How to Get Immunization Records Arizona Online in 2026

Arizona MyIR + ASIIS guide — 2026
Immunization Records Arizona: Online Request, MyIR & ASIIS Guide

Need Arizona immunization records for school, child care, college, work, healthcare employment, travel, immigration, military paperwork, or your own file? Arizona’s main registry is ASIIS, and the online access route many residents try first is MyIR Mobile. This guide explains the official Arizona record request steps, what to do when MyIR cannot match your record, how to request records for a child or adult, and how to avoid 404 links, fake lookup pages, and incomplete proof.

Quick answer

To get immunization records Arizona online, start with the official Arizona MyIR page. If MyIR cannot match your information, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form or contact the provider, pharmacy, school, local health department, college, military clinic, or previous state registry that may hold the original vaccine record.

Official starting points: ADHS AZ MyIR and ADHS Immunization Record Request

Arizona MyIR can help eligible users access family immunization records online, but matching must be exact. If the name, date of birth, old phone, old email, parent information, or provider entry does not match, the record may not appear even if the vaccine was given.

💉 Immunization Record Tools

Free interactive tools to find, verify, and plan your vaccine records — all data verified May 2026

🏛️State Finder
🔎Record Checker
🔬Titer Calculator
Emergency Guide

🏛️ 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.

Step 1 of 4
How old were you when you received the vaccines you need to find?
👶Child (under 18)
🧑Adult (18 or older)
🕗Both / Mixed
Approximately when were the vaccines administered?
📅Within last 5 years
🕐5–20 years ago
📷20+ years ago / Unknown
Do you know which state you were vaccinated in?
Yes, I know the state
🎥Multiple states
Not sure
What is this record for?
🏫School / College
🏥Healthcare Job
✈️Travel / Immigration
📄Personal / Other

🔬 Titer Test Need Calculator

Select your situation to see exactly which titer tests you need, accepted immunity thresholds, and current self-pay costs.

🏥Healthcare Worker
🏏Nursing / Med School
🏫College / University
📄Lost Records
✈️Travel / Abroad Vaccine
🔬Just Want to Check

⚡ 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.

💥Today / Right Now
📅Within 24 Hours
🕐2–5 Business Days
🕒1–2 Weeks
🕙Over 2 Weeks
Related live guide: Arizona Immunization Records Online

What “Immunization Records Arizona” Means in 2026

Arizona immunization records are vaccine history documents that may come from ASIIS, MyIR Mobile, a doctor, pharmacy, clinic, school, child care center, college, local health department, employer, military clinic, or another state registry. A useful record should show the vaccine name and the dose date clearly enough for the office requesting proof.

State-level related guide: State of Arizona Immunization Records

The phrase “online” does not always mean instant. MyIR may work quickly if your record matches. If it does not, Arizona’s ADHS Immunization Record Request system says requests are normally processed within 5–7 business days, and delays can happen when request volume increases.

Official record request page: Arizona Immunization Record Request
Fastest online option

Try MyIR Mobile through the official ADHS AZ MyIR page.

Official backup route

Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form when MyIR cannot match.

Real-world backup

Check providers, pharmacies, schools, colleges, military records, and previous states.

MyIR Mobile Arizona Login: View, Download and Print Records

Arizona’s ADHS AZ MyIR page says MyIR lets families access immunization information using any device and print official immunization certificates for school or summer camp. This is the best first try for many Arizona families because it may save a provider visit.

Official access page: ADHS AZ MyIR and MyIR registration

If MyIR does not find your record, do not assume the shots are gone. MyIR matching depends on the information in Arizona records. A different spelling, old phone number, old email, parent contact, maiden name, hyphenated name, or date-of-birth typo can block a match.

MyIR sign-in page: Arizona MyIR sign in
MyIR search issue What it usually means What to try
No match Your entered details do not match the registry record. Try old phone/email, maiden name, middle initial, hyphen, or parent contact details.
Child not showing Parent or guardian details may not connect to the child record. Use the parent/guardian contact used at the vaccine visit or request through ADHS.
Record incomplete Some doses may not have been reported to ASIIS. Contact the provider, pharmacy, clinic, or school that has the missing dose.
Login trouble Account or technical support may be needed. Use the official MyIR help route, not a random support phone from another website.

