Free tool

Horse Vaccination Schedule

Generate a 12-month vaccination calendar based on your horse's profile. Built around AAEP core and risk-based guidelines.

Vaccination calendar

Always confirm with your veterinarian based on regional risk.

  • Tetanus (core)

    June 3, 2026

    Annual booster.

  • EEE / WEE (core)

    June 3, 2026

    Annual, ideally in spring before mosquito season.

  • West Nile Virus (core)

    June 3, 2026

    Annual, in spring.

  • Rabies (core)

    June 3, 2026

    Annual.

  • Influenza (risk-based)

    June 3, 2026

    Every 6 months for horses with travel.

  • Rhinopneumonitis EHV-1/4 (risk-based)

    June 3, 2026

    Every 6 months for horses with travel.

  • Influenza (risk-based)

    December 3, 2026

    Every 6 months for horses with travel.

  • Rhinopneumonitis EHV-1/4 (risk-based)

    December 3, 2026

    Every 6 months for horses with travel.

Track every horse's vaccinations automatically

NexxorFarm logs every vaccine, sends WhatsApp reminders 7 days before due dates and produces an instant veterinary record for each horse.

Start free — up to 5 horses

AAEP core vaccines (every horse, every year)

The American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP) defines five core vaccines that every adult horse in the United States should receive annually: tetanus, Eastern Equine Encephalomyelitis (EEE), Western Equine Encephalomyelitis (WEE), West Nile Virus (WNV) and rabies. They protect against diseases that are widespread, highly fatal, or pose a public-health risk.

Risk-based vaccines

Influenza, rhinopneumonitis (EHV-1/EHV-4), strangles, Potomac horse fever, anthrax, botulism, leptospirosis and rotavirus are recommended only when age, use, region or herd exposure justify them. Performance horses that travel typically need influenza and EHV every 6 months — sometimes every 3-4 months in the show season.

Foal vaccination schedule

Foals born to vaccinated mares start their primary series at 4-6 months: three doses 4-6 weeks apart for tetanus, EEE/WEE and West Nile, plus a rabies dose around month 6 with a booster 6-12 months later. The first influenza/EHV doses follow if the foal is at risk of exposure.