waiver documentation before attendance or continued enrollment.
Official school and childcare page: MDHHS school and childcare immunization informationMichigan’s school and childcare waiver process can involve the local health department, especially for nonmedical waiver education. If your family is asking about a waiver, contact your local health department early and follow the official process instead of relying on a school office or unofficial download.
School administrator and waiver information: MDHHS immunization and waiver information| School situation | Likely proof needed | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| Childcare or preschool | Michigan immunization record or valid waiver. | Ask pediatrician or local health department for a current MCIR record. |
| Kindergarten | Record showing required vaccine status. | Check early so missing doses can be scheduled before school starts. |
| Seventh grade | Updated adolescent vaccine record. | Ask the provider to update MCIR and print the record. |
| Transfer student | Michigan record review or out-of-state proof. | Bring the old state record to a Michigan provider or local health department. |
| Waiver question | Official waiver process if eligible. | Contact the local health department before school deadlines. |
Michigan Local Health Department Help: Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Ann Arbor and More
If the portal fails, the doctor retired, the pharmacy cannot help, or a child’s record is needed, a local health department can be the right next step. This matters in large Michigan areas such as Detroit, Wayne County, Oakland County, Macomb County, Kent County, Genesee County, Washtenaw County, Ingham County, Kalamazoo County, and the Upper Peninsula.
Find public health help: MDHHS immunization information for the public| If you live near | Common search intent | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| Detroit or Dearborn | Wayne County or Detroit immunization records. | Try the portal if adult; for child records, call the provider or local health department. |
| Oakland County | Oakland County MCIR record help. | Check doctor records, MCIR, and local health department options. |
| Macomb County | Macomb vaccine record for school or work. | Ask for a current MCIR record and confirm school or employer requirements. |
| Grand Rapids | Kent County immunization records. | Use portal, provider, pharmacy, or health department record support. |
| Ann Arbor | Washtenaw County vaccine records or college proof. | Check MCIR plus university or provider portal requirements. |
| Lansing | Ingham County school or adult records. | Use portal if adult; call provider or local health department for child records. |
CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Meijer, Walmart and Pharmacy Vaccine Records in Michigan
Many Michigan adults received flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, or travel vaccines at a pharmacy. Those records may be in MCIR if properly reported and matched, but your pharmacy account can still be the fastest place to check.
Old record backup guide: Tips for locating old immunization recordsUse the same pharmacy chain, phone number, email, and date of birth used at the vaccine appointment. If the portal cannot match the vaccine, ask the pharmacy for a printed immunization history and then ask your provider or local health department whether it can help update your record.
Check CVS or MinuteClinic records using the same account used when vaccinated.
Check your Walgreens pharmacy profile or call the store where the vaccine was given.
Ask the Rite Aid pharmacy for a vaccine history if the dose is missing from MCIR.
Meijer pharmacy may be the fastest source for a dose given at a store pharmacy.
Ask the pharmacy location directly if the record is not in your portal.
Ask for vaccine names, dates, and documentation if you need travel or immigration proof.
Why Your Michigan Immunization Record May Be Missing
A missing Michigan shot record does not automatically mean the vaccine never happened. MCIR depends on accurate matching and provider-submitted data. Older paper records, out-of-state doses, pharmacy accounts, name changes, duplicate profiles, or military records can all create gaps.
Other state records: CDC IIS contacts by state| Problem | What it means | What to try next |
|---|---|---|
| Name changed | Record may be under maiden name, old last name, hyphenated name, or spelling variation. | Use MCIR public help and ask provider to search previous names. |
| Address changed | Portal matching may fail if old address data is tied to the record. | Use MCIR Request to Change Information guidance if needed. |
| Birth date mismatch | A typo can block matching or split the record. | Ask provider or local health department to review identifiers. |
| Out-of-state vaccines | Dose may be in another state’s registry. | Contact the state where the shot was given. |
| Old paper record only | Older childhood records may never have been entered electronically. | Check parents’ files, school records, college health records, and old providers. |
| Military or VA vaccine | Record may be stored in federal or military systems. | Check VA, TRICARE, base clinic, or service medical records. |
Michigan Immunization Record vs Full Medical Record
An immunization record is not the same thing as your full medical record. A vaccine record usually lists vaccine names, dates, and sometimes provider-submitted information. A full medical record may include doctor notes, diagnoses, lab results, medications, hospital visits, imaging, and treatment history.
