Need an Arizona vaccine record for school, child care, college, a healthcare job, travel, immigration paperwork, a lost COVID card, or your own family file? Arizona’s state registry is ASIIS, and Arizona residents can start with MyIR Mobile for online access. This guide explains the online route, the ADHS backup request form, what to do when MyIR cannot match your record, and how to avoid fake vaccine-record lookup sites.
To get Arizona state immunization records online, start with MyIR Mobile or AZ MyIR. If MyIR matches your ASIIS record, you may be able to view, save, or print an official immunization record for school registration, child care, work, travel, or personal use.
Official starting point: ADHS AZ MyIR pageIf MyIR cannot match your information, use the Arizona Department of Health Services Immunization Record Request website or form. You may also need to contact the doctor, pharmacy, school, child care center, county health office, or provider that gave the vaccine.
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What Are Arizona State Immunization Records?
Arizona state immunization records are vaccine history records that may show vaccine names, dates, provider-reported information, and official registry details. Arizona’s immunization information system is ASIIS, the Arizona State Immunization Information System.
Official registry page: ASIIS web applicationCDC identifies Arizona’s IIS as ASIIS and says it includes immunization records for vaccine recipients of all ages. That matters because adults, college students, healthcare workers, and parents can all have different reasons for needing the same registry-based record.
Federal reference: CDC Arizona IIS pageUse MyIR first. If matching fails, use ADHS record request or contact your provider/pharmacy.
Open MyIR ArizonaUse MyIR for family access when available, or submit the ADHS request with proper identification.
Open ADHS request formPrint a clean official record and confirm the school or child care center accepts the format.
School and child care guideHow MyIR Mobile Arizona Works in 2026
MyIR Mobile is the public-facing online route many Arizona residents use to access immunization records. ADHS describes AZ MyIR as online access to immunization records for school registration, vaccine schedules, and related record needs.
Official MyIR page: ADHS AZ MyIRThe most important rule is exact matching. The ADHS record request website says to check MyIR for immediate access and notes that the information provided needs to match exactly to what is in the state records. If the system cannot match your information, move to the ADHS request route instead of repeatedly entering guesses.
Official request site: ADHS Immunization Record Request| Search intent | What the user really needs | Best Arizona action |
|---|---|---|
| Arizona immunization records online | Fast digital access to a state vaccine record. | Use MyIR Mobile first, then ADHS request form if matching fails. |
| AZ MyIR login | Correct portal to sign in or register. | Use the official MyIR Arizona sign-in page, not a random lookup page. |
| ASIIS immunization records | A record from Arizona’s state registry. | Use MyIR for consumer access or ADHS request form for backup help. |
| Arizona vaccine record PDF | A printable record for school, work, or personal use. | Download/print from MyIR if matched, or request through ADHS. |
How to Get Arizona State Immunization Records Step by Step
Use this order. It starts with the fastest online route and then moves to official backup routes if the online match fails.
- Open the official MyIR Arizona sign-in page. Start with MyIR Mobile or AZ MyIR if you want online access, a PDF, or a printable record.
- Create or sign in to your account. Use an email you can access. Do not use fake third-party record lookup pages that ask for private health details.
- Enter details exactly as they may appear in ASIIS. Name, date of birth, phone number, email, and older demographic details can affect whether the system matches your record.
- Review the record before sending it anywhere. Check spelling, date of birth, vaccine names, dose dates, and whether the record looks complete enough for the school, employer, college, travel clinic, or provider requesting it.
- Download, print, or save the record securely. Keep one PDF copy and one printed copy. Do not post the record publicly.
- If MyIR cannot match you, use the ADHS request form. The official record request route is the safer backup, especially when you need records for a child, school, provider, or urgent deadline.
- Check providers, pharmacies, schools, or another state if doses are missing. A missing dose may be in a pharmacy app, patient portal, school file, military record, or another state registry.
