U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

01/23/2022 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/23/2022 13:55

Overall US COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution and Administration Update as of Sun, 23 Jan 2022 06:00:00 EST

Overall US COVID-19 Vaccine Deliveries and Administration; Maps, charts, and data provided by CDC, updates daily by 8 pm ET†
Represents all vaccine partners including jurisdictional partner clinics, retail pharmacies, long-term care facilities, dialysis centers, Federal Emergency Management Agency and Health Resources and Services Administration partner sites, and federal entity facilities.

COVID Data Tracker's vaccination data typically have a lag time from vaccination data shown on a state's website. The amount of lag time varies for each state.
How Do I Find a COVID-19 Vaccine?
View Footnotes and Download Data
Total Vaccine Doses
Delivered
659,895,815
Administered
534,608,709

Learn more about the distribution of vaccines.
210.4M

People fully vaccinated
83.9M

People received a booster dose**
Vaccinated People
Count
Percent of US Population
Total
250,763,600
75.5%
Population ≥ 5 Years of Age
250,712,879
80.3%
Population ≥ 12 Years of Age
242,336,691
85.5%
Population ≥ 18 Years of Age
225,706,891
87.4%
Population ≥ 65 Years of Age
56,426,697
95%

*For surveillance purposes, COVID Data Tracker counts people as being "fully vaccinated" if they received two doses on different days (regardless of time interval) of the two-dose mRNA series or received one dose of a single-dose vaccine.

**The count and percentage of people who received a booster dose includes anyone who is fully vaccinated and has received another dose of COVID-19 vaccine since August 13, 2021. This includes people who received booster doses and people who received additional doses.

***The count and percentage of people who are eligible for a booster dose (at least 5 months since their completed Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna primary series or at least 2 months since their completed Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) single-dose vaccine) but have not received a booster or additional dose. Booster eligibility counts and percentages exclude vaccine administrations reported by Texas because data on the primary series cannot be linked to data on booster doses in the aggregate data submitted by Texas. Criteria for booster eligibility may change over time; data will be updated to align with the current recommendations.

About these data
CDC | Data as of: January 23, 2022 6:00am ET. Posted: Sunday, January 23, 2022 2:20 PM ET
0.050M100M150M200M250M300MVaccine TypeTotal Doses AdministeredU.S. COVID-19 Vaccine Administration by Vaccine Type
Pfizer-BioNTechModerna J&J/JanssenOther313,000,963203,024,47818,114,786468,482
0.0100M200M300MVaccine TypeTotal Doses DeliveredU.S. COVID-19 Vaccine Delivered by Vaccine Type
Pfizer-BioNTechModerna J&J/JanssenOther388,089,095241,806,62030,000,1000
0.020M40M60M80M100MVaccine Series TypeTotal Number of People Fully VaccinatedNumber of People Fully Vaccinatedin the U.S. by COVID-19 VaccineSeries Type
Pfizer-BioNTech 2-doseModerna 2-dose J&J/Janssen single doseOther 2-dose119,329,60174,317,70116,576,922133,784
0.010M20M30M40MBooster TypeTotal Number of People with a Booster DoseNumber of People with a Booster Dosein the U.S. by COVID-19 Vaccine Type
Pfizer-BioNTechModernaJ&J/JanssenOther45,669,05236,952,0281,284,83718,698
Covid-19 Booster Dose Typeby Primary Series TypePercent of People with a Booster Doseby Booster Dose Type0102030405060708090100Data on booster dose type by primary series type for Texas are unavailable. As such, these metrics do not include people who received doses of vaccine in Texas.Other70.61kJ&J/Janssen4.55MModerna31.98MPfizer-BioNTech41.60MPeople with a Booster Doseby Primary Series Type50.9% (35.96k)45.0% (31.75k)33.2% (1.51M)41.8% (1.90M)25.0% (1.14M)92.3% (29.53M)92.8% (38.63M)
41.60M42.59M31.98M34.40M4.55M1.20M70.61k18.54kPfizer-BioNTechModernaJ&J/JanssenOtherTotal Number of People withBooster Dosesby Primary SeriesType:by Booster DoseType:
COVID-19 Booster Dose Type by Primary Series Type: This graph is limited to people who are fully vaccinated and have received a booster dose. It illustrates the vaccine manufacturer (i.e., vaccine type) of the COVID-19 primary series received, as well as the manufacturer of the booster dose received. The graph demonstrates that while some vaccine recipients received the same vaccine type for their primary series and booster dose, others received one type for their primary series and a different type for their booster dose.
View:
Total Doses
People
Show:
Administered
Delivered
Metric:
Count
Rate per 100,000
Population:
Total Population
Population ≥ 5 Years of Age
Population ≥ 12 Years of Age
Population ≥ 18 Years of Age
Population ≥ 65 Years of Age
This shows the number of doses administered within the state or territory for every 100,000 people of the total population. It does not reflect the residency of the person receiving the vaccine, but where they received it.
Total Doses Administered Reported to the CDC by State/Territory and for Select Federal Entities per 100,000 of the Total Population