For vaccine records, start with Michigan Immunization Portal. For complete medical records, contact the hospital, clinic, or provider medical records office.| Need | Ask for | Where to start |
|---|---|---|
| School vaccine proof | Current MCIR immunization record or required waiver documentation. | Pediatrician or local health department. |
| Adult vaccine history | Michigan immunization record from MCIR. | Michigan Immunization Portal. |
| Pharmacy vaccine proof | Pharmacy immunization history. | CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Meijer, Walmart, Costco or provider portal. |
| Full hospital chart | Complete medical record or visit record. | Hospital medical records department. |
Titer Tests When Michigan Vaccine Records Are Lost
A titer is a blood test that can show immunity to some diseases. It may help when old childhood vaccine records are truly lost, especially for healthcare jobs, nursing programs, college health requirements, or immigration medical exams. But the school, employer, college, or civil surgeon decides whether titers are accepted.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Ask first |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health which lab result format they accept. |
| College or nursing school | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask whether positive IgG titers replace vaccine dates. |
| Immigration medical exam | Civil surgeon-reviewed proof. | Ask the civil surgeon before paying for labs. |
| K-12 school | Limited situations only. | Follow Michigan school and local health department instructions. |
Official Michigan Immunization Record Links
Use official sources first. This page is an independent guide for Michigan residents and is not MCIR, MDHHS, CDC, a local health department, a school, a pharmacy, or a healthcare provider.
Official online portal for adults 18+ to request their own Michigan immunization record.
Open Michigan portalPublic guidance for requesting Michigan immunization records and handling portal problems.
Open MCIR request pageUse for immunization record request forms and public record request help.
Open MCIR formsOfficial answers about adult records, child records, doctors, local health departments, email and fax requests.
Open MCIR FAQsMain Michigan Department of Health and Human Services immunization information page.
Open MDHHS immunizationsMichigan school, childcare, preschool, vaccine requirement and waiver information.
Open school infoUse this if a vaccine was given in another state before moving to Michigan.
Open CDC IIS contactsHelpful national guidance for finding paper, school, military, and old provider vaccine records.
Open old-record tipsGeneral information about verified digital health cards when offered by a provider or pharmacy.
Open SMART Health CardsSource Check and Trust Note
This guide was built from official MCIR, Michigan Immunization Portal, Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, CDC, and public immunization-record guidance. Record access rules, portal matching, school deadlines, local health department processes, provider participation, waiver rules, and employer requirements can change. Always confirm final requirements with MCIR, MDHHS, your doctor, your pharmacy, your local health department, your school, your employer, your college, or your civil surgeon.
Michigan Immunization Records FAQs
If you are 18 or older, start with the Michigan Immunization Portal. If the portal does not work, contact your doctor, pharmacy, local health department, or use the MCIR Immunization Record Request Form.
Open Michigan Immunization PortalMCIR is the Michigan Care Improvement Registry. It is Michigan’s official immunization registry used for vaccine record storage and access.
Open MCIRAdults age 18 and older may be able to download their Michigan immunization record online through the Michigan Immunization Portal using MiLogin and accepted government ID.
Open portalThe adult portal is not the normal route for child records. For a child or dependent, contact the child’s pediatrician, local health department, or use the MCIR record request form process.
Child record guidanceThe portal asks adults to use a government-issued ID such as a driver’s license, state ID, or U.S. passport during the record retrieval process.
Michigan Immunization PortalA failed match can happen because of name changes, address changes, birth-date errors, duplicate records, old paper records, out-of-state vaccines, or vaccines never submitted to MCIR.
MCIR request helpUse MCIR public guidance and the Request to Change Information process if your record does not match because your name or address changed.
MCIR public helpAsk the child’s pediatrician or local health department for a current MCIR immunization record. For waiver questions, contact the local health department and follow MDHHS school and childcare guidance.
School and childcare informationPharmacy vaccines may appear if reported and matched correctly, but you should also check the pharmacy account directly for CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Meijer, Walmart, Costco, Kroger, or another pharmacy.
MCIR FAQs describe record request options through doctor, local health department, email, fax, and request form routes. Follow MCIR’s current instructions and include required ID.
MCIR FAQsAsk a current provider or local health department to check MCIR. Also look for the retired doctor’s successor practice, medical records custodian, hospital group, pharmacy records, school records, or previous state registry.
Out-of-state records can help a Michigan provider or local health department review vaccine history, but the school may still need records reviewed under Michigan school and childcare rules.
Find other state registry contactsSometimes. Titers may help for certain vaccines, especially for healthcare work or college programs, but the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for labs.
No. A Michigan immunization record usually lists vaccines and dates. A full medical record may include diagnoses, visit notes, labs, medications, imaging, and hospital records. Contact the provider’s medical records office for full records.
No. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use MCIR, MDHHS, your doctor, pharmacy, local health department, school, employer, college, or civil surgeon as the final authority.