What You Need Before Searching Arizona Immunization Records
Most online record failures happen because the information entered does not match what is stored in ASIIS. Before using MyIR or the ADHS request route, gather the exact identity details that the provider, pharmacy, parent, school, or clinic may have used.
| Information | Why it matters | Practical tip |
|---|---|---|
| Legal first and last name | MyIR must match the state record. | Try the name used when the vaccine was given, including previous last names. |
| Date of birth | One wrong digit can block a match. | Check provider, pharmacy, school, or insurance records for the exact date used. |
| Phone number or email | Online matching may rely on contact details already in the record. | Try older phone numbers, parent emails, or the email used at a pharmacy appointment. |
| Government-issued ID | ADHS requests must include identifying documents. | Prepare a clear copy before submitting a manual request. |
| Provider or pharmacy name | Missing doses may be outside the state registry. | Check CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, Safeway, Fry’s, Banner, HonorHealth, Mayo, or other portals. |
| School or child care deadline | The record format needed may vary. | Ask the school whether a MyIR printout, ASIIS record, or provider-signed record is acceptable. |
ADHS Immunization Record Request Form: When MyIR Does Not Work
Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request route when MyIR cannot match your record, you need a child’s record sent to a school or provider, you have old records, or you need help from Arizona’s immunization record request team.
Official form: ADHS Immunization Record Request FormADHS says immunization record requests must be accompanied by documents that identify the person requesting the record. For children under 18, Arizona guidance says records can be sent to a school, day care or child care center, or doctor or healthcare provider’s office.
Parent/child record guidance: ADHS Healthy Kids record guidance| Request route | Best for | What to know |
|---|---|---|
| MyIR Mobile | Fast online access when details match. | Best first step for an online PDF or printable record. |
| ADHS request form | No-match cases, child records, manual help, and official request routing. | Requires identifying documents and accurate instructions for delivery. |
| Provider or pharmacy | Recent vaccines, missing doses, or records inside a patient portal. | Ask for an immunization history and whether the dose was reported to ASIIS. |
| School or child care record | Older child records when a family copy is lost. | Ask whether they can provide a copy or tell you what format they need. |
How Parents Can Get Child Immunization Records in Arizona
Parents and legal guardians often need child records for kindergarten, child care, summer camp, sports, school transfer, foster care, medical visits, or travel. Start with MyIR if you can match the child’s record. If that fails, use the ADHS request form with the required identification and instructions.
Official request page: ADHS Immunization Record RequestIf the child’s vaccine record was created with an old phone number, another parent’s email, a different last name, or a provider spelling error, the online match may fail. In that case, contact the child’s provider, school, child care center, or ADHS record request team rather than using an unofficial form site.
What to Do If MyIR Cannot Find Your Arizona Record
A “no match” result does not always mean your Arizona vaccine record is gone. It usually means the details entered into MyIR do not match the ASIIS record, or the vaccine was not reported to ASIIS in the way you expected.
- Check your spelling and date of birth first. Use the legal name and date of birth that the vaccine provider or pharmacy used.
- Try old contact details. The record may be linked to an old phone number, parent email, landline, pharmacy profile, or previous address.
- Check provider and pharmacy portals. A vaccine may be in a pharmacy app or hospital portal before it appears in a state record.
- Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form. This is the safer official backup when online matching fails.
- Contact ASIIS User Support or your provider. Ask whether the record has duplicate profiles, missing demographics, or unreported doses.
- Check another state registry if the vaccine was not given in Arizona. Vaccines given in California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, Texas, or another state may be in that state’s registry.
Using Arizona Immunization Records for School, Child Care, College and Jobs
Arizona vaccine records are commonly needed for child care, K-12 school enrollment, summer camp, college, healthcare jobs, clinical rotations, travel, immigration medical exams, military paperwork, and personal medical history. MyIR can be useful because it may let you print official records for school registration and other uses.
