Need Maryland vaccine records for school, daycare, camp, college, employment, health care training, travel, immigration paperwork, military forms, or your own files? Maryland uses ImmuNet, the state immunization information system, and Maryland residents can use MyIR Mobile to access official vaccination records when the record matches correctly. This guide shows the safest official steps, what details you need, what to do when no match appears, and when to use the printable ImmuNet records request form.
To get Maryland vaccine records, start with Maryland MyIR Mobile. MyIR can securely pull available records from ImmuNet, Maryland’s Immunization Information System. Adults age 18 and older can use the portal to access records for themselves or their children when the information matches correctly.
Official starting point: MyIR Mobile and Maryland ImmuNet formsIf MyIR cannot find a match, use the assistance option inside MyIR, contact the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine, or use Maryland’s ImmuNet printable records request form. A missing MyIR match does not automatically mean you were never vaccinated.
💉 Immunization Record Tools
Free interactive tools to find, verify, and plan your vaccine records — all data verified May 2026
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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 Maryland Vaccine Records Mean
Maryland vaccine records are documents that show immunizations reported to ImmuNet or kept by a provider, pharmacy, school, health department, employer clinic, military system, or other vaccine source. They may include childhood vaccines, adult vaccines, flu shots, COVID-19 vaccines, school-required doses, travel vaccines, and other reported immunizations.
Official public record guide: Maryland ImmuNet vaccination records request informationA Maryland MyIR record can be very useful for daycare, camps, schools, employment, or travel when available. But the receiving office decides what proof it accepts. A school, college, employer, health care program, travel clinic, or immigration civil surgeon may ask for a specific printout, provider-signed record, titer lab result, or uploaded form.
Maryland public portal reference: MarylandVax.org vaccine record accessUse MyIR Mobile to match your account with available ImmuNet records.
Open MyIR MobileUse the ImmuNet request form or contact the provider, pharmacy, school, or local health department.
Open request formIf the vaccine was not given in Maryland, contact the registry in the state where the dose was given.
CDC IIS contactsWhat Is ImmuNet and How Does MyIR Mobile Work?
ImmuNet is Maryland’s Immunization Information System. Maryland Department of Health describes ImmuNet as a confidential, secure, HIPAA-compliant database that stores vaccination records for people across the state. MyIR Mobile is the public portal Marylanders can use to access available records from ImmuNet.
Official source: Maryland ImmuNet homeMyIR Mobile tries to match your account information with ImmuNet. If the match works, you may be able to view, print, or download official immunization records and vaccine certificates. If the match fails, you may need MyIR assistance, ImmuNet support, or the official Maryland request form.
Official MyIR guide: Maryland MyIR Mobile quick reference guide| Term | What it means | How you use it |
|---|---|---|
| ImmuNet | Maryland’s Immunization Information System. | Records are stored here when vaccines are reported and matched correctly. |
| MyIR Mobile | Public portal for accessing available Maryland vaccine records. | Register or sign in, connect to Maryland, and match your details. |
| Official vaccination record | Record pulled from ImmuNet or another official source. | Print or save for school, daycare, camp, work, travel, or personal files when accepted. |
| Record request form | Printable ImmuNet form for records when portal access does not work. | Use official form instructions and avoid sending details to unofficial sites. |
How To Get Maryland Vaccine Records Online Step by Step
Use these steps when you need a safe official route to Maryland vaccine records. Start with MyIR Mobile, then use provider, local health department, ImmuNet support, or the printable request form if the portal cannot locate your record.
- Open MyIR Mobile from an official source. Go to MyIR Mobile directly or through a Maryland Department of Health page. Avoid paid lookup pages that are not connected to Maryland’s official record process.
- Create your MyIR account or sign in. Register with your name, email, password, mobile phone, and other details requested by the portal. Use information that may match your vaccine record.
- Choose Maryland as your state connection. After registration, connect your account to Maryland so MyIR can try to match your details with ImmuNet.
- Enter matching identity details carefully. Use legal name, date of birth, gender if requested, phone number, and other details that may have been used when the vaccine was given.
- Complete verification. MyIR may use verification codes or other security steps before linking a record. Keep codes and secure links private.
- View, print, or download your record. If a match appears, review the record and save a PDF or print a copy for school, daycare, camp, employment, travel, or personal files.
- If no match appears, request help. Use MyIR assistance, contact ImmuNet support, contact the vaccine provider, or complete the official ImmuNet records request form.
