Need Arizona vaccination records for school, child care, college, a healthcare job, travel, immigration paperwork, a foster-care file, or your own family folder? Arizona’s state immunization registry is ASIIS, public online access starts with AZ MyIR/MyIR Mobile, and the ADHS Immunization Record Request form is the backup route when online matching does not work.
To get Arizona vaccination records, start with AZ MyIR/MyIR Mobile for online access. If MyIR cannot match your information, use the official ADHS Immunization Record Request form or contact the doctor, clinic, pharmacy, school, county health office, or previous state registry that may hold the record.
Official online start: Arizona Department of Health Services — AZ MyIRA missing online record does not automatically mean the vaccine was never given. It may mean the dose was not reported to ASIIS, was entered under a different name, was given in another state, or is stored in a pharmacy, school, military, employer, or older provider file.
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🔬 Titer Test Need Calculator
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What Are ASIIS, AZ MyIR and MyIR Mobile?
ASIIS means Arizona State Immunization Information System. It is Arizona’s immunization information system and may include vaccine records for people of all ages when records have been reported and matched correctly. ASIIS is mainly a registry system used by authorized users, while AZ MyIR/MyIR Mobile is the public-facing online option Arizona residents can try for record access.
Registry reference: Arizona State Immunization Information System and CDC IIS Policies: ArizonaAZ MyIR is useful when you want a printable vaccine record for school, camp, child care, work, or personal files. The important catch is matching: the details you enter must match what is already in the state record. If the match fails, do not keep guessing forever. Move to the ADHS request route and contact the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine.
Online access: Arizona MyIR sign in and MyIR registrationArizona’s state immunization registry. Records depend on what providers, pharmacies, clinics, and public health offices reported.
Public online access route for available family immunization records when identity matching works.
Official backup option if MyIR cannot match the record or a formal request is needed.
How to Get Arizona Vaccination Records Step by Step
Use this order because it starts with the fastest official route, then moves to backup routes when a match fails or records are incomplete.
- Open the official AZ MyIR page. Start from the Arizona Department of Health Services AZ MyIR page or the Arizona MyIR Mobile sign-in page, not from a random record-search website.
- Register or sign in to MyIR Mobile. Use the person’s legal name, date of birth, and contact details carefully. Matching can fail if the record uses a different name, older phone number, or different spelling.
- Print or save the record if MyIR finds it. Save a PDF and print one copy for school, child care, camp, college, work, travel, or personal use.
- Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request form if MyIR cannot match. ADHS says MyIR may fail if the information you provide does not exactly match state records.
- Contact the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine. Adult records often sit in CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, Safeway, Fry’s, Banner, HonorHealth, Dignity Health, Mayo Clinic, VA, military, or old clinic systems.
- Check school, child care, college, employer or military files. Older records may have been submitted previously even if they are not easy to find online now.
- Contact another state registry if the vaccine was not given in Arizona. ASIIS may not contain vaccines given in California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, Texas, Mexico, or another place unless the details were later added.
AZ MyIR Online Matching Tips
Most MyIR problems are matching problems. The system is trying to connect your account details with the person’s existing immunization record. If your details do not line up, you may see no record even when vaccines were given.
Start here: MyIR Mobile Arizona sign-in| Matching issue | Why it happens | What to try |
|---|---|---|
| Name mismatch | Record may use maiden name, hyphenated name, nickname, or different spelling. | Try legal name and previous names, then use ADHS request if it still fails. |
| Old contact details | Some vaccine records may be tied to an older phone, email, or address. | Check old pharmacy and provider accounts before assuming no record exists. |
| Minor child record | Guardian details and child details must line up correctly. | Use the legal guardian route and keep proof of guardianship ready. |
| Duplicate registry profile | A provider may have entered a separate record under slightly different data. | Ask provider, ADHS, or health office to check for duplicate records. |
| Out-of-state dose | Dose may be in another state registry or provider chart. | Use CDC’s IIS contact directory for the state where the vaccine was given. |
When to Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request Form
Use the ADHS Immunization Record Request route when MyIR cannot match your record, when you need formal state help, or when you are requesting a record for a child or another allowed situation under current ADHS instructions. ADHS request pages warn that the information you provide must match state records and may require identifying documents.