What Is ASIIS, the Arizona State Immunization Information System?

ASIIS stands for Arizona State Immunization Information System. CDC’s Arizona IIS page says Arizona’s IIS is ASIIS and includes immunization records for vaccine recipients of all ages. That matters because adults, not just parents, may have records connected to Arizona’s registry.

Federal reference: CDC Arizona IIS policy page and ASIIS web application

ASIIS is not a public “search anyone by name” website. Public users normally use MyIR Mobile, the ADHS request form, providers, pharmacies, schools, local health departments, or previous state registries. Provider access and public record access are not the same thing.

Arizona privacy note Vaccine records are private health information. Use official ADHS, MyIR, ASIIS, provider, pharmacy, school, or health department routes. Do not upload ID documents or vaccine records to unofficial lookup sites.

How to Get Immunization Records Arizona Online Step by Step

Use this order. It starts with the fastest Arizona online option, then moves to the official ADHS request form and backup record sources.

  1. Open the official ADHS AZ MyIR page. Use the Arizona Department of Health Services MyIR page before entering private details. Avoid copied login links from unknown websites.
  2. Register or sign in to MyIR Mobile. Enter the person’s name, date of birth, phone, email, and family details carefully. Matching depends on the data in the record.
  3. Review and print the record if MyIR finds it. Check the name, birth date, vaccine names, and dose dates before submitting it to school, work, college, or travel offices.
  4. Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form if MyIR fails. Arizona’s request page says a valid email address is required and identification documents must accompany record requests.
  5. For minors, include proof of guardianship. ADHS examples include a birth certificate, court documentation, appointed documentation, or notarized legal guardian documentation.
  6. For adults over 18, the adult or their healthcare provider must request the record. Do not ask a parent, spouse, school friend, or employer to request an adult record unless ADHS rules allow that specific route.
  7. Check providers, pharmacies, schools and previous states if the record is incomplete. Missing records may be stored outside ASIIS or under different personal information.
  8. Save a clean copy. Keep one PDF and one printed copy. Use a clear file name such as “Arizona-Immunization-Record-2026.pdf.”
Deadline warning Do not wait until the first day of school, clinical rotation, job start, immigration exam, travel appointment, or dorm move-in. If MyIR fails and ADHS processing is needed, a same-day record may not be realistic.

Arizona ADHS Immunization Record Request Form: ID, Email and Processing Time

The ADHS Immunization Record Request Form is the official backup when MyIR cannot match the record or when you need a state request route. The ADHS page says record requests are normally processed within 5–7 business days and a valid email address is required.

Official form: ADHS Immunization Record Request Form
Form item Why it matters Practical instruction
Valid email address ADHS requires it to submit the request. Use an email you can access today and check spam/junk folders.
Photo ID ADHS says requests must include documents identifying the requester. Examples include state driver license, state ID, passport booklet or passport card.
Minor record request Guardian proof is needed for minors. Include birth certificate, court documentation, appointed documentation, or notarized guardian documentation when applicable.
Adult record request Adult privacy rules apply. Adults over 18 must request their own record or use their healthcare provider.
Record type The form may offer all immunizations, COVID certificate, or COVID-only choices. Choose the record type that matches your school, work, travel, or personal need.
Request form tip If the form asks for maiden name, previous name, or contact details, fill them carefully. A tiny mismatch can turn a simple search into a delayed request.

Arizona Child Immunization Records and Proof of Guardianship

Parents and legal guardians usually need a child’s immunization record for child care, preschool, kindergarten, school transfer, sports, summer camp, travel, or medical care. Try MyIR first because ADHS says it can let families access records online and print official certificates.

