No pet profile selected. Create one in the Profile section to auto-fill tool forms.
Dog Vaccination Schedule
Get a personalized vaccination and deworming schedule for your dog based on WSAVA core vaccine guidelines.
Key Knowledge
Core vs. Non-Core Vaccines
Core vaccines (DHPP + Rabies) are required for ALL dogs; non-core vaccines (Leptospirosis, Lyme, Bordetella) depend on region and lifestyle. Core vaccines are recommended for ALL dogs regardless of lifestyle or location: DHPP (Distemper, Hepatitis, Parvovirus, Parainfluenza) and Rabies. Non-core vaccines β Leptospirosis, Lyme Disease, Bordetella, Canine Influenza β depend on your dog's geographic location and exposure risk (outdoor access, boarding, wildlife contact).
WSAVA recommends: puppy series at 6-8, 12, and 16 weeks; a 12-month booster; then core vaccine boosters every 3 years. The World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA) publishes the most widely adopted global vaccination guidelines. They recommend: initial puppy series at 6-8, 12, and 16 weeks; a 12-month booster; then boosters every 3 years for core vaccines (DHPP). Rabies follows local legal requirements β annually in some regions, every 3 years in others.
DHPP is a 4-in-1 vaccine covering Distemper, Hepatitis, Parvovirus (91% fatal without treatment), and Parainfluenza. DHPP is the 4-in-1 core vaccine covering: Distemper (highly contagious, often fatal viral disease), Hepatitis (canine adenovirus causing liver damage), Parvovirus (severe gastrointestinal virus, 91% fatal without treatment), and Parainfluenza (respiratory infection, part of kennel cough complex). Every dog needs the full DHPP series.
Data verified by petsMetrics using peer-reviewed veterinary sources. Citations: ASPCA, AVMA, AAFP. Last reviewed: 2026.
The Science Behind the Dog Vaccination Schedule
This schedule is built on WSAVA 2024 Global Vaccination Guidelines and AAHA Canine Vaccination Guidelines. The 3-dose puppy series (6-8, 12, 16 weeks) accounts for maternal antibody interference β antibodies from the mother's milk can neutralize vaccines given too early, which is why multiple doses with 3-4 week intervals are essential. The 12-month booster and subsequent 3-year intervals for core vaccines are based on duration-of-immunity studies showing long-lasting protection. Non-core vaccines are region-dependent: Leptospirosis is recommended in areas with standing water/wildlife, Lyme Disease in tick-endemic regions, Bordetella for dogs that board or attend daycare.