Need Arizona vaccine records for school, child care, college, work, travel, healthcare training, immigration paperwork, sports, camp, or your own files? Start with Arizona MyIR Mobile for quick online access, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request route if MyIR does not match, and contact ASIIS support only through official Arizona sources.
To get Arizona vaccine records in 2026, try MyIR Mobile first because ADHS points families to MyIR for immediate online access when your information matches the state record. If MyIR cannot match you, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request page. ADHS says record requests are normally processed within 5–7 business days, but delays can happen when request volume is high.
Official route: ADHS Immunization Record Request and ADHS AZ MyIR informationArizona’s registry is ASIIS, the Arizona State Immunization Information System. CDC says ASIIS includes immunization records for vaccine recipients of all ages, but older adult records, out-of-state shots, pharmacy records, military vaccines, and paper-only records may still need extra follow-up.
💉 Immunization Record Tools
Free interactive tools to find, verify, and plan your vaccine records — all data verified May 2026
🏛️ Instant State IIS Record Finder
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🔎 Where Should I Look for My Records?
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🔬 Titer Test Need Calculator
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⚡ Emergency Record Guide — How Long Do You Have?
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What Are ASIIS and MyIR Mobile in Arizona?
ASIIS stands for Arizona State Immunization Information System. It is Arizona’s immunization registry. A registry record can help families, adults, providers, schools, and public health staff find vaccine history that was reported to the state system.
Official registry page: Arizona State Immunization Information SystemMyIR Mobile is the public online access route many Arizona residents use first. ADHS tells users to check MyIR for immediate access to family immunization records and warns that the information you enter needs to match exactly with what is in the records.
Start here: MyIR Mobile registration/sign-inBest first route for online access, printing, and quick family record lookup when the match works.
Open MyIRBackup route when MyIR cannot match your record or you need a manual official request.
Open ADHS requestArizona’s immunization registry system. Use official support routes for registry questions.
Open ASIISHow to Get Arizona Vaccine Records Step by Step
Use this order when you need Arizona vaccine records online, by phone, for school, for work, or for a deadline. It avoids the common mistake of calling five offices before trying the correct Arizona route.
- Try MyIR Mobile first. Register or sign in with the exact name, date of birth, and phone details that may be attached to the immunization record. If you moved, changed phone numbers, or used a parent’s number years ago, try the older details where the portal allows it.
- Review the record carefully before using it. Check the person’s name, date of birth, vaccine names, and dose dates. Do not submit a record to a school, employer, or college if it looks incomplete or belongs to the wrong person.
- Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request route if MyIR does not match. ADHS says a valid email address is required, identity documents must be included, and requests are normally processed within 5–7 business days.
- For a child, include proof of guardianship when required. ADHS lists examples such as a birth certificate, court documentation, appointed documentation, or notarized legal guardian documentation.
- Ask the provider, clinic, pharmacy, or school for backup copies. MyIR and ASIIS may not show every shot from every place. Doctor offices, pharmacies, schools, colleges, military clinics, and travel clinics may still have copies.
- Use the other state’s registry if the vaccine was not given in Arizona. If vaccines were received in California, Texas, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Washington, Mexico, or another place, Arizona’s registry may not have the full record.
- Save one PDF and one printed copy. Store the file privately. A simple file name such as “Arizona-Vaccine-Record-2026.pdf” will save time later.
Arizona MyIR Mobile Login, Matching Problems and Print Access
Most “Arizona vaccine records online” searches should start with MyIR Mobile. It is the fastest route when your account details match the registry. The biggest problem is not usually the portal itself; it is a mismatch between what you type and what ASIIS has on file.
Online portal: Register or sign in to MyIR Mobile| MyIR problem | What it usually means | What to try next |
|---|---|---|
| No match found | Name, date of birth, phone number, or record details may not match ASIIS. | Try old phone numbers, maiden name, hyphenated name, or contact ADHS/request support. |
| Child record not showing | Guardian details may not link correctly or proof may be needed. | Use ADHS record request and include minor/guardian information carefully. |
| Recent dose missing | Provider or pharmacy may not have reported it yet or it did not match. | Ask the vaccine provider or pharmacy to check their reporting and give a printout. |
| Adult child over 18 | Records for adults generally must be requested by the individual or healthcare provider. | Have the adult request their own record through MyIR or ADHS. |
| Need school proof today | Online access may not be enough if the school requires a specific format. | Ask the school nurse what they accept, then contact provider, MyIR, or ADHS. |
ADHS Immunization Record Request Form: ID, Minor Records and Processing Time
The ADHS Immunization Record Request is the backup route when MyIR does not give immediate access. ADHS says a valid email address is required, requests must include documents identifying the requester, and examples include a state-issued driver’s license, state-issued photo ID, passport booklet, or passport card.