Official MyIR page: Arizona MyIR for families

If MyIR cannot match the child, use the ADHS request form and include proof of guardianship when required. The record request page lists examples such as birth certificate, court documentation, appointed documentation, or notarized guardian documentation.

Official request route: ADHS record request
School or camp

Print a clear official record from MyIR if matched and accepted by the school or camp.

Child care

Ask the child care office what exact vaccine proof it accepts before submitting a screenshot.

Guardian proof

Have ID and guardianship documents ready before using the ADHS request form.

Arizona Adult Immunization Records for Jobs, College, Travel and Immigration

Adults often need Arizona vaccine records for healthcare jobs, nursing school, ASU, University of Arizona, NAU, community college, immigration medical exams, travel, caregiving, military paperwork, or personal files. Start with MyIR and the ADHS request form, then check provider portals, pharmacy accounts, college health portals, employer occupational health files, and previous states.

Adult-focused related guide: AZ Immunization Records Official Portal Access Guide
Adult need Likely proof requested Best Arizona route
Healthcare job MMR, varicella, hepatitis B, Tdap, flu, COVID-19, TB screening, or titers. MyIR, ADHS request, provider portal, pharmacy record, occupational health record.
ASU, University of Arizona, NAU or college Campus-specific vaccine upload, often MMR and program-specific proof. College health portal, MyIR, provider, pharmacy, previous school record.
Travel Routine, travel, COVID-19, or clinic-signed vaccine proof. Travel clinic, pharmacy, MyIR, ADHS request, provider portal.
Immigration exam Civil surgeon-reviewed vaccine history or accepted lab proof. MyIR, provider record, pharmacy record, foreign records, titers if accepted.
Personal archive Readable vaccine history with dose dates. MyIR, ADHS request, provider, pharmacy, school, military, previous state registry.
Adult privacy note ADHS says records for individuals over age 18 must be requested by the individual themselves or their healthcare provider. Do not rely on a parent or employer to handle your adult record unless the official process allows it.

Arizona School, Child Care, Preschool and College Immunization Records

Arizona schools and child care programs need proof of required immunizations or valid exemption paperwork. ADHS school documents for the 2025–2026 school year list required vaccines and remind users that vaccine doses must meet ACIP minimum ages and intervals to be valid.

Official K–12 PDF: Arizona K–12 immunization requirements

For child care, preschool, or Head Start, ADHS guidance says a child missing age-required vaccines must receive a needed dose within 15 days of enrollment or may not attend without documentation showing required vaccination or series start. That means parents should not wait until the first week of school to search for records.

Official child care PDF: Arizona child care and preschool requirements
School situation Record issue Best action
Child care or preschool Age-required vaccines and documentation may be time-sensitive. Ask the center which ADHS record or provider printout it accepts.
Kindergarten or 1st grade School may need complete K–12 vaccine proof. Use MyIR early, then pediatrician or ADHS request if the record is missing.
7th grade or middle school Tdap and meningococcal timing may matter. Ask the school nurse what exact dose is missing.
Out-of-state transfer Previous state records may need review against Arizona rules. Bring full old records and contact the previous state registry if needed.
College or university Campus rules can differ from K–12 rules. Upload proof through the college health portal and confirm accepted formats.
School proof warning Parent memory, verbal history, blurry screenshots, or incomplete dose dates can be rejected. Ask the school, child care center, or college what record format it accepts before the deadline.

Arizona Immunization Records Near Me: Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Scottsdale, Glendale, Gilbert, Tempe and Yuma

When Arizona residents search “immunization records near me,” they usually need local record help because an online match failed or a school/work deadline is close. The best local source is usually the doctor, pharmacy, school, clinic, college, county health department, or health system that gave or collected the vaccine.