No Data
0
1 - 170,000
170,001 - 180,000
180,001 - 190,000
190,001 - 200,000
200,001 +


Territories

GU AS RP FM MP MH VI

Federal Entities

BoP DoD IHS VHA


Data for Federal Entities are presented here and are also incorporated into the respective jurisdictional totals

Data Downloads and Footnotes

Expand each accordion to view data table and download data
Data Table for COVID-19 Vaccinations in the United States
CDC | Data as of: January 23, 2022 6:00am ET. Posted: Sunday, January 23, 2022 2:20 PM ET
Skip Table
State/Territory/Federal Entity Total Doses Administered by State where Administered Doses Administered per 100k by State where Administered 18+ Doses Administered by State where Administered 18+ Doses Administered per 100K by State where Administered
Alabama 5,908,517 120,504 5,546,591 145,394
Alaska1,059,073 144,772 959,315 173,927
American Samoa 82,990 175,114 61,279 195,561
Arizona 11,044,623 151,739 10,057,565 178,374
Arkansas 3,962,434 131,302 3,634,394 156,814
Bureau of Prisons 288,909 0 288,907 0
California 69,887,601 176,876 62,974,219 205,680
Colorado 9,962,002 172,989 9,042,235 200,974
Connecticut 7,037,223 197,382 6,360,165 224,119
Delaware 1,658,680 170,337 1,524,045 197,879
Dept of Defense 7,047,845 0 6,621,559 0
District of Columbia 1,355,266 192,032 1,273,618 220,509
Federated States of Micronesia 87,228 85,250 82,906 124,252
Florida 35,086,747 163,363 32,726,655 189,744
Georgia 13,883,462 130,761 12,793,908 157,686
Guam 306,856 182,122 269,941 235,666
Hawaii2,680,031 189,285 2,423,912 217,196
Idaho 2,117,922 118,514 2,115,853 158,033
Illinois 20,966,686 165,459 18,902,977 191,832
Indian Health Svc 2,099,892 100,820 1,870,995 0
Indiana 8,933,809 132,702 8,249,411 159,741
Iowa 4,796,270 152,018 4,408,342 181,546
Kansas 4,279,671 146,900 3,886,767 175,628
Kentucky 6,143,252 137,505 5,685,324 164,088
Louisiana 5,882,950 126,548 5,502,346 154,510
Maine 2,633,224 195,894 2,416,755 220,634
Marshall Islands 49,506 63,681 45,784 96,329
Maryland 11,042,430 182,650 9,900,062 210,148
Massachusetts 13,735,763 199,286 12,416,706 224,140
Michigan 14,594,370 146,136 13,456,123 171,570
Minnesota 9,587,903 170,009 8,639,038 199,218
Mississippi 3,643,932 122,438 3,395,227 149,073
Missouri 8,406,428 136,970 7,759,947 162,790
Montana 1,490,146 139,425 1,381,986 164,485
Nebraska 2,981,036 154,106 2,706,626 185,597
Nevada 4,539,931 147,393 4,186,355 175,343
New Hampshire 2,530,257 186,088 2,322,250 210,262
New Jersey 15,822,679 178,139 14,324,443 206,297
New Mexico 3,606,964 172,020 3,267,352 201,565
New York State 36,261,653 186,401 33,163,578 214,995
North Carolina 15,598,839 148,729 14,293,213 174,576
North Dakota1,045,211 137,156 964,731 165,792
Northern Mariana Islands 101,151 195,080 82,951 229,940
Ohio 16,763,126 143,408 15,481,457 169,919
Oklahoma 5,552,073 140,311 5,130,365 170,743
Oregon 7,180,124 170,236 6,556,713 195,654
Pennsylvania21,342,255 166,710 19,620,361 192,974
Puerto Rico 6,281,805 196,694 5,643,240 215,312
Republic of Palau 42,865 199,076 38,669 233,185
Rhode Island 2,063,900 194,825 1,883,328 220,307
South Carolina 7,026,280 136,467 6,543,176 162,059
South Dakota 1,313,802 148,509 1,199,331 179,659
Tennessee 9,252,234 135,481 8,662,274 162,852
Texas 42,629,712 147,020 38,148,839 176,647
Utah 4,699,518 146,587 4,137,361 181,880
Vermont 1,313,388 210,483 1,183,563 232,078
Veterans Health 7,109,112 0 7,105,695 0
Virgin Islands135,755 127,721 127,814 156,814
Virginia 15,177,550 177,816 13,657,682 204,620
Washington 13,191,481 173,233 11,992,070 201,485
West Virginia2,571,829 143,505 2,414,579 168,548
Wisconsin 9,566,422 164,303 8,778,480 192,686
Wyoming 709,694 122,623 661,583 148,662
Footnotes

Browser: The content on this page is not accessible using Internet Explorer. Please use Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Mozilla Firefox, or Apple Safari to access this page.

