The phrase “which 11 vaccines will be required” does not match any official global rule or law saying that 11 specific vaccines will be mandatory for everyone.

What this phrase likely refers to

This wording is most often seen in:

  • Online discussions or social media posts speculating that “governments/WHO will soon require 11 vaccines” for travel, school, or general life.
  • Misinterpretations of travel‑health pages that list many recommended vaccines (often around 10–15), which some people then describe as “required,” even though most are only advised, not legally mandatory.

In reality, there is no single worldwide list of 11 vaccines that everyone must get. Requirements vary by:

  • Country and region
  • Purpose (school entry, workplace rules, immigration, pilgrimage, or specific jobs like healthcare)
  • Travel destination and disease risk (for example, yellow fever areas)

What is actually required today

Instead of one universal “11 vaccines” rule, there are a few well‑defined requirement types:

  • Travel requirements
    • Yellow fever: required for entry into some countries if you come from, or transit through, a yellow‑fever‑risk country.
* Polio: some countries require proof of recent polio vaccination for travellers entering or leaving polio‑affected regions.
* Meningococcal: required for certain trips, such as the Hajj/Umrah pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.
  • Recommended (but not legally required) travel vaccines
    Travel health agencies list multiple vaccines (COVID‑19, hepatitis A and B, typhoid, rabies, Japanese encephalitis, cholera, MMR, Tdap, etc.) as recommended depending on where you go, your health, and activities.
  • Routine national schedules
    Each country has its own childhood and adult schedule (for example, MMR, polio, tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis, HPV, etc.), and some of these may be required for school or certain jobs, but the exact list and count are different in each place.

Why you see “11 vaccines” in forums and news

In forum or “latest news” discussions, people sometimes:

  • Count all the standard childhood vaccines plus a few extras and say “they want 11 shots.”
  • Mix up “recommended for best protection” with “legally required,” especially for travel.
  • Share viral posts about “upcoming WHO rules” without linking to any actual regulation or government document.

So when you see the phrase “which 11 vaccines will be required,” it is almost always:

  • A discussion or rumor , not an official global mandate.
  • Dependent on context: country, school, job, or specific trip.

How to check what applies to you

Because requirements depend heavily on where you are and what you plan to do, the safest approach is:

  1. Look up the official health site for your country (for example, national health ministry or health service) to see:
    • The current routine vaccination schedule.
 * Any vaccines required for **school, childcare, or certain jobs**.
  1. For travel, use:
    • National or international travel‑health pages that let you choose your destination country and see recommended and required vaccines (for example, lists that include yellow fever, polio, meningococcal, etc.).
  1. If a post claims “11 required vaccines,” check whether:
    • It links to an actual government or health‑agency document.
    • It clearly states where and for what they would be required (for example, “for school in X country” or “for entry to Y country”).

If you tell your country and whether you mean school, work, or travel, a more concrete explanation of what you might actually need can be outlined.