Statewide official start: ADHS Immunization Record Request
If you live near Common search intent Practical route
Phoenix / Maricopa County Phoenix immunization records, Maricopa County school shot record. Try MyIR, pediatrician, pharmacy, school nurse, Maricopa-area clinics, then ADHS request.
Tucson / Pima County Tucson vaccine records or child school proof. Check MyIR, provider, school, pharmacy, Pima-area health resources, then ADHS.
Mesa / Chandler / Gilbert East Valley immunization record help. Use MyIR, family doctor, urgent care, pharmacy, school, and ADHS request form.
Scottsdale / Tempe College or work vaccine proof. Check college portal, provider portal, pharmacy record, MyIR, and occupational health.
Glendale / Peoria School enrollment or child vaccine record. Try MyIR, pediatrician, school nurse, pharmacy records, and ADHS request.
Yuma, Flagstaff, Prescott or rural Arizona Local clinic or county record help. Check local clinic, tribal or county health office, school record, pharmacy, then ADHS.
Local visit tip Before visiting a clinic, school, or health office, call and ask what ID, proof of guardianship, student name, date of birth, old school name, previous name, and signed release they need.

CVS, Walgreens, Fry’s, Safeway, Walmart and Arizona Pharmacy Vaccine Records

Many adult Arizona vaccine records are easiest to recover through a pharmacy account first. Flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, and travel vaccines may be stored in a pharmacy system even when a primary care portal or MyIR match is incomplete.

COVID-specific related guide: COVID-19 Vaccine Record Guide
CVS and MinuteClinic

Use the same CVS profile, phone number, email, and name used at the vaccine visit.

Walgreens records

Check your Walgreens account or ask the pharmacy for a printed vaccine history.

Fry’s, Safeway or Albertsons

Call the exact pharmacy location if your online account does not show the shot.

Walmart or Costco

Ask for vaccine dates and a pharmacy printout if your portal is incomplete.

Health systems

Check Banner, HonorHealth, Dignity, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Valleywise, or other portals when applicable.

Travel clinics

Request vaccine names, dates, clinic proof, and signed documentation if required.

Pharmacy matching tip Try old phone numbers, old emails, maiden names, parent accounts, and the exact pharmacy location. A dose can be real but stored under a different customer profile.

Why Arizona Immunization Records May Be Missing, Wrong or Incomplete

A missing Arizona online record does not automatically mean the person was never vaccinated. It may mean the dose was never reported to ASIIS, MyIR could not match the information, the provider used a different spelling, the shot was given in another state, or the record is stored in a provider, pharmacy, school, military, or paper file.

Out-of-state registry help: CDC IIS contacts by state
Problem What it may mean What to try next
MyIR no match Entered details do not match ASIIS or connected record data. Try old phone, old email, previous name, parent contact, or ADHS request form.
Missing COVID vaccine Dose may be in pharmacy, clinic, county, or provider records but not matched online. Call the pharmacy or clinic that gave the dose and ask for a printout or correction.
Wrong date or vaccine Original entry may need correction by the source that administered the vaccine. Contact the provider, pharmacy, or clinic first.
Out-of-state dose Dose may be in California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, Texas, or another state registry. Contact the state where the shot was actually given.
Old doctor closed Records may be with a successor practice, hospital group, or custodian. Search the clinic name, health system, medical records office, and school records.
Military, VA or tribal clinic vaccine Records may be in federal, military, VA, or tribal health systems. Check VA, TRICARE, base clinic, service records, tribal clinic, and civilian provider records.
Micro checklist before repeating shots Check MyIR, ADHS request, provider portals, pharmacy accounts, school records, college health portals, employer records, military files, previous states, old names, old phone numbers, and old emails before paying for repeat vaccines or titers.

Arizona Immunization Exemptions, Titers and Proof of Immunity

Exemption paperwork is separate from record access. Arizona school and child care requirements can involve medical, personal belief, or religious exemption forms depending on the setting. Do not use old PDFs from random websites; use the current ADHS school and child care resources or ask the school directly.

Official school resource PDF: Arizona school immunization toolkit

A titer is a blood test that can show immunity to some diseases. Titers may help for healthcare jobs, college programs, older missing records, or immigration medical exams, but the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab work.

