The flu is a contagious respiratory sickness caused by a virus. The flu spreads easily when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks. Less often, it can spread if someone touches a surface that has influenza virus on it and then touches their mouth, nose, or eyes.source: 1
Seasonal flu vaccines are the best way to protect yourself and your child from flu and, if you get the flu, from being so sick that you have to see a doctor or go to the hospital.source: 2 Children younger than 5 years old—especially those younger than 2—are at higher risk of developing serious flu-related illness. There are many vaccine options available to protect kids against flu.source: 3 (1) Flu shots can be given to kids ages 6 months and older. (2) The nasal spray vaccine can be given to kids 2 years of age and older. The nasal spray vaccine can be given to children who are healthy, without certain underlying medical conditions.source: 4 Your child's doctor can tell you which vaccine is right for your child.source: 5
Why does my child need to be vaccinated against flu?
Flu is much more serious than the common cold.source: 6 For instance, during the 2022–2023 flu season, for every 100,000 children under age 5, 11,443 went to the doctor because of flu, 119 went to the hospital, and one died.source: 7 Children are twice as likely as adults 65 years and older to get sick from flu.source: 1 A seasonal flu vaccine can lower the risk of getting the flu by about 40%–60% when the type of flu virus that is circulating is well-matched to the ones used in that year’s vaccine.source: 8 A flu vaccine can also reduce the severity of illness and lower the risk of flu-related hospitalization. Getting a yearly flu vaccine is the best way to protect your child from flu.source: 8
Most people who get the flu have a mild illness. But for many, it can be serious—and even deadly. Babies and young kids are especially at risk for serious complications from flu. Between 4,900 and 51,000 people died from flu every year between 2010 and 2023.source: 9
It's especially important for people who are at higher risk of developing serious complications from the flu to get a vaccine every year. This includes kids younger than 5 years—and especially kids younger than 2 years.source: 10
How safe are the vaccines?
Flu vaccines have a safe record. In the 75 years that flu vaccines have been around, hundreds of millions of Americans have been vaccinated safely.source: 11,source: 12 Even children with an egg allergy can safely get a flu vaccine.source: 13
Like any medicine, there's a small chance that flu vaccines could cause other serious reactions. Generally, if 1 million vaccine doses are given, 1 to 2 people may have a severe allergic reaction.source: 14,source: 15 Getting a flu vaccine is much safer than getting the flu.
How effective are the vaccines?
The seasonal flu vaccines can lower the risk of getting the flu by about 50%.source: 8 Even if a vaccinated person gets the flu, it is usually milder and less likely to lead to hospitalization or death.source: 8 Flu vaccines are updated every year to give the best protection.source: 16 Flu vaccines have been around since the 1940s.source: 17
What are the vaccines’ side effects?
Most people have no side effects from a flu vaccine. If there are side effects, they are usually mild, last 1–3 days, and might include pain, swelling, or redness where the shot was given, headache, muscle aches, fever, or an upset stomach. Side effects from the nasal spray vaccine may include a runny nose, wheezing, headache, vomiting, and muscle aches. Although some side effects from a flu vaccine are similar to those from flu disease, a flu vaccine can't cause the flu. This is because vaccines are either made with a dead or weakened virus or made with proteins from an influenza virus. The nasal spray vaccine also cannot cause the flu because the viruses it contains are weakened and designed to only reproduce in the nose and not warmer parts of your body.source: 18
Understanding the Risks
Getting the Flu vs. Getting Vaccinated
Flu
Vaccines to Prevent Flu
Common: Mild to Moderate Symptoms or Side Effects
Symptoms can be mild to moderate and last up to 2 weeks:
- Fever* or feeling feverish, and chills
- Cough
- Sore throat
- Runny or stuffy nose
- Muscle or body aches
- Headache
- Fatigue (tiredness)
- Vomiting or diarrhea
*It’s important to note that not everyone with the flu will have a fever.
