Need New York State immunization records for school, child care, college, work, healthcare employment, travel, immigration paperwork, camp, military files, or your own family folder? New York has two main registry paths: NYSIIS for New York State outside New York City, and NYC’s Citywide Immunization Registry for the five boroughs. This guide explains the right route, what records may be available, and how to recover missing shots without using unsafe lookup sites.
To get New York State immunization records, first decide where the vaccine record belongs. For New York State outside New York City, ask your health care provider, pharmacy, school, college, or local health department to check NYSIIS. For New York City, use NYC Health’s My Vaccine Record or CIR record route.
Official starting points: NYSDOH NYSIIS and NYC My Vaccine RecordIf your record is missing, check the original doctor, clinic, pharmacy, school, college, military system, previous state registry, or older paper record. New York’s own record guidance says the only records that exist are the ones given to parents and the ones in the doctor or clinic medical record, and schools may retain records for limited periods.
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Quick Facts About New York State Immunization Records
New York record access is confusing because “New York State” and “New York City” do not always use the same registry route. NYSIIS covers New York State outside NYC, while New York City uses CIR. Your best path depends on where the vaccine was given and where the record was reported.
| Question | Short answer | Official route |
|---|---|---|
| Vaccine was given outside NYC | Start with provider, pharmacy, local health department, or NYSIIS support. | NYSIIS information |
| Vaccine was given in NYC | Use NYC Health’s CIR and My Vaccine Record route. | My Vaccine Record |
| Record is old or missing | Check provider, school, old records, pharmacy, military, and previous states. | NYSDOH locating records |
| Need school proof | Ask the school what proof format it accepts and compare with NYS requirements. | NYS school immunization |
| Need another state’s record | Use CDC’s IIS contact directory for the state where the vaccine was given. | CDC IIS contacts |
What Is NYSIIS?
NYSIIS stands for New York State Immunization Information System. It is New York State’s immunization registry for locations outside the five boroughs of New York City. NYSDOH describes NYSIIS as an electronic system that gives providers access to consolidated immunization records and helps improve vaccine record accuracy.
Official NYSIIS page: New York State Immunization Information SystemNYSIIS is mainly used by authorized health care providers and public health users. It is not the same as a simple public account where every resident can instantly download every lifetime vaccine record. For many people outside NYC, the fastest NYSIIS route is asking the provider, clinic, pharmacy, school, college, or local health department that already has access to check the record.
Record-locating guidance: NYSDOH locating old immunization recordsNYSIIS is the state registry route for most New York counties outside New York City.
Your doctor, clinic, pharmacy, or local health department may be able to check NYSIIS.
Older records, out-of-state doses, adult records, and paper-only records may be incomplete.
New York City Immunization Records: CIR and My Vaccine Record
New York City uses the Citywide Immunization Registry, also called CIR. NYC Health says CIR keeps immunization records for children and adults who live in the city. NYC residents can use My Vaccine Record to look up eligible records for themselves or their child.
Official NYC pages: NYC vaccine records and My Vaccine RecordNYC My Vaccine Record may let you search by IDNYC number, New York State DMV driver or non-driver license number, mobile phone, or email address. If you search for a child’s record, you generally need to be listed on the birth certificate or have your information reported by the child’s health care provider.
Access details: NYC My Vaccine Record accessing records| NYC record route | Best for | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| My Vaccine Record | Online lookup for eligible NYC immunization records. | IDNYC, DMV ID, phone, email, name, and birth date match. |
| CIR parent/guardian route | Child records, school, child care, camp, or employer proof. | Parent or guardian details must be correctly connected. |
| Provider record | Missing adult records, pharmacy vaccines, and corrections. | Ask the provider or pharmacy that administered the dose. |
| NYC CIR support | Registry help when My Vaccine Record does not work. | CDC lists NYC CIR support at 347-396-2400 and NYCvaxrecord@health.nyc.gov. |
How to Get New York State Immunization Records Step by Step
Use this order to avoid the common New York mistake: using the NYC portal for an upstate record, or asking NYSIIS for a New York City CIR record.
- Identify where the vaccine was given. If it was given outside New York City, think NYSIIS. If it was given in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, or Staten Island, think NYC CIR.
- Start with the provider, pharmacy, school, or local health department. The office that gave the vaccine is usually the fastest place to get a clean record or fix a missing dose.
- For New York City, use My Vaccine Record. Enter the ID, phone, email, name, and date of birth details most likely connected to the vaccine record.
- For New York State outside NYC, ask a provider or local health department to check NYSIIS. NYSIIS is primarily accessed by authorized users, so your provider or local health department can be more useful than searching random websites.