Information You Need Before Using MyIR Mobile
MyIR matching works best when your account details match the information already stored with your Maryland vaccine record. Before signing in, collect the details that may have been used by the doctor, pharmacy, clinic, school, or health department.
Official MyIR help: MyIR Mobile help center| Information | Why it matters | Helpful tip |
|---|---|---|
| Full legal name | Must match or closely match ImmuNet data. | Try maiden name, previous last name, hyphenated name, or old spelling if needed. |
| Date of birth | One wrong digit can stop a match. | Double-check month, day, and year before submitting. |
| Phone number | MyIR matching and verification may depend on old contact details. | Try old cell numbers, parent numbers, or pharmacy appointment numbers if appropriate. |
| Email address | Needed for account setup and communication. | Use an email you can access immediately. |
| Provider or pharmacy | Important when a dose is missing or never reported. | List CVS, Walgreens, Giant, Safeway, county clinic, pediatrician, school clinic, or hospital system. |
| Reason for proof | Different offices accept different formats. | Ask whether they need MyIR record, provider printout, school form, titer, or signed documentation. |
How To Print, Save PDF or Download Maryland Vaccine Records
After MyIR successfully matches your Maryland record, review the record carefully. Check vaccine names, dose dates, your name, date of birth, and whether the record is complete enough for the organization requesting proof.
Official access route: MyIR MobileUse the portal’s print or download option if available. On a computer, you can usually choose “Print” and then “Save as PDF.” On a phone, use the share, download, or print option. Keep one digital copy and one printed copy.
Print the MyIR record, then ask the school or daycare if it needs a specific Maryland school form or provider update.
Ask whether the office accepts MyIR, provider printout, pharmacy record, titer labs, or a signed form.
Save the PDF with a clear name like Maryland-Vaccine-Records-2026.pdf and keep a printed copy.
Maryland ImmuNet Printable Records Request Form
If MyIR Mobile cannot match your record, Maryland provides an ImmuNet printable records request form. This route can help when the portal fails, when old details are unclear, when the person needs a formal request, or when additional matching information is needed.
Official PDF: ImmuNet records request formThe request form asks for client information, requestor information, relationship to the person whose record is requested, and other names, addresses, or phone numbers that may help locate the record. Use the current official PDF and follow its current submission instructions before sending private information.
| Form section | What it means | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| Client information | The person whose vaccination record is requested. | Enter legal name, date of birth, and contact details carefully. |
| Requestor information | The person completing the request. | Use a reachable phone and email in case more details are needed. |
| Relationship | Self, parent, guardian, provider, or another authorized relationship. | Choose the correct relationship and include required documentation if requested. |
| Other known information | Past names, addresses, phone numbers, or details that help matching. | Include previous names, old phone numbers, and known vaccine locations. |
| Submission instructions | Where and how to send the form. | Follow the latest official PDF instructions, not copied instructions from old websites. |
Maryland Child, Daycare, Camp and School Vaccine Records
Maryland MyIR Mobile can help adults access records for themselves or their children when the records are in ImmuNet and the account matches correctly. This can be helpful for daycare, camp, school, sports, college, and travel proof.
Official MDH public records route: Maryland vaccination records requestIf you need a child’s record for school or daycare, ask the receiving office what format it accepts. Some offices accept MyIR. Others may need a provider printout, school form, local health department record, or additional proof if a dose is missing.
| Child record need | Best first source | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Daycare or preschool | MyIR, pediatrician, local health department, or daycare instructions. | Ask what format is accepted before submitting. |
| K-12 school | MyIR record plus provider or school office if needed. | Do not wait until the first week of school. |
| Camp or sports | MyIR or pediatrician printout. | Camp forms may need signature or date within a specific period. |
| Child moved from another state | Previous state registry and Maryland provider review. | Maryland may not automatically have out-of-state doses. |
| Portal no match | MyIR assistance, provider, ImmuNet form, or local health department. | Try old phone numbers and prior names before assuming no record exists. |
What If MyIR Says No Match or Maryland Vaccine Records Are Missing?
A no-match message does not always mean the vaccines never happened. It usually means MyIR cannot connect your account details to the record in ImmuNet, the dose was not reported, the vaccine was given outside Maryland, or the record is stored only with a provider, pharmacy, school, employer, or military system.