Timing:† Data will be updated after review and verification, usually before 8:00 pm ET. Note: Daily updates might be delayed due to delays in reporting.

Data on doses of vaccine distributed and administered include data received by CDC as of 6:00 am ET on the day of reporting.
Vaccination data on CDC's COVID Data Tracker are updated daily between 1:30 pm and 8:00 pm ET.
Updates will occur the following day when reporting coincides with a federal holiday.

View all data definitions on Reporting COVID-19 Vaccinations in the United States.

For reporting on CDC COVID Data Tracker,

CDC counts people as being "fully vaccinated" if they received two doses on different days (regardless of time interval) of the two-dose mRNA series or received one dose of a single-dose vaccine. When the vaccine manufacturer is not reported, the recipient is considered fully vaccinated with two doses.
CDC counts people as having "received a booster dose" if they are fully vaccinated and received another dose of any COVID-19 vaccine on or after August 13, 2021. This does not distinguish if the recipient is immunocompromised and received an additional dose.
Criteria for booster eligibility may change over time; data will be updated to align with the current recommendations.
CDC counts people as being "eligible to get a booster dose" if it has been at least 5 months since their completed Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna primary series or at least 2 months since their completed Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) single-dose vaccine.
Beginning December 9, 2021, adolescents ages 16 and 17 years were authorized and recommended to get a Pfizer-BioNTech booster dose at least 6 months after completing the Pfizer-BioNTech primary series.
Beginning January 4, 2022, people ages 16 years and older who have completed the Pfizer-BioNTech primary series can get a Pfizer-BioNTech booster dose at least 5 months after completing the primary series.
Beginning January 5, 2022, adolescents ages 12-15 years who have completed the Pfizer-BioNTech primary series can get a Pfizer-BioNTech booster dose at least 5 months after completing the primary series.
Beginning January 7, 2022, adults ages 18 years and older who have completed the Moderna primary series can get an mRNA booster dose (Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna) at least 5 months after completing the primary series.
The booster eligibility metric excludes fully vaccinated people who received an "Other" primary series vaccine type.
CDC estimates the number of people receiving at least one dose, the number of people who are fully vaccinated, and the number of people with a booster dose based on information that state, territorial, tribal, and local public health agencies and federal entities report to CDC on dose number, dose manufacturer, administration date, recipient ID, and date of submission. Because the method used to determine dose numbers needs to be applied across multiple jurisdictions (states, territories, tribes, or local entities) with different reporting practices, CDC's dose number estimates might differ from those reported by jurisdictions and federal entities. People receiving doses are attributed to the jurisdiction in which the person resides.
Metrics for rates per 100,000 population can be greater than 100,000 since this is a dose-based measure and each person may have up to two vaccine doses to complete their vaccine series and may have up to one booster dose.
Idaho provides vaccine data only for vaccine recipients who are 18 years and older, in line with state laws. COVID-19 vaccination administration data is unavailable for the Vaccinations in the US and Vaccinations by County pages for the population aged less than 18 years. Since no individuals under 18 from Idaho are included in the vaccination totals, CDC is working to subtract Census figures for the Idaho population under the age of 18 from the total US and ID population denominators and from the US and ID populations denominators for people aged 12 years and older.
Beginning July 14, 2021, select entities had the ability to update or delete submitted records using a new functionality available in CDC's Data Clearinghouse. As of August 9, 2021, all entities have the ability to update or delete their previously submitted records. Use of this new functionality may result in fluctuations across metrics on the CDC COVID Data Tracker as historical data are updated or deleted. The functionality will also allow for more accurate reporting and improved data quality. Click here to view an appendix of historical update and delete events.

The following vaccination data updates include changes from the past two weeks:

Vaccination Data Updates:
Click here to view historical updates.