Official request page: ADHS Immunization Record Request FormFor minors, ADHS says proof of guardianship should be included. Examples listed by ADHS include a birth certificate, court documentation, appointed documentation, or notarized documentation from a legal guardian. Adults over age 18 must request their own records or have their healthcare provider request them.
Start page: ADHS Immunization Record Request information| Request situation | Arizona requirement to plan for | Practical advice |
|---|---|---|
| Requesting your own record | Valid email and identity document. | Use your legal name and birth date exactly as used at the provider or pharmacy. |
| Requesting for a minor | Requester identity plus proof of guardianship. | Include the child’s information in the personal info section and your information as requester. |
| Adult child age 18+ | Adult must request their own record or use their healthcare provider. | Do not submit as a parent unless ADHS instructions specifically allow your situation. |
| Need all immunizations | Select the record type carefully. | ADHS form includes options for all immunizations on file and COVID certificate options. |
| Urgent deadline | Normal processing may be 5–7 business days, with possible delays. | Also call the provider, school, or pharmacy that may already have a copy. |
Arizona Vaccine Records Phone Number, Email and Fax Help
Use official Arizona contact routes only. The ADHS request page lists the Immunization Record Request Team main line as 602-364-3630 and email as immunization_record@azdhs.gov. The existing Arizona record page also lists ASIIS support details for registry help; verify current details on official ADHS, ASIIS, or CDC pages before sending private information.
Official ADHS request contact: ADHS Immunization Record Request| Contact route | Use it for | Before you contact |
|---|---|---|
| ADHS record request main line: 602-364-3630 | Questions about the ADHS Immunization Record Request route. | Have name, birth date, email, request date, and deadline ready. |
| Email: immunization_record@azdhs.gov | Official record request follow-up when directed by ADHS. | Confirm spelling and avoid sending private documents to copied/random addresses. |
| ASIIS support | Registry-related support and provider/record direction. | Use the official ASIIS or CDC-listed number only. |
| Provider or pharmacy | Dose missing, recent vaccine, pharmacy vaccine, travel vaccine, COVID booster. | Call the exact location that gave the vaccine if possible. |
| School nurse or college health office | Proof format, upload deadline, exemption form, temporary documentation. | Ask what exact record format they accept. |
Arizona School Vaccine Records, Child Care Proof and Exemption Forms
Parents often need Arizona vaccine records for school registration, preschool, child care, sports, summer camp, transfer paperwork, or college enrollment. ADHS school materials tell school staff to ask the parent or guardian for the student’s immunization record at enrollment, and the record may come from the child’s healthcare provider or a printed ASIIS record from the Bureau of Immunization Services.
School toolkit: ADHS School Immunization Quick-look ToolkitThe practical parent move is simple: try MyIR, ask the pediatrician or clinic, and ask the school what format it accepts. Some schools may accept a printed registry record. Others may ask for a provider record, school form, or complete immunization documentation.
ADHS school and child care materials: Arizona school and child care immunization resources| School situation | Likely proof needed | Best Arizona action |
|---|---|---|
| Child care or preschool | Up-to-date immunization record or valid exemption form. | Try MyIR, pediatrician, local health department, or ADHS request. |
| K–12 enrollment | Current vaccine record compared with age/grade requirements. | Ask school nurse what format is accepted before submitting. |
| Transfer from another state | Previous state record plus Arizona school review. | Bring the old record and ask if anything must be updated. |
| College or university | Campus-specific vaccine upload, dates, or titers. | Check the school portal for exact accepted documents. |
| Exemption | ADHS-approved exemption form or process. | Use official ADHS/school instructions; do not use random forms. |
Adult Arizona Vaccine Records: Work, Healthcare Jobs, College, Travel and Immigration
Adults usually search for Arizona immunization records when a healthcare job, nursing program, college, travel clinic, immigration medical exam, military process, caregiver role, or employer asks for proof. MyIR and ADHS are strong starting points, but older adult records may be split across providers, pharmacies, schools, military systems, and previous state registries.
CDC confirms Arizona ASIIS includes records for all ages: CDC Arizona IIS page| Adult need | Best first route | What to ask before paying |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MyIR, provider, pharmacy, employer health office. | Which vaccines, dates, titers, TB test, or booster proof are required? |
| Nursing or medical school | College health portal, MyIR, old school records, provider. | Are positive titers accepted or do they require vaccine dates? |
| Travel | Travel clinic, pharmacy, MyIR, provider portal. | Does the destination require a special certificate or only routine vaccine proof? |
| Immigration exam | Civil surgeon instructions plus MyIR/provider records. | Which records or lab results will the civil surgeon accept? |
| Personal file | MyIR, ADHS request, provider, pharmacy. | Do you need a complete history or only a specific vaccine? |
Arizona COVID Vaccine Record, CDC Card and Pharmacy Booster Proof
If you need an Arizona COVID vaccine record, start with MyIR Mobile and then check the pharmacy or provider that gave the shot. Many Arizona COVID doses were given by CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, Safeway, Fry’s Pharmacy, local clinics, county sites, tribal health programs, hospitals, or community vaccine events.