Official school/child care guide: Arizona school and child care immunization guide| Use case | Likely proof needed | Best Arizona action |
|---|---|---|
| Child care | Readable child immunization record with required vaccine dates. | Use MyIR or ADHS request form before the deadline. |
| K-12 school | School-accepted immunization record or exemption documentation. | Print from MyIR and ask the school if any dose is missing. |
| College | Campus-specific vaccine proof or titers. | Check the college portal first, then use MyIR, provider, or pharmacy records. |
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B, Tdap, flu, COVID-19, TB screening or titers. | Ask occupational health what exact record or lab format is accepted. |
| Travel | Routine and travel vaccine dates. | Use MyIR plus travel clinic or pharmacy records if travel vaccines are missing. |
| Immigration medical exam | Civil-surgeon-reviewed vaccine proof. | Ask the civil surgeon before ordering titers or repeating vaccines. |
Why Some Arizona Vaccines May Be Missing From ASIIS or MyIR
A missing vaccine in MyIR or ASIIS does not automatically mean the vaccine was never given. It may not have been reported, may be attached to different demographic details, may be in another state registry, or may exist only in a provider, pharmacy, school, military, or paper record.
Cross-state help: CDC IIS contacts for other statesTry legal name, maiden name, hyphenated name, older last name, or the spelling used by the provider.
MyIR may need a phone number or email connected to the state record.
Two profiles can split vaccine history and create incomplete results.
COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, hepatitis, and travel vaccines may be easier to find in pharmacy apps first.
Vaccines from California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, or Texas may be in that state’s IIS.
Older childhood vaccines may still be with schools, retired doctors, military clinics, or family paper files.
Pharmacy Records: CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, Safeway and Fry’s
Many Arizona adults received flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, or travel vaccines from pharmacies. If the dose does not show in MyIR, check the pharmacy profile used at the appointment. Use the same phone number, email, date of birth, and name used when the vaccine was given.
COVID Vaccine Card Replacement in Arizona
If you lost a CDC COVID vaccine card, start with MyIR and the pharmacy, clinic, or provider that gave the COVID vaccine. A state registry record or provider record is usually more reliable than trying to replace the original paper card.
Related guide: COVID vaccine recordTiter Tests When Records Are Truly Lost
A titer is a blood test that may show immunity to certain diseases. It can help for college, healthcare jobs, clinical training, or immigration medical exams, but the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for labs.
Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Scottsdale, Flagstaff and Yuma Record Help
Arizona residents often search by city because they need local help fast. The safest state-level route is still MyIR first, then ADHS request form if matching fails. Local help may come from your provider, pharmacy, school, child care center, county health department, or the clinic where the vaccine was given.
| If you live near | Common search intent | Practical next step |
|---|---|---|
| Phoenix / Maricopa County | Phoenix immunization records, child school records, COVID card help. | Try MyIR, then provider/pharmacy, ADHS request form, or Maricopa public health help. |
| Tucson / Pima County | Tucson vaccine record or lost COVID card. | Use MyIR and ADHS request form; Pima County also points residents to ADHS record request for lost COVID card help. |
| Mesa / Chandler / Gilbert | East Valley school or pharmacy vaccine records. | Check MyIR, school records, pharmacy profiles, and provider portal records. |
| Scottsdale / Tempe | College, work, travel, or healthcare job vaccine proof. | Compare MyIR PDF with employer, campus, or travel clinic requirements. |
| Flagstaff / Northern Arizona | Student or rural clinic immunization records. | Try MyIR, then contact the clinic, pharmacy, school, or county health office that likely holds the original record. |
| Yuma / border communities | Arizona, California, or out-of-country vaccine proof. | Check Arizona MyIR and also the state/country where the vaccine was actually given. |
Privacy and Safety Tips for Arizona Immunization Records
Immunization records include private health information. Treat a MyIR PDF or ADHS record like a medical document. Share it only with a school, employer, provider, government office, travel clinic, immigration civil surgeon, or organization that truly needs it.