West Virginia recently conducted an internal review of COVID-19 vaccine administrative data and determined that there was a lag in some of their data uploads to CDC Data Clearing House (DCH).
Beginning November 15, 2021 and continuing through December 9, West Virginia submitted multiple files to DCH containing administration records from July through November of this year, which resulted in an increase of 1.47 million administration records for the state.
New Hampshire lifted its national COVID-19 emergency response declaration in May 2021, which allows vaccine recipients to opt out of having their COVID-19 vaccinations included in the state's Immunization Information System registry. As such, data submitted by New Hampshire since May 2021 may not be representative of all COVID-19 vaccination occurring in the state.
North Carolina identified an issue on December 10, 2021 at the federal level with linking data across different vaccine sites (i.e., retail pharmacy, local health department, doctor's office).
This resulted in an undercount of "fully vaccinated people with a booster dose" in North Carolina. This issue is being evaluated for resolution.
Due to a data processing issue on January 7, 2022, vaccination delivery data were not updated on CDC COVID Data Tracker and reflect data as of January 6, 2022. CDC is actively working to address this issue and the data will be updated when available.
Booster dose eligibility data posted on the COVID Data Tracker on January 13, 2022 were incorrect due to a data syncing error. CDC corrected this issue at 10:16 AM EST on January 14, 2022.
On Thursday, January 20, 2022, data review and reporting adjustments resulted in a decrease of 12,298 vaccine doses administered in Hawaii since December 14, 2020.

Update and Delete Events:
Beginning July 14, 2021, entities have the ability to update or delete their previously submitted records. Click here to view an appendix of historical update and delete events.

January 6, 2022: California updated 22,696,262 records previously submitted to CDC. This did not result in a change to the number of doses administered.
January 7, 2022: Illinois made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 1,097 doses administered.
January 7, 2022: Maryland made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 25,564 doses administered.
January 11, 2022: New Jersey made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 31,680 doses administered.
January 13, 2022: Colorado made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 47,260 doses administered.
January 13, 2022: North Carolina made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 41,000 doses administered.
January 13, 2022: Hawaii made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 318,481 doses administered.
January 14, 2022: Illinois made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in a decrease of 4,868 doses administered.
January 19, 2022: Idaho added 20,015 records for persons aged 18 years not previously submitted to CDC.
January 20, 2022: Georgia made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 139 doses administered.
January 20, 2022: Wyoming made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 2,761 doses administered.
January 20, 2022: Pennsylvania made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 206,575 doses administered.
January 21, 2022: Illinois made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in a decrease of 29,394 doses administered.
January 21, 2022: New Jersey made updates to data previously submitted to CDC that resulted in an increase of 34,238 doses administered.

How CDC estimates vaccination coverage

CDC estimates the number of people receiving at least one dose, the number of people who are fully vaccinated, and the number of people with a booster dose. CDC estimates are based on data that includes a dose number (first, second, booster or additional dose). However, the dose number may be incorrect because the data that CDC receives does not have personally identifiable information.
To protect the privacy of vaccine recipients, CDC receives data without any personally identifiable information (de-identified data) about vaccine doses. Each record of a dose has a unique person identifier. Each jurisdiction or provider uses a unique person identifier to link records within their own systems. However, CDC cannot use the unique person identifier to identify individual people by name. If a person received doses in more than one jurisdiction or at different providers within the same jurisdiction, they could receive different unique person identifiers for different doses. CDC may not be able to link multiple unique person identifiers for different jurisdictions or providers to a single person.
There are challenges in linking doses when someone is vaccinated in different jurisdictions or at different providers because of the need to remove personally identifiable information (de-identify) data to protect peoples' privacy. This means that, even with the high-quality data CDC receives from jurisdictions and federal entities, there are limits to how CDC can analyze those data.
For example, most people receive their first and second dose of a 2-dose vaccine from the same provider because those doses are given within just a few weeks of each other. As they receive their booster dose months later, it's possible they will go to a new location for that dose. The person may have moved or the provider who gave them their initial doses may no longer offer vaccination. This often happens for people who went to mass vaccination clinics that have since closed. In such a scenario, the person's booster dose may appear to be their first dose when reported. This is just one example of how CDC's data may over-estimate first doses and under-estimate booster doses.
Another issue that poses challenges to estimating doses administered is that different jurisdictions and providers use different reporting practices, which can affect estimates for people who relocate to another jurisdiction or do not use the same provider for their second dose, booster dose, or any additional dose they receive. Also, CDC may lack information about a person's residence. These issues can cause CDC's dose number estimates to differ from those reported by jurisdictions and federal entities.
CDC has capped the percent of population coverage metrics at 95%. This cap helps address potential overestimates of vaccination coverage due to first, second, and booster doses that were not linked. Other reasons for overestimates include census denominator data not including part-time residents or potential data reporting errors.
Previously, CDC had capped estimates of vaccination coverage 99.9%. CDC changed the cap to 95% to account for differences in the accuracy of vaccination coverage estimates between different jurisdictions.
CDC is also updating COVID Data Tracker and the CDC website with prominent statements to better explain the limitations of vaccination coverage estimates shown in Data Tracker's "Vaccination Delivery and Coverage" grouping. This change will help people appropriately interpret vaccination coverage data.