Official form route: ADHS Immunization Record Request Form| Request situation | Likely requirement | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Adult requesting own record | Identity details and current ADHS instructions. | Use your legal name and exact date of birth. |
| Parent or guardian requesting child record | Requester ID and proof of guardianship when required. | Have birth certificate, guardianship, foster-care, or placement paperwork if applicable. |
| Provider requesting record | Provider route or authorized access. | Ask the provider office to check ASIIS if they are authorized. |
| MyIR no match | More precise identity details. | Do not create multiple random accounts; move to official request help. |
Arizona School, Child Care, Camp and College Vaccination Records
Parents often need Arizona vaccination records for child care, preschool, kindergarten, seventh grade, school transfer, sports, camp, or college entry. MyIR may allow families to access and print official immunization certificates if the record is matched. If not, use ADHS, your provider, pharmacy, school nurse, or county health office.
School form reference: ADHS personal beliefs exemption PDF and ADHS medical exemption PDF| Need | Best first step | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| Child care or preschool | Try MyIR, provider, or child care file. | Ask what exact immunization certificate or exemption form is accepted. |
| K–12 enrollment | Use MyIR or provider record. | Ask the school nurse if a printed MyIR certificate is enough. |
| Kindergarten exemption | Use official ADHS exemption forms. | Confirm the current form and school instructions. |
| College or university | Check the college health portal first. | Ask whether vaccine dates, titers, or provider-signed proof are required. |
| Healthcare training | Ask occupational health or clinical placement office. | Ask for the exact list of vaccines and titer rules before paying for labs. |
Arizona County and City Help: Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Glendale and Scottsdale
If MyIR cannot match your record and ADHS request timing is too slow, local help can matter. In large Arizona areas, records may sit with a provider, pharmacy, hospital system, county public health office, school file, or employer medical file.
Statewide official route: Arizona DHS immunization program| If you live near | Likely local path | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Phoenix | Maricopa-area provider, pharmacy, school, or public health route. | Try MyIR first, then provider/pharmacy, then ADHS request. |
| Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Tempe | East Valley provider systems and pharmacies. | Check old patient portals and pharmacy profiles before repeating vaccines. |
| Glendale, Peoria, Surprise | West Valley clinic, school, pharmacy, or county health files. | Ask the school nurse or provider to search by previous names if needed. |
| Tucson | Pima-area provider, pharmacy, school, or public health help. | Use MyIR and ADHS request, then contact the provider that gave the vaccine. |
| Flagstaff, Yuma, Prescott | Regional clinics, pharmacies, tribal health, military, school, or county files. | Check every location where vaccines were actually given. |
CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Costco, Safeway and Fry’s Vaccine Records in Arizona
Adult vaccination records are often easiest to find through the pharmacy that gave the shot. COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, and travel vaccines may appear in pharmacy apps or printouts even if the state record is incomplete or hard to match online.
Old-record backup help: Tips for locating old immunization recordsCheck the same account, phone number, and email used at the appointment.
Use the pharmacy account and ask the store pharmacy for a vaccine history if needed.
Call the pharmacy location where the vaccine was administered.
Ask the pharmacy for immunization documentation, even if you no longer use the same account.
Check pharmacy profile records and request a printed vaccine history.
Search the pharmacy account and call the exact store if online access fails.
Why Your Arizona Vaccination Record May Be Missing
A missing Arizona record usually has a practical cause: mismatched identity details, an unreported dose, old paper-only records, out-of-state vaccines, duplicate registry profiles, pharmacy records under another account, or a provider that closed or changed systems.
| Problem | What it means | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| No MyIR match | Details entered do not match the registry record. | Try legal/previous names, then use ADHS request. |
| Vaccine given outside Arizona | Record may be in another IIS or provider chart. | Use CDC IIS contacts for the state where the shot was given. |
| Old pediatrician closed | Records may be with successor practice or medical records custodian. | Search provider name, health system, and county public health route. |
| Military, VA or tribal clinic | Record may be in federal or tribal health systems. | Check VA, TRICARE, base clinic, IHS, or tribal health records. |
| School file only | A school may have a copy that was never fully reported elsewhere. | Ask previous school, district health office, or college health office. |
Titer Tests When Arizona Vaccine Records Are Lost
A titer is a blood test that can show immunity to some diseases. Titers may help for college, healthcare work, clinical training, immigration medical exams, or adult record gaps. But the school, employer, college, civil surgeon, or program decides whether titers are acceptable.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Ask first |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health which lab format they accept. |
| Nursing or medical school | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask whether positive IgG titers replace vaccine dates. |
| Immigration exam | Civil surgeon-reviewed proof. | Ask the civil surgeon before paying for labs. |
| K–12 or child care | Limited situations only. | Follow school, child care, ADHS, and provider instructions. |
Official and Related Arizona Vaccination Record Links
Use official sources first. This page is an independent guide and is not ADHS, ASIIS, MyIR Mobile, CDC, a school, a pharmacy, or a healthcare provider.
