COVID-19 Vaccine in London

Planning travel with COVID-19 rules or risk in mind? Book COVID-19 vaccination advice in London, including timing, suitability and booster questions.

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COVID-19 still matters for some trips

For many trips, COVID-19 has moved from headline concern to practical planning issue: entry rules, work meetings, vulnerable relatives, cruise policies, and your own risk if you become unwell abroad. City Of London Clinic in London can assess your vaccine history, destination plans and timing before you travel. The aim is simple enough: work out whether vaccination or a booster makes sense for this trip, not just in theory.

For many trips, COVID-19 has moved from headline concern to practical planning issue: entry rules, work meetings, vulnerable relatives, cruise policies, and your own risk if you become unwell abroad. City Of London Clinic in London can assess your vaccine history, destination plans and timing before you travel. The aim is simple enough: work out whether vaccination or a booster makes sense for this trip, not just in theory.

A respiratory virus that has not disappeared

COVID-19 is caused by SARS-CoV-2, a virus that spreads mainly through droplets and aerosols from an infected person’s nose or mouth. It can also spread when contaminated hands touch the eyes, nose or mouth. Cases continue to occur worldwide, and the virus changes over time, which is why new variants are monitored internationally. Symptoms vary. Some people feel barely unwell. Others develop a high temperature, a new continuous cough, loss or change of taste or smell, breathlessness, marked tiredness, headache, sore throat, runny nose, diarrhoea, nausea or muscle aches. Most infections are mild, but COVID-19 can still cause pneumonia and severe breathing problems, especially in older adults and people with certain medical conditions. Long COVID is another reason travellers may take it seriously; weeks of fatigue or breathlessness after a short business trip is a poor souvenir.

COVID-19 is caused by SARS-CoV-2, a virus that spreads mainly through droplets and aerosols from an infected person’s nose or mouth. It can also spread when contaminated hands touch the eyes, nose or mouth. Cases continue to occur worldwide, and the virus changes over time, which is why new variants are monitored internationally. Symptoms vary. Some people feel barely unwell. Others develop a high temperature, a new continuous cough, loss or change of taste or smell, breathlessness, marked tiredness, headache, sore throat, runny nose, diarrhoea, nausea or muscle aches. Most infections are mild, but COVID-19 can still cause pneumonia and severe breathing problems, especially in older adults and people with certain medical conditions. Long COVID is another reason travellers may take it seriously; weeks of fatigue or breathlessness after a short business trip is a poor souvenir.

What the vaccine can and cannot do

COVID-19 vaccination is designed to train your immune system to recognise the virus and respond faster if you are exposed. It can lower the risk of severe illness, hospital admission and death. It does not guarantee that you will avoid infection, and protection can be affected by time since your last dose, your immune system, and circulating variants. In the UK, COVID-19 vaccination is now mainly a targeted programme for people at higher risk of severe disease. For travel, the discussion is usually about whether you are due or eligible for a booster, whether your destination or transport operator has rules, and whether your medical history makes extra protection sensible. The vaccine is given as an injection, usually in the upper arm. Adults and children need individual assessment, particularly where age, pregnancy, immune suppression, previous reactions or recent infection are relevant. Plan several weeks before departure if you can. Some side effects, such as a sore arm, tiredness, headache or a feverish feeling, usually settle quickly, but nobody wants them on the day of a long-haul flight.

COVID-19 vaccination is designed to train your immune system to recognise the virus and respond faster if you are exposed. It can lower the risk of severe illness, hospital admission and death. It does not guarantee that you will avoid infection, and protection can be affected by time since your last dose, your immune system, and circulating variants. In the UK, COVID-19 vaccination is now mainly a targeted programme for people at higher risk of severe disease. For travel, the discussion is usually about whether you are due or eligible for a booster, whether your destination or transport operator has