# Travel Vaccinations in Chiang Mai: A Calm Guide to Jabs and Clinics

> A calm guide to travel vaccinations for Chiang Mai: rabies, hepatitis, typhoid and where to get your jabs at the city's friendly travel clinics.

Few things make a trip feel more daunting than a long list of recommended vaccines. Read certain travel forums and you'd think Chiang Mai was a minefield of exotic diseases. It isn't. This is a relaxed, friendly city where most visitors and new arrivals never have a health scare beyond a dodgy som tam. Still, a little planning before you come — and knowing where to go once you're here — takes the worry out of it entirely. Here's how we'd think it through, with the firm caveat that this is general information rather than medical advice: your own history and plans deserve a proper chat with a doctor or travel clinic.

## Start with the boring basics

Before any tropical-sounding jab, the most useful thing you can do is make sure your routine vaccinations are up to date. **Tetanus** is the classic one — easy to forget, genuinely worth having current if you're the sort who hikes, rides a scooter, or generally collects scrapes. The same goes for measles, mumps and rubella, diphtheria, polio and your seasonal flu shot. None of this is Chiang Mai-specific; it's just good baseline cover that a clinic will check first. Bring whatever vaccination record you already have, and ask them to update it as they go. A tidy little booklet you can photograph and keep on your phone saves a lot of guesswork later, especially if you end up [settling in for the long haul](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai).

![A Lanna-style illustration of a calm Chiang Mai travel clinic with a nurse and a vaccination booklet](/blog/vaccinations-travel-clinics-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

The jabs that usually come up — all worth raising with a clinic, so you only get what your own trip needs:

- **Routine boosters** — tetanus, MMR, diphtheria, polio, flu
- **Rabies** — relevant around street animals
- **Hepatitis A** — spread by food and water
- **Hepatitis B** — for longer stays
- **Typhoid** — food and water
- **Japanese encephalitis** — rural and rice-growing areas

## Rabies: the one worth understanding properly

Rabies is the vaccine most people ask us about, and for good reason. Chiang Mai has a visible population of street dogs, and while the vast majority are gentle and many are looked after by their neighbourhoods, the disease is taken seriously here. The reassuring news is twofold. First, a pre-exposure course is something you can simply discuss with a clinic if your lifestyle — cycling, trekking, a soft spot for strays — puts you around animals. Second, and more importantly, Chiang Mai is genuinely well set up for treatment after a bite or scratch: rabies vaccine and immunoglobulin are widely stocked across Thai hospitals, public and private. If an animal ever breaks your skin, clean the wound thoroughly and get to a hospital the same day — don't wait and see. We go deeper into the practicalities in our pieces on [the city's soi dogs](/blog/soi-dogs-chiang-mai) and on [the animals worth respecting](/blog/dangerous-animals-chiang-mai), but the headline is simple: prevention is easy, and post-exposure care is close at hand.

## Hepatitis, typhoid and the rest of the list

After rabies, the conversation usually turns to the food-and-water and longer-stay vaccines. **Hepatitis A** comes up often because it spreads through contaminated food and water — relevant anywhere you're enjoying street food with gusto. **Hepatitis B** and **typhoid** are common topics too, particularly for people staying a while or travelling more adventurously. **Japanese encephalitis** is mosquito-borne and tends to be discussed for those spending real time in rural or rice-growing areas, so it's worth raising if your plans involve a lot of [trekking and time in the hills](/blog/hiking-trekking-chiang-mai). We're deliberately not laying out doses or schedules here, because the right answer genuinely depends on you — your trip length, your past jabs, where you'll roam. That's exactly the sort of thing a travel clinic sorts out in one calm appointment.

## Where to go in Chiang Mai

This is the easy part. Chiang Mai is a medical-tourism city, so getting vaccinated is straightforward, efficient and usually very affordable. The private hospitals — **Bangkok Hospital Chiang Mai**, **Chiang Mai Ram**, and the more wallet-friendly **Sriphat Medical Center** on the Suan Dok (Maharaj Nakorn) university campus — all run health-check or vaccination services with English-speaking staff. There are also dedicated travel clinics in town geared entirely towards visitors. Walk-ins are often possible, though a quick call ahead never hurts, and you'll generally be given clear costs upfront. For the bigger picture on how the system works, our [guide to healthcare in Chiang Mai](/blog/healthcare-chiang-mai) is a good companion read.

![A Lanna-style illustration of a Chiang Mai travel-clinic and vaccination scene](/blog/vaccinations-travel-clinics-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Dengue: the bite you can't vaccinate away

One health topic deserves a slightly different mention. **Dengue** is mosquito-borne and turns up across Thailand, more so in the wetter months. There's no simple traveller's vaccine you can pop in for the way you can with the others, which makes everyday bite-avoidance your best friend: repellent, covering up at dawn and dusk, and not leaving still water around your balcony. It's not a reason for alarm — just a nudge that a can of repellent matters more than any clinic visit here. If you're timing your stay, our notes on [when to visit](/blog/when-to-visit-chiang-mai) touch on the seasons when mosquitoes are liveliest.

## Keep it all in perspective

Step back and the picture is genuinely calm. A handful of these vaccines, sorted in a single appointment, cover the great majority of travellers comfortably — and Chiang Mai makes the whole thing painless. Sensible travel cover rounds it off nicely, which is why we'd pair this with our [look at travel insurance](/blog/travel-insurance-chiang-mai). Most of all, treat this article as a starting point for a conversation, not a checklist to self-prescribe from: a doctor or travel clinic who can see your records will give you advice that actually fits your trip. Do that one thing, keep your little vaccination booklet handy, and you can get on with the far more enjoyable business of settling into the city.