Official Arizona page for online immunization record access through MyIR.
Open AZ MyIRSign in to MyIR Mobile for Arizona record access.
Open MyIR sign inCreate a MyIR account if you are new to the system.
Register with MyIRUse when MyIR cannot match your record or formal help is needed.
Open ADHS requestDirect ADHS form route for immunization record requests.
Open request formArizona State Immunization Information System web application.
Open ASIISCDC page confirming Arizona’s immunization information system.
Open CDC Arizona IISFind vaccine records from another state registry.
Open CDC IIS contactsMain Arizona immunization program page.
Open ADHS immunizationRelated ImmunizationRecord.org guides
Source Check and Trust Note
This Arizona vaccination records guide uses official Arizona Department of Health Services AZ MyIR guidance, MyIR Mobile Arizona access pages, the ADHS Immunization Record Request route, ASIIS, CDC’s Arizona IIS page, CDC’s IIS contact directory, and live internal ImmunizationRecord.org Arizona guides. Record access rules, request requirements, school forms, identity documents, processing times, and accepted proof can change. Confirm final requirements with ADHS, MyIR, ASIIS, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, county health office, or civil surgeon.
Arizona Vaccination Records FAQs
Start with AZ MyIR or MyIR Mobile through official Arizona links. Register or sign in, enter accurate identity details, and print or save the available record. If matching fails, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request form.
Open AZ MyIRASIIS is the Arizona State Immunization Information System. It is Arizona’s immunization registry and may include vaccine records for people of all ages when records are reported and matched.
Open ASIISAZ MyIR is Arizona’s online access route through MyIR Mobile. It helps residents access available family immunization records when the system can match the person’s details.
Open MyIR Arizona sign inCheck legal name, previous names, date of birth, old phone numbers, and pharmacy/provider records. If MyIR still cannot match, use the ADHS Immunization Record Request route and contact the provider or pharmacy that gave the vaccine.
Open ADHS requestParents and guardians can try MyIR for family records. If online matching fails, they may need the ADHS request form, provider help, school files, and proof of guardianship depending on the current request instructions.
Arizona’s public online access route is MyIR Mobile. Use the ADHS AZ MyIR page or the MyIR Mobile Arizona sign-in page to access the official route.
Open MyIR MobileYes, when MyIR matches and shows the available record, you can save or print the record for uses such as school, child care, camp, work, or personal files. Confirm with the requesting office that the printed format is accepted.
CDC’s Arizona IIS information says ASIIS includes records for vaccine recipients of all ages. Older adult records can still be incomplete if doses were not reported, were given elsewhere, or cannot be matched.
CDC Arizona IIS pageProcessing times can change. Existing Arizona guidance has referenced 5–7 business days in normal situations, but delays can happen. Always verify current timing on the official ADHS request page.
Check ADHS request pageADHS request instructions may require documents that identify the requester and, for minors, proof of guardianship. Check the current form instructions before sending private documents.
Open ADHS formMyIR may provide printable immunization certificates, but each school or child care program can tell you what exact format it accepts. Ask the school nurse or enrollment office before the deadline.
Use official Arizona Department of Health Services exemption forms and school instructions. Avoid random third-party PDF form websites because forms can change and health information is private.
Personal beliefs exemption PDFYes, if the vaccine was given there, the pharmacy may provide a vaccine history or show records in the pharmacy account. This is especially useful for adult vaccines such as flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, Tdap, and travel vaccines.
Contact the immunization registry or provider in the state where the vaccine was given. Use CDC’s IIS contact directory to find the correct state record office.
CDC IIS contactsSometimes. Titers may help for certain vaccines in healthcare jobs, college programs, or immigration exams, but the organization requesting proof decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab work.
No. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use ADHS, MyIR, ASIIS, CDC, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, or health office as the final authority.