- Use official NYSDOH record-locating guidance for old records. Check doctors, clinics, schools, colleges, military records, paper cards, old employers, and other state registries.
- Ask the receiving office what format it accepts. A school, college, employer, camp, licensing board, or civil surgeon may require a provider printout, registry record, lab titer, or official form.
- Save a clean copy. Keep one PDF, one printed copy, and a photo backup. Use a clear file name such as “New-York-Immunization-Record-2026.pdf.”
Information You Need Before Requesting New York Immunization Records
Record searches fail when the details entered do not match the original vaccine record. Before you call or use a portal, gather these details so the provider, school, pharmacy, NYSIIS support, or NYC CIR can search accurately.
| Information | Why it matters | Practical tip |
|---|---|---|
| Full legal name | Registry and provider searches depend on exact identity. | Try prior last names, hyphenated names, and spelling used by the provider. |
| Date of birth | Separates records for people with similar names. | Double-check month, day, and year before submitting. |
| Where vaccine was given | Determines whether to use NYSIIS, NYC CIR, another state, or a provider record. | List doctor, clinic, pharmacy, school, college, hospital, employer, or county clinic. |
| Old phone or email | NYC My Vaccine Record may use contact details for search and match. | Try the contact information used when the vaccine appointment happened. |
| Parent or guardian details | Needed for child records, especially NYC CIR access. | Use the parent details reported by the child’s provider or shown on the birth certificate. |
| School or employer requirement | Different organizations accept different proof formats. | Ask for the exact vaccine list and document format before requesting records. |
Children, School, Child Care and Camp Immunization Records in New York
New York schools and child care programs may ask for immunization proof at enrollment, transfer, camp, or grade-level deadlines. NYSDOH school guidance says children attending day care and pre-K through grade 12 in New York State must receive required doses on the recommended schedule unless they have a valid medical exemption.
Official school requirements: NYSDOH school vaccine requirementsFor a child’s record, contact the pediatrician, clinic, pharmacy, school nurse, prior school, child care provider, camp, local health department, NYSIIS-related support, or NYC CIR route. Schools may have documentation, but NYSDOH notes school records are only retained for required periods, so do not rely on a school to have lifetime records forever.
School record retention reference: NYSDOH locating records| Child record need | Best first contact | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| Day care or child care | Pediatrician, child care office, local health department. | Current immunization history accepted by the child care program. |
| Pre-K or kindergarten | Pediatrician and school registrar. | Required vaccine proof and dose dates for school entry. |
| Middle or high school | School nurse, pediatrician, prior school. | Grade-specific vaccines and accepted documentation format. |
| NYC student | My Vaccine Record, pediatrician, NYC CIR, school. | CIR record and school-accepted proof. |
| Transfer from another state | Old school, old provider, previous state IIS. | Official vaccine dates for New York school review. |
Adult New York State Immunization Records
Adults often need vaccine records for college, healthcare jobs, nursing school, travel, immigration medical exams, military paperwork, licensing programs, caregiver work, or personal medical history. Adult records are often harder to find because older childhood vaccines may not have been entered into electronic registries.
Old-record help: NYSDOH locating old immunization recordsFor adults outside NYC, start with the provider, pharmacy, health system, local health department, school, or employer most likely to have the record. For adults in NYC, My Vaccine Record and CIR may help, especially for records reported into CIR. Adults may also need pharmacy records for flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, hepatitis, Tdap, pneumonia, and travel vaccines.
NYC adult record route: NYC Health vaccine records| Adult need | Best first step | What to ask for |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | Employer health office, provider, pharmacy, registry route. | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B, Tdap, flu, COVID-19, TB screening, and titers if required. |
| College or nursing school | Campus health portal plus provider record. | School-specific vaccine form, exact dose dates, or lab proof. |
| Travel | Travel clinic, pharmacy, primary care office. | Routine vaccines, travel vaccines, and exact dates. |
| Immigration medical exam | Civil surgeon instructions plus provider and pharmacy records. | Official vaccine history and accepted titer results if allowed. |
| Personal copy | Provider, pharmacy, NYSIIS/CIR route, old school files. | Complete immunization history from every available source. |
Why Your New York Immunization Record May Be Missing
A missing record does not automatically mean you were never vaccinated. It may mean the vaccine was not reported, was reported to the wrong registry, was stored only on paper, was given outside New York, or was entered under a different name, birth date, phone number, or parent contact.
NYC records may be in CIR, while non-NYC records may be in NYSIIS.
Try prior last names, hyphenated names, spelling variations, or names used by the provider.