Proof type Best for Before you use it
MyIR or ADHS record School, work, travel, and personal files when accepted. Make sure vaccine names and dose dates are clear.
Provider or pharmacy record Missing dose correction or quick vaccine proof. Ask whether the receiving office accepts provider printouts.
Titer Some adult proof-of-immunity cases. Ask the employer, college, clinical program, or civil surgeon first.
Exemption form Allowed school or child care exemption situations. Use current ADHS and school instructions, not outdated forms.

Source Verification and Safety Note

This guide was checked against Arizona ADHS AZ MyIR, the ADHS Immunization Record Request portal, the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form, ASIIS, CDC’s Arizona IIS policy page, ADHS K–12 and child care immunization requirement documents, CDC IIS contact guidance, and live related ImmunizationRecord.org Arizona guides. Record access rules, support contacts, forms, school requirements, processing times, provider reporting, pharmacy records, and local office workflows can change. Always verify final instructions with ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, your provider, pharmacy, school, college, employer, local health department, licensing board, or civil surgeon before submitting private information.

Immunization Records Arizona FAQs

Start with the official ADHS AZ MyIR page. If MyIR cannot match your record, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form or contact the provider, pharmacy, school, local health department, college, employer, military clinic, or previous state registry that may have the record.

Open AZ MyIR

MyIR Mobile is the online option Arizona promotes for family immunization record access. ADHS says it can help users access family immunization information and print official certificates for school or summer camp.

Register with MyIR

ASIIS is the Arizona State Immunization Information System. CDC states Arizona’s IIS is ASIIS and includes records for vaccine recipients of all ages.

CDC Arizona IIS page

Yes, if MyIR matches your record, the ADHS AZ MyIR page says users can print official immunization certificates for school or camp. If MyIR does not work, use the ADHS request form or contact the original record holder.

The ADHS request page says immunization record requests are normally processed within 5–7 business days, with possible delays if requests increase.

ADHS record request

ADHS says requests must include documents identifying the requester. Examples include a state-issued driver license, state ID card, passport booklet, or passport card.

ADHS request form

Parents or legal guardians may request minor records through the proper route. ADHS says minor record requests should include proof of guardianship, such as a birth certificate, court documentation, appointed documentation, or notarized guardian documentation.

ADHS says records for individuals over age 18 must be requested by the individual themselves or their healthcare provider. This protects adult health privacy.

Common reasons include old phone number, old email, previous name, maiden name, hyphenated spelling, date-of-birth mismatch, parent contact mismatch, provider reporting gaps, or vaccines given outside Arizona.

CDC’s Arizona IIS page says ASIIS includes immunization records for vaccine recipients of all ages. Older adult records may still be incomplete if they were not reported or cannot be matched.

MyIR may let users print official immunization certificates, but the school, child care center, camp, or college decides what format it accepts. Ask before submitting a screenshot or incomplete printout.

Arizona K–12 requirements

Try MyIR, the child’s provider, pharmacy, school or child care file, local health department, and the ADHS request form. Child care deadlines can be strict, so start early.

Child care requirements

Check the pharmacy account used at the vaccine visit or call the exact pharmacy location. Pharmacy records are especially useful for COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, Tdap, hepatitis, and travel vaccines.

Sometimes. Titers may help prove immunity in certain adult, college, healthcare job, or immigration situations, but the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab work.

The ADHS Immunization Record Request Team lists 602-364-3630 and immunization_record@azdhs.gov. For MyIR technical help, use the official MyIR help route linked from the ADHS AZ MyIR page.

ADHS record request help

No. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, your provider, pharmacy, school, college, employer, local health department, or civil surgeon as the final authority.

Important: This guide is general information only. It is not medical advice, legal advice, school enrollment advice, employment advice, immigration advice, or travel advice. Arizona immunization record access, MyIR matching, ASIIS data, ADHS processing times, school rules, exemption rules, provider reporting, pharmacy records, support contacts, and local workflows can change. Confirm final requirements with ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, your provider, pharmacy, school, college, employer, licensing board, local health department, or civil surgeon.