Related guide: How to find your COVID vaccine recordThe paper CDC card is useful as a reminder, but the safer proof is an official registry record, provider record, pharmacy record, or digital record when available. If a booster is missing, call the specific pharmacy or provider that administered that booster and ask for a printout and reporting check.
| COVID record problem | Likely reason | Best fix |
|---|---|---|
| Lost CDC card | Paper card lost, faded, or damaged. | Use MyIR, pharmacy app, provider portal, or ADHS request instead of trying to fake a replacement. |
| Booster missing | Dose not reported, not matched, or stored with pharmacy/provider. | Call the exact vaccine location and ask for a vaccine history printout. |
| Vaccinated in another state | Dose may be in that state’s IIS. | Use CDC IIS contacts for the state where the vaccine was given. |
| Work or travel asks for proof | Organization has its own accepted format. | Ask whether they accept MyIR, pharmacy record, provider record, or SMART Health Card. |
What to Do If MyIR or ADHS Cannot Find Your Arizona Vaccine Record
A missing Arizona vaccine record does not always mean you were never vaccinated. It may mean the record was not reported, was reported under different details, was given outside Arizona, was stored by a pharmacy, or exists only in an old paper or provider record.
Other state help: CDC contacts for IIS immunization recordsTry legal name, former last name, hyphenated name, or the exact spelling used by the provider.
MyIR matching may fail if the phone number on file is old or belongs to a parent.
Arizona may not show vaccines given in California, Texas, Nevada, New Mexico, or another state.
Check CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Safeway, Fry’s, Costco, or the exact pharmacy location.
Some vaccine history may be in VA, TRICARE, base clinic, or federal records.
Ask old schools, colleges, parents, employers, travel clinics, and retired provider record custodians.
Missing record troubleshooting checklist
- Try MyIR with accurate details. Use old phone numbers and previous names if needed.
- Submit the ADHS request if MyIR fails. Include clear ID and guardianship proof when required.
- Call the original provider or pharmacy. Ask for a vaccine history and whether the dose was reported to ASIIS.
- Ask the school or college. They may have a copy submitted during earlier enrollment.
- Check another state registry. Use CDC’s directory if the vaccine was given outside Arizona.
- Ask a clinician about titers or repeat doses. Do this only after the requesting office confirms what it accepts.
Arizona County and Local Help: Maricopa, Pima, Pinal, Yavapai, Yuma and Navajo County
Many Arizona users search by county because they need a school form, local health department support, or a record from a county vaccine clinic. Local help can be useful, but the first online route is still usually MyIR, followed by ADHS record request if online matching fails.
State starting point: ADHS Immunization Program| If you live near | Common user intent | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| Phoenix, Mesa, Chandler, Glendale, Scottsdale | Maricopa County vaccine record or school proof. | Try MyIR, provider/pharmacy, ADHS request, then local health department guidance. |
| Tucson | Pima County vaccine record, college proof, or child care record. | Use MyIR and check the provider, pharmacy, school, or county clinic that gave the vaccine. |
| Casa Grande, San Tan Valley, Apache Junction | Pinal County immunization record help. | Start with MyIR/ADHS, then ask the local provider or health department if the dose is missing. |
| Prescott, Prescott Valley, Cottonwood | Yavapai County adult or school vaccine record. | Check MyIR, pharmacy, provider, and ADHS request before calling multiple offices. |
| Yuma | Yuma County record for work, school, or travel. | Try MyIR and pharmacy/provider records; use ADHS request if no match appears. |
| Navajo Nation or tribal health area | Tribal clinic, IHS, school, or Arizona registry proof. | Check the clinic or tribal/IHS health record plus MyIR/ADHS if Arizona reporting is needed. |
CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Safeway, Fry’s and Costco Vaccine Records in Arizona
Pharmacy vaccine records matter in Arizona because many adults received COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, or travel vaccines at pharmacies. A pharmacy dose may appear in ASIIS when reported and matched, but the pharmacy profile is often the fastest backup.
Check CVS or MinuteClinic records using the same profile, phone, and email used at the appointment.
Use the Walgreens account or call the exact store pharmacy that gave the vaccine.
Ask the pharmacy for an immunization history if the dose is not visible online.