Childhood vaccines may be in a paper chart, yellow card, baby book, or old school file.
Adult vaccines from CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Costco, or supermarket pharmacies may be in pharmacy systems.
Vaccines from New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Florida, Texas, California, or another state may be in that state’s registry.
VA, TRICARE, federal occupational health, and military clinic records may be outside state registry systems.
What to do next when the record is missing
- Confirm whether the vaccine was given in NYC or outside NYC. Use CIR for NYC and NYSIIS-related support for New York State outside NYC.
- Ask the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine. The original source is usually best for missing or incorrect doses.
- Check school, college, employer, and military records. Old immunization forms may exist even when the registry does not show the record.
- Use CDC’s IIS directory for other states. Contact the state where the vaccine was actually administered.
- Ask the receiving office about titers or revaccination. This matters when records are truly lost and proof is needed quickly.
Local Help: NYC, Long Island, Westchester, Albany, Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse
New York’s local route depends heavily on where the vaccine was given. NYC uses CIR. Outside NYC, local health departments, providers, pharmacies, schools, colleges, and NYSIIS-related support may help locate or verify records.
Local department directory: NYSDOH contact information| If you live near | Likely record path | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| New York City | CIR and My Vaccine Record. | Use NYC My Vaccine Record, then contact provider, pharmacy, school, or CIR support. |
| Long Island outside NYC | NYSIIS-related route plus provider and school records. | Ask pediatrician, pharmacy, school district, or local health department. |
| Westchester or Hudson Valley | NYSIIS-related route and provider portals. | Check provider, pharmacy, school, college, and local health department records. |
| Albany / Capital Region | NYSIIS and local provider records. | Ask provider or local health department to check NYSIIS. |
| Buffalo / Western New York | NYSIIS, provider, school, pharmacy. | Check health system portals and pharmacy accounts for adult vaccines. |
| Rochester or Syracuse | NYSIIS-related support and local health systems. | Ask the provider or county health department for immunization record help. |
CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Costco and Pharmacy Vaccine Records in New York
Many adults received COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, hepatitis, Tdap, travel, pneumonia, or booster vaccines at a pharmacy. Those records may or may not appear in NYSIIS or CIR in a way you can easily access. The pharmacy account is often the fastest backup.
Check the CVS account or MinuteClinic record connected to your appointment email or phone.
Use the Walgreens pharmacy profile used when the vaccine was administered.
Ask the pharmacy location for an immunization administration record if online access is missing.
Contact the pharmacy that gave the shot and ask for vaccine name, dose date, and documentation.
Check MyChart, NYU Langone, Northwell, Mount Sinai, NYP, Rochester Regional, or other portals if used.
Ask for vaccine names, exact dates, lot numbers if available, and provider signature if needed.
Out-of-State, Foreign, Military and Old New York Vaccine Records
You moved to New York from another state
Vaccines from another state may not automatically appear in NYSIIS or NYC CIR. Use CDC’s IIS contact directory to request records from the state where the vaccine was given, then provide the record to your New York provider, school, college, employer, or civil surgeon.
Find another state registry: CDC IIS contacts by stateYou were vaccinated outside the United States
Bring the original foreign vaccine record, translation if needed, and any clinic paperwork to your provider, school, college health office, employer, local health department, or immigration civil surgeon. The receiving office may require vaccine names, exact dates, spacing review, titers, or repeat doses.
You were vaccinated through military, VA, or federal care
Military, VA, TRICARE, federal occupational health, and base clinic vaccinations may be stored in federal systems rather than NYSIIS or CIR. Check those systems directly and keep a copy with your New York civilian record.
Your doctor retired or the clinic closed
Search for the successor practice, hospital group, medical records custodian, old patient portal, former school, college health center, employer health office, pharmacy records, and older paper cards. This is often the only realistic path for older adult childhood records.
Titer Tests When New York Immunization Records Are Missing
A titer is a blood test that checks for antibodies showing immunity. It may help when adult childhood vaccine records are lost, especially for healthcare employment, nursing school, medical programs, college entry, or immigration medical exams. But the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Before you pay |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health which lab result format they accept. |
| Nursing or medical school | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask whether positive IgG titers meet the program requirement. |
| Immigration medical exam | Depends on vaccine and civil surgeon review. | Ask the civil surgeon before ordering tests independently. |
| School or child care | Limited situations depending on current rules. | Ask the school and clinician before relying on titers. |
Related Immunization Record Guides You May Need
If your vaccine history crosses state lines or you need another New York record wording, use the related guides below. These internal links were selected because they match New York record search intent and avoid random interlinking.
