Standardized Reporting on Vaccination (STARVAX): Vaccination coverage in children

Report on the percentage of children who have completed their routine immunizations, categorized by vaccination status, sex, and age group.

  • Last updated: 2026-02-18

This page shows the percentage of children who have completed their routine immunizations, categorized by vaccination status, sex, and age group as reported by provinces and territories participating in the Standardized Reporting on Vaccination (STARVAX) surveillance system. Currently, estimates in this report only include numbers from British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Yukon.

This report includes coverage rates up to and including December 31, 2024.

On this page

Highlights

Vaccination coverage is a combined estimate based on reports from: Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, and Yukon.

About childhood vaccinations

Vaccinations are an important preventative public health measure.

Routine childhood immunizations are vaccines recommended to all children at specific age milestones by provincial and territorial public health authorities to protect them against infectious diseases. To find out what vaccines are recommended in your province or territory, please check its vaccine schedule.

For the latest recommendations on routine immunizations, please refer to the Canadian immunization guide.

In 2016, the government of Canada and provincial and territorial governments agreed on a series of vaccination coverage goals:

The standardized reporting on vaccination (STARVAX) surveillance system is a collaboration between federal, provincial and territorial governments Currently, seven provinces and territories (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Yukon) are reporting to STARVAX on childhood vaccination.

In addition to routine reporting, STARVAX enabled responses to public health questions, such as assessing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on routine childhood vaccinations:

Use caution while interpreting estimates:

Vaccination coverage in children as of December 31, 2024

Table 1. Vaccination coverage at age 2, as of December 31, 2024

Table 1: Notes

Vaccination coverage is a combined estimate based on reports from the provinces and territories that reported for 2024: Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, and Yukon.

* The number of doses required to complete the rotavirus vaccine series varies across provinces and territories, depending on the product administered and on program specifications.

Table 2. Vaccination coverage at age 7, as of December 31, 2024

Table 2: Notes

Vaccination coverage is a combined estimate based on reports from the provinces and territories that reported for 2024: British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, and Yukon.

*Up-to-date means having received the number of doses required to be considered as protected at age 7. In most provinces and territories, a child vaccinated on time since birth would have received 5 doses of DTaP by age 7; however, a child starting vaccination late could be considered as protected at age 7 with a smaller number of doses.

Vaccination coverage in adolescents, by sex as of December 31, 2024

Table 3. Vaccination coverage in 14-year-old children

Table 3: Notes

Vaccination coverage is a combined estimate based on reports from the provinces and territories that reported for 2024: British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Yukon.

Table 4. Vaccination coverage in 17-year-old children

Table 4: Notes

Vaccination coverage is a combined estimate based on reports from the provinces and territories that reported for 2024: British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Yukon.

aNew Brunswick is not included in the Tdap coverage estimate.

Coverage over time for vaccines administered to infants and young children

  • In 2-year-old children: decrease in vaccination coverage from 2019 to 2022, with stabilization/partial recovery after 2022.
  • In 7-year-old children: continuous decrease in vaccination from 2019 to 2024 with no apparent recovery.
Figure 1: Vaccination coverage against at of age from 2019 to 2024.
Figure 1: Notes
  • At age 2 and 7 the coverage goal is set at 95%
  • Only provinces that reported for all years between 2019 and 2024 are shown: vaccine at age only includes jurisdiction

Coverage over time for vaccines administered to adolescents

  • In 17-year-olds: slight decrease in vaccination from 2019 to 2024, though less pronounced than what was observed at age 2 and 7.
Figure 2: Vaccination coverage against at by sex from 2019 to 2024.
Figure 2: Notes
  • At age 14 and 17 the coverage goal is set at 90%
  • Only provinces that reported for all years between 2019 and 2024 are shown: vaccine at age only includes jurisdiction

Acknowledgment

STARVAX would not have been possible without the collaboration of provincial and territorial public health partners.

For healthcare providers

For parents and guardians

Provincial and territorial links

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