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How to Track Your Dog's Vaccinations: A Complete Guide

Keeping up with your dog’s vaccination schedule is one of the most important things you can do as a pet owner. Missed or late vaccines can leave your dog vulnerable to serious — and sometimes fatal — diseases. This guide covers everything you need to know about tracking dog vaccinations effectively.

Why Vaccination Tracking Matters

Vaccines protect your dog against diseases like rabies, distemper, parvovirus, and canine hepatitis. But protection doesn’t last forever — most vaccines require boosters on a specific schedule. Without proper tracking:

  • You might miss a booster window and leave your dog unprotected
  • You won’t have records ready when boarding, traveling, or visiting a new vet
  • You could accidentally over-vaccinate, which carries its own risks

Core Vaccines Every Dog Needs

These are considered essential for all dogs regardless of lifestyle:

VaccineFirst DoseBoosters
Rabies12-16 weeksEvery 1-3 years (varies by law)
Distemper (DHPP)6-8 weeksEvery 3 doses at 3-4 week intervals, then every 1-3 years
Parvovirus6-8 weeksIncluded in DHPP series
Canine Hepatitis6-8 weeksIncluded in DHPP series

Lifestyle Vaccines (Non-Core)

Your vet may recommend these based on your dog’s exposure risk:

  • Bordetella (kennel cough) — Required for boarding, daycare, or grooming facilities. Annual or every 6 months.
  • Leptospirosis — Recommended if your dog swims in natural water or lives in rural areas. Annual.
  • Canine influenza — Growing in prevalence. Two initial doses, then annual.
  • Lyme disease — If you live in tick-heavy regions. Annual.

Puppy Vaccination Timeline

Puppies need a series of vaccines during their first year:

  • 6-8 weeks: First DHPP
  • 10-12 weeks: Second DHPP, Bordetella, Leptospirosis (if recommended)
  • 14-16 weeks: Third DHPP, Rabies
  • 12-16 months: DHPP booster, Rabies booster

After the puppy series, most core vaccines shift to every 1-3 years depending on the vaccine type and your vet’s recommendation.

How to Keep Track: Digital vs Paper

Paper Records

The traditional approach — your vet gives you a vaccination booklet. Problems:

  • Easy to lose or damage
  • Hard to share with other family members or caregivers
  • No reminders — you have to remember yourself
  • Can’t generate reports for boarding facilities

Spreadsheets

Better than paper, but still manual. You have to remember to update it and set your own reminders.

Dedicated Pet Health Apps

The best option. A good vaccination tracker app like PokiPaw will:

  • Store your complete vaccination history in one place
  • Send automatic reminders before each vaccine is due
  • Display a visual calendar so you can see your schedule at a glance
  • Share records with family so everyone knows what’s coming up
  • Generate reports for boarding, travel, or new vet visits
  • Work across devices — access records from your phone, tablet, or computer

Have cats too? Check out our cat vaccination schedule guide.

Setting Up Your Vaccination Tracker

Here’s how to get started with digital vaccination tracking:

  1. Gather existing records — Collect any paper records from your vet, including dates and vaccine types
  2. Enter historical data — Log all past vaccinations with their exact dates
  3. Set up reminders — Enable notifications so you’re alerted before vaccines are due
  4. Add your vet’s info — Store your vet’s contact details so you can easily schedule appointments
  5. Share with family — If others help with pet care, make sure they have access too

What to Record for Each Vaccination

For each vaccine entry, log:

  • Vaccine name (e.g., DHPP, Rabies)
  • Date administered
  • Next due date
  • Vet/clinic name
  • Lot number (if provided — useful for adverse reaction tracking)
  • Any reactions noted

Signs of a Vaccine Reaction

While rare, reactions can happen. Watch for these within 24-48 hours:

  • Mild lethargy or reduced appetite (normal, resolves in 1-2 days)
  • Swelling at the injection site
  • Mild fever
  • Seek immediate vet care for: facial swelling, difficulty breathing, persistent vomiting, collapse

Recording any reactions in your pet’s health records helps your vet make informed decisions about future vaccinations.

Traveling with Your Dog

If you travel with your dog — especially internationally — vaccination records become critical. Most countries require:

  • Current rabies vaccination certificate
  • DHPP vaccination proof
  • Sometimes a titer test (blood test showing immunity levels)

Having a digital record makes it easy to produce documentation on demand.

The Bottom Line

Vaccination tracking doesn’t have to be complicated. A digital tracker eliminates the guesswork, ensures you never miss a booster, and keeps your records accessible whenever you need them.

For more on why going digital matters, read why every pet owner needs a digital vaccination record.

Download PokiPaw free to start tracking your dog’s vaccinations today — with visual calendars, smart reminders, and family sharing built in.

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