Use MyIR, ADHS, ASIIS, providers, pharmacies, schools, and legitimate health offices.
Do not upload ID or vaccine records to random “free record search” pages.
Store the PDF in a private folder, not a public shared drive or social media account.
Official Arizona Immunization Record Links
Use official sources first. This page is an independent guide and is not ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, CDC, a school district, pharmacy, provider, or county health department.
Arizona Department of Health Services page for MyIR online immunization record access.
Open ADHS AZ MyIRUse this for online access to available Arizona immunization records.
Open MyIR ArizonaCreate a MyIR account when you are using the portal for the first time.
Register with MyIRUse this when MyIR does not match or you need the official backup request route.
Open ADHS record requestArizona immunization record request form for manual help.
Open request formArizona State Immunization Information System web application and support details.
Open ASIISFederal page identifying Arizona’s immunization information system as ASIIS.
Open CDC Arizona IISUse this directory when a vaccine was given outside Arizona.
Open CDC IIS contactsArizona school and child care immunization handbook and requirements guidance.
Open school guideSource Check and Trust Note
This guide was prepared using official ADHS MyIR information, ADHS Immunization Record Request pages, ASIIS support details, ADHS child record guidance, CDC’s Arizona IIS page, CDC’s IIS contact directory, and live internal ImmunizationRecord.org related guides. Record access rules, online matching, school requirements, provider reporting, contact details, and ADHS processes can change. Always confirm final requirements with ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, your provider, pharmacist, school, employer, college, travel clinic, civil surgeon, or local health office.
Arizona State Immunization Records FAQs
Start with MyIR Mobile or AZ MyIR. Create or sign in to your account, enter matching details, then view, save, or print the record if MyIR can match your ASIIS record.
Open MyIR ArizonaASIIS is the Arizona State Immunization Information System. It is Arizona’s statewide immunization information system used for vaccine records reported by participating providers and programs.
Open ASIISNo. ASIIS is Arizona’s immunization registry. MyIR is the public-facing online access route that may let residents view and print available records when details match.
ADHS AZ MyIRMyIR may fail if the name, date of birth, phone, email, or other details do not match ASIIS. It can also fail if the vaccine was not reported, was reported under different details, or was given in another state.
Use ADHS request formParents and legal guardians can try MyIR for family access or use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form with proper identification. Records for children may be sent to a school, child care center, day care, or healthcare provider when appropriate.
ADHS record requestIf MyIR matches your record, you may be able to print or save an official immunization record. If MyIR cannot match, use the ADHS request form or ask your provider or pharmacy for a record.
Register with MyIRMyIR is designed to help users access immunization records for school registration and related needs. Always confirm the accepted format with the school or child care center before the deadline.
Arizona school guideAsk the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine to verify or report it. Also check old providers, school files, child care records, college health services, military records, paper cards, and previous state registries.
Find other state registriesStart with MyIR if the COVID vaccine was reported to ASIIS. Also check the pharmacy, health department, clinic, or provider portal where the COVID vaccine was given.
COVID vaccine record guideCDC’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 never reported or cannot be matched.
CDC Arizona IISPharmacy vaccines may appear if they were reported and matched correctly. If a vaccine is missing, check the pharmacy account or ask the pharmacy for a vaccine history.
Out-of-state records may help a school or provider review vaccine history, but the school decides what documentation it accepts. Bring the out-of-state record to your Arizona provider or school early.
CDC IIS contactsSometimes. Titers may help for healthcare jobs, college programs, clinical training, or immigration medical exams, but the receiving organization decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab tests.
ASIIS User Support lists phone 602-364-3899, toll-free 877-491-5741, and fax 602-364-3285. Verify current contact details on the official ASIIS or ADHS website before sending private documents.
ASIIS supportNo. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR, CDC, your provider, pharmacist, school, employer, college, civil surgeon, or local health office as the final authority.