Official ImmuNet support: Maryland ImmuNet contact information| Problem | What it may mean | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| MyIR cannot find a match | Name, date of birth, phone, email, or registry details may not match. | Try old phone numbers, old emails, previous names, and MyIR assistance. |
| One vaccine dose is missing | The provider or pharmacy may not have reported it or it did not match correctly. | Contact the exact place that gave the vaccine. |
| Old childhood record missing | Older doses may be paper-only or stored with a school or pediatrician. | Check old doctors, parents, family files, schools, colleges, and local health departments. |
| Out-of-state vaccine | The dose may be in another state’s IIS registry. | Use CDC IIS contacts to find the state where the vaccine was given. |
| Pharmacy vaccine missing | CVS, Walgreens, Giant, Safeway, Costco, Walmart, or another pharmacy may store it separately. | Check the pharmacy app or call the pharmacy for a vaccine history. |
| Need proof urgently | MyIR support or form processing may not be fastest. | Contact the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine and ask for same-day printout options. |
Baltimore, Montgomery County, Prince George’s, Anne Arundel and Local Maryland Help
Maryland vaccine record searches often become local because records can sit with a county health department, school, provider, pharmacy, hospital system, or clinic. Start with MyIR and ImmuNet, then contact the vaccine source if the record is missing.
Local health department directory: Maryland immunization information for the public| If you live near | Common search intent | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| Baltimore City or County | School records, provider vaccine history, COVID card, or clinic record. | Use MyIR, then provider, pharmacy, school, or local health department. |
| Montgomery County | School vaccine proof, MyIR records, child records, pharmacy dose. | Start with MyIR and ask the school or provider what document is accepted. |
| Prince George’s County | Daycare, school, county clinic, COVID record, work proof. | Use MyIR, provider records, pharmacy history, and local health department support. |
| Anne Arundel County | Adult or child records from MyIR and ImmuNet. | Check MyIR first, then provider, pharmacy, school, or county guidance. |
| Howard, Frederick, Harford or Carroll | School enrollment, camp proof, provider vaccine record. | Use MyIR and contact the office that gave or stored the vaccine. |
| Eastern Shore or Western Maryland | Local health department, pharmacy, provider, school, or travel vaccine records. | Use MyIR and contact the local health department or vaccine source if missing. |
Adult Maryland Vaccine Records, Pharmacy Records, Military Records and Old Shot Cards
Adult vaccine records are often scattered across several sources. MyIR is the best online starting point, but older adult records may also be with doctors, pharmacies, schools, colleges, employers, military files, travel clinics, paper cards, or another state registry.
Related Maryland guide: How to Get Maryland Vaccination Records OnlineCheck CVS, Walgreens, Giant, Safeway, Walmart, Costco, local pharmacy, or grocery pharmacy accounts for flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, Tdap, or travel vaccines.
Check MyChart, MedStar, Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland Medical System, urgent care, or provider portals.
Check VA, TRICARE, base clinics, service medical records, or federal health portals if vaccines were given through military care.
Older school, college, nursing, or health program files may still contain vaccine dates.
Use CDC’s IIS directory for vaccines given outside Maryland.
CDC IIS contactsScan the card, keep the original, and ask a provider whether the dates can be documented or used.
Titer tests when old Maryland vaccine records are missing
A titer is a blood test that may show immunity to certain diseases. It can help when old childhood records are lost, especially for health care jobs, nursing school, college programs, clinical rotations, and immigration needs. But the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Ask first |
|---|---|---|
| Health care job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health for exact lab rules. |
| 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 before paying for labs. |
| School or daycare | Limited situations only. | Follow school, provider, and Maryland immunization instructions. |
Mistakes To Avoid When Requesting Maryland Vaccine Records
Most delays happen because people use the wrong portal, enter current details that do not match old vaccine records, wait until a deadline, or assume one source has every shot ever received.
| Mistake | Why it causes problems | Better action |
|---|---|---|
| Using paid lookup websites | They may not connect to Maryland MyIR or ImmuNet. | Use MyIR, Maryland Department of Health, provider, pharmacy, or school routes. |
| Only trying your current phone number | The registry may have an old phone number. | Try the number used when vaccinated or contact MyIR assistance. |
| Assuming Maryland has out-of-state shots | Another state may hold the dose record. | Contact the registry where the vaccine was given. |
| Waiting until the first day of school | Matching, forms, and provider corrections take time. | Start early and ask the school what proof is accepted. |
| Sending records to unverified emails | Vaccine records are private health information. | Use official instructions and trusted recipients only. |
Official Maryland Vaccine Record Links and Related Guides
Use official sources first. This page is an independent guide for Maryland residents and is not Maryland Department of Health, ImmuNet, MyIR Mobile, CDC, a school district, a pharmacy, or a healthcare provider.