If side effects occur, they are usually mild and last 1–3 days:
- Soreness, redness, or swelling where the vaccine was given
- Fever
- Headache
- Fatigue (tiredness)
- Upset stomach
Rare: More Serious Symptoms, Complications or Side Effects
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
- Pneumonia
- Myocarditis (heart inflammation)
- Encephalitis (brain inflammation)
- Myositis (muscle inflammation)
- Multi-organ failure
- Sepsis
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
- Severe allergic reaction (generally, for every 1 million vaccines administered in the United States, only about 1–2 doses result in a severe allergic reaction)
When does my child need a flu vaccine?
Your child needs a flu vaccine every year once they are 6 months old.source: 19 Getting a flu vaccine every year is important because flu viruses are constantly changing. Every year, updated flu vaccines provide the best protection against the flu viruses that research suggests might be most common in the next flu season.source: 16
Kids can get a flu vaccine at the same time as other vaccines.source: 20 Pregnant women can help protect their newborn from flu by getting vaccinated while pregnant. Flu vaccination during pregnancy can protect babies for several months after birth against flu and flu-related hospitalizations because the pregnant parent passes antibodies onto the developing baby during pregnancy.source: 21
Some kids may need two doses of flu vaccine. This includes kids 6 months through 8 years who are getting a flu vaccine for the first time, and kids who have only ever gotten one dose of flu vaccine. The first dose should be given as soon as the vaccine becomes available, usually in September or October, but can be as early as July or August.source: 5,source: 10,source: 22
Try to get yourself and your child vaccinated against flu by the end of October before flu season begins.source: 5 It takes 2 weeks for your body to develop immunity after receiving a flu vaccine. So, it's best to get a flu vaccine before flu starts to spread in your community. Although it is best to get a flu vaccine by the end of October, the vaccine can still provide protection throughout the flu season (fall and winter).source: 23
More information
- Learn why it’s worth getting vaccinated even if some people can still get the flu afterward.
You can also visit these sites:
Sources
- CDC: About Influenza
- CDC: Caregivers of Infants and Young Children
- FDA: Vaccines for Children - A Guide for Parents and Caregivers
- CDC: Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine [LAIV] (The Nasal Spray Flu Vaccine)
- CDC: Who Needs a Flu Vaccine
- FDA: Flu Vaccines
- CDC: High Influenza Incidence and Disease Severity Among Children and Adolescents Aged <18 Years ― United States, 2022–23 Season
- CDC: Benefits of the Flu Vaccine
- CDC: About Estimated Flu Burden
- CDC: Clinical Guidance for Influenza Vaccination
- CDC: Flu Vaccine Safety
- WHO: A Brief History of Vaccines
- CDC: Flu Vaccine and People with Egg Allergies
- HHS: Vaccine Side Effects
- Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: Risk of anaphylaxis after vaccination in children and adults
- FDA: It’s a Good Time to Get Your Flu Vaccine
- CDC: Influenza Historic Timeline 1930 and Beyond
- CDC: Influenza (Flu) Vaccine Safety
- CDC: Seasonal Flu Vaccine Basics
- CDC: Multiple Vaccines at Once
- CDC: Flu Vaccination During Pregnancy Decreases Flu Hospitalizations and Emergency Department Visits in Infants Younger Than 6 Months
- CDC: ACIP Recommendations Summary
- CDC: 2022–2023 Season
Disclaimer Policy: Links with this icon () mean that you are leaving the HHS website.
Disclaimer Policy: Links with this icon () mean that you are leaving the HHS website.
- The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) cannot guarantee the accuracy of a non-federal website.
- Linking to a non-federal website does not mean that HHS or its employees endorse the sponsors, information, or products presented on the website. HHS links outside of itself to provide you with further information.
- You will be bound by the destination website's privacy policy and/or terms of service when you follow the link.
- HHS is not responsible for Section 508 compliance (accessibility) on private websites.
- For more information on HHS's web notification policies, see Website Disclaimers.