Use this related guide when you search “vaccine records” instead of “immunization records.”
Open New York vaccine guideUse this if the only proof you need is COVID-19 vaccine history or a lost COVID card replacement.
Open COVID vaccine record guideUseful if vaccines were received in California before moving to New York.
Open California records guideHelpful if your vaccine history includes Illinois school, pharmacy, or provider records.
Open Illinois records guideSee how ImmunizationRecord.org helps users find official state record routes.
Open About UsReview the limits of this independent informational guide before relying on any record process.
Open DisclaimerOfficial New York Immunization Record Resources
Use official New York and federal sources first. This page is an independent guide and is not part of NYSDOH, NYSIIS, NYC Health, CIR, CDC, any school district, provider, pharmacy, employer, or local health department.
Official New York State Department of Health page for the New York State Immunization Information System.
Open NYSIISOfficial New York guidance for finding old or missing immunization records.
Open record guidanceOfficial NYC portal to look up eligible immunization records from CIR.
Open My Vaccine RecordNYC Health page for parents, guardians, and people requesting CIR records.
Open NYC vaccine recordsOfficial NYSDOH school immunization requirement information.
Open school requirementsFederal directory for finding immunization records from other states.
Open CDC IIS contactsSource Verification for This New York Guide
This guide was checked against New York State Department of Health NYSIIS information, NYSDOH locating immunization records guidance, NYSDOH school immunization requirement pages, NYC Health CIR vaccine record pages, NYC My Vaccine Record access guidance, and CDC’s IIS contact directory. Because registry access, school rules, portal behavior, contact details, provider reporting, pharmacy records, and local health department processes can change, verify final details with NYSDOH, NYSIIS, NYC Health, CIR, CDC, your provider, pharmacy, school, college, employer, local health department, or civil surgeon.
New York State Immunization Records FAQs
Start with the provider, pharmacy, school, college, or local health department most likely to have the record. For New York State outside NYC, ask a provider or local health department to check NYSIIS. For NYC, use My Vaccine Record or the Citywide Immunization Registry route.
Open NYSIIS informationNYSIIS is the New York State Immunization Information System. It is the immunization registry used for New York State outside New York City.
NYSIIS official pageCIR is the New York City Citywide Immunization Registry. It keeps immunization records for children and adults who live in the city and supports NYC My Vaccine Record.
NYC vaccine recordsOnline access depends on location. NYC residents can use My Vaccine Record for eligible CIR records. Outside NYC, start with providers, pharmacies, schools, local health departments, and NYSIIS-related support.
Open NYC My Vaccine RecordUsually no. New York City uses CIR, while NYSIIS covers New York State outside the five boroughs. If the vaccine was given in NYC, start with NYC My Vaccine Record or CIR guidance.
Records may be missing because the vaccine was not reported, was reported to a different registry, was entered under different details, was given outside New York, or only exists in an older paper, school, provider, pharmacy, or military record.
NYSDOH locating recordsParents should contact the child’s pediatrician, clinic, pharmacy, school nurse, child care provider, local health department, NYSIIS-related route outside NYC, or NYC CIR/My Vaccine Record for city records.
NYSDOH says there are no nonmedical exemptions to school vaccine requirements in New York State. A medical exemption may apply only when a child has a medical condition that prevents vaccination.
NYSDOH school vaccine requirementsNYSDOH says New York State law requires schools to keep individual immunization records for 6 years, or 3 years after the individual reaches age 18, whichever is longer.
NYSDOH locating recordsSometimes. Adults should check providers, pharmacies, schools, colleges, employers, local health departments, NYSIIS/CIR routes, military records, old paper cards, and previous state registries. Older records may be incomplete.
Pharmacy vaccines may appear if reported and matched correctly, but you should also check the pharmacy account or request a vaccine administration record directly from the pharmacy location.
Contact the provider, pharmacy, clinic, or health department that administered the vaccine. The original source is usually the best place to correct a wrong name, date, or dose entry.
Use CDC’s IIS contact directory to find the immunization registry for the state where the vaccine was given. Then give that record to your New York provider, school, college, employer, or civil surgeon if needed.
CDC IIS contactsSometimes. Titers may help for some healthcare, college, adult, or immigration situations, but the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab tests.
CDC’s IIS contact directory lists New York outside NYC at 518-473-4437 and nysiis@health.ny.gov. For New York City CIR, CDC lists 347-396-2400 and NYCvaxrecord@health.nyc.gov.
CDC IIS contactsNo. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use NYSDOH, NYSIIS, NYC Health, CIR, CDC, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, local health department, or civil surgeon as the final authority.