Official public portal used by Maryland residents to access available vaccination records.
Open MyIR MobileCreate a MyIR Mobile account if this is your first time using the portal.
Register in MyIRState-specific MyIR sign-in route for Maryland records.
Open Maryland sign inMaryland Department of Health page for the state immunization registry.
Open ImmuNetMaryland Department of Health forms page with vaccination records request information.
Open ImmuNet formsPrintable Maryland ImmuNet records request form.
Open PDF formOfficial contact details for Maryland ImmuNet support.
Open support pageMaryland vaccine information page linking residents to vaccine record access.
Open MarylandVaxUse this if a vaccine was given outside Maryland.
Open CDC IIS contactsRelated ImmunizationRecord.org Maryland pages
These internal links were selected because they are live, relevant Maryland vaccine record pages and support nearby search intent without sending users to unrelated content.
Source Check and Trust Note
This guide was built from Maryland Department of Health ImmuNet pages, Maryland MyIR Mobile guidance, the ImmuNet forms page, the official ImmuNet records request form, ImmuNet support information, MarylandVax.org, CDC IIS contact guidance, and live related ImmunizationRecord.org Maryland pages. Record access rules, MyIR matching, school requirements, employer policies, request forms, phone numbers, email addresses, and local health department processes can change. Always confirm final requirements with Maryland Department of Health, ImmuNet, MyIR Mobile, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, local health department, travel clinic, previous state registry, or civil surgeon.
Maryland Vaccine Records FAQs
Use MyIR Mobile first. Register or sign in, connect to Maryland, and try to match your information with ImmuNet. If no match appears, use MyIR assistance, contact the provider, or use Maryland’s official ImmuNet records request form.
Open MyIR MobileImmuNet is Maryland’s Immunization Information System. It is the state registry that stores vaccination records when vaccines are reported and matched correctly.
Open Maryland ImmuNetMyIR Mobile is a public portal that can securely pull available Maryland vaccination records from ImmuNet after your account details match correctly.
Open MyIR MobileYes. Maryland guidance says adults age 18 and older can use MyIR Mobile to access records for themselves when records match in ImmuNet.
Adults can use MyIR Mobile for themselves or their children when the records match correctly. If the portal does not find a child’s record, contact the pediatrician, school, local health department, MyIR assistance, or ImmuNet support.
No match can happen when the name, date of birth, phone number, email, or other details do not match ImmuNet, or when the dose was never reported to Maryland’s registry.
Contact the place that gave the vaccine first. The provider, pharmacy, school clinic, employer clinic, military system, or local health department may have the missing dose record.
Yes. Maryland provides an ImmuNet records request form that can be used when MyIR Mobile cannot match the record or when a formal request route is needed.
Open records request formWhen MyIR successfully matches your record, you may be able to view and print official vaccination records. Save a PDF and print a paper copy for school, work, travel, or personal files.
MyIR may show available Maryland COVID-19 vaccination information when it is in ImmuNet and matched correctly. If a COVID dose is missing, contact the pharmacy, clinic, county site, employer clinic, or provider that gave the dose.
Pharmacy vaccines may appear if they were reported and matched correctly, but you should also check the pharmacy account directly if a dose is missing.
Many schools may accept official vaccine records, but the school decides the format. Ask whether it wants MyIR, provider printout, school form, local health department record, or other proof.
Contact the immunization registry in the state where the vaccine was given, then bring that record to your Maryland provider, school, employer, college, or local health department.
CDC IIS contactsTry MyIR Mobile, old pediatrician, schools, college health records, family files, local health department, pharmacy accounts, military records, and previous state registries.
Sometimes. Titers may help for certain vaccines, especially for health care jobs or college programs, but the requesting organization decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for labs.
Maryland Department of Health lists ImmuNet support at 410-767-6606 and mdh.mdimmunet@maryland.gov. Business hours are generally Monday through Friday except state holidays, but always confirm current details on the official page.
Open ImmuNet contact pageNo. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use Maryland Department of Health, ImmuNet, MyIR Mobile, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, or local health department as the final authority.