Contact the pharmacy location directly for adult vaccine documentation.
Check the pharmacy profile or ask the store pharmacy for a printout.
Ask the pharmacy location for records tied to your profile or appointment.
Titer Tests When Arizona Vaccine Records Are Lost
A titer is a blood test that can show immunity to certain diseases. It may help when adult childhood records are missing, especially for healthcare jobs, nursing programs, medical training, and some college requirements. But the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Ask before paying |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health for the exact lab format and accepted result. |
| Nursing or medical school | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask whether positive IgG titers replace vaccine dates. |
| Immigration medical exam | Civil surgeon-reviewed proof. | Ask the civil surgeon first; do not guess. |
| K–12 school | Limited situations only. | Follow the school and ADHS instructions for required proof. |
Official Arizona Vaccine Record Links and Live Related Guides
Use official sources first. The internal related guides below were selected because they support Arizona users who need COVID proof, moved from nearby states, or use MyIR in more than one state.
Arizona Department of Health Services page for Arizona MyIR access.
Open ADHS MyIROnline registration and sign-in for available immunization records.
Open MyIR MobileManual request route when MyIR does not match or you need ADHS help.
Open ADHS requestForm page showing identity, minor, and request information fields.
Open request formArizona State Immunization Information System web application.
Open ASIISCDC page explaining Arizona’s IIS and record access context.
Open CDC Arizona IISUse this if your main need is COVID card, booster, QR, pharmacy, or travel proof.
Open COVID record guideHelpful if you moved from California or got a vaccine there.
Open California guideHelpful if your Arizona record is missing because vaccines were received in Texas.
Open Texas guideUseful comparison because Washington also uses MyIR-style access for records.
Open Washington guideUseful for MyIR users who moved from or studied in Maryland.
Open Maryland guideStart here if vaccines were given in multiple states.
Open complete guideSource Verification and Safety Note
This Arizona guide was checked against official ADHS MyIR information, the ADHS Immunization Record Request page, the ADHS request form, ASIIS, CDC’s Arizona IIS policy page, CDC’s IIS contact directory, and ADHS school immunization materials. Portal matching, processing times, phone numbers, forms, school requirements, and accepted proof formats can change, so verify final requirements with ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, civil surgeon, or local health department.
Arizona Vaccine Records FAQs
Start with MyIR Mobile. If MyIR cannot match your record, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request page and check your provider, pharmacy, school, or other state registry if needed.
Open MyIR MobileASIIS stands for Arizona State Immunization Information System. It is Arizona’s immunization registry and can include vaccine records reported for people of all ages.
Open ASIISMyIR Mobile is the online portal ADHS points users to for immediate access to family immunization records when the entered information matches the Arizona record.
ADHS MyIR informationNo match can happen when the name, birth date, phone number, previous name, or other details do not match ASIIS. Try older phone numbers and exact provider spellings, then use the ADHS request route if needed.
ADHS request routeADHS says immunization record requests are normally processed within 5–7 business days, with possible delays when request volume is high.
ADHS record request informationADHS says record requests must include documents identifying the person requesting the record. Examples include a state-issued driver’s license, state photo ID, passport booklet, or passport card.
ADHS request formTry MyIR first. If that does not work, use the ADHS record request and include minor information plus proof of guardianship when required. ADHS lists examples such as a birth certificate or court documentation.
ADHS says records for individuals over 18 must be requested by the individual themselves or their healthcare provider.
ADHS request informationThe ADHS Immunization Record Request page lists 602-364-3630 as the main line for the Immunization Record Request Team. Use official ADHS, ASIIS, or CDC pages to verify current support details before sending private information.
Often, MyIR can help families print available records, but the school decides what format it accepts. Ask the school nurse or enrollment office whether a MyIR printout, provider record, or other official documentation is needed.
Ask the school exactly what is missing, then contact the pediatrician, clinic, pharmacy, MyIR, or ADHS request team. Do not guess dates or write in missing vaccine information yourself.
CDC says Arizona’s IIS, ASIIS, includes immunization records for vaccine recipients of all ages. However, older adult records may be incomplete if they were never reported or cannot be matched.
CDC Arizona IIS pageThey may show if properly reported and matched, but you should also check the pharmacy account or call the exact pharmacy location that gave the vaccine. Pharmacy records are especially useful for COVID, flu, RSV, shingles, and travel vaccines.
Try MyIR, the pharmacy or provider that gave the COVID vaccine, and the ADHS request route if needed. If the dose was given in another state, check that state’s registry.
COVID vaccine record guideSometimes, especially for certain adult school or healthcare requirements, but the organization requesting proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for labs.
No. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, CDC, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, or civil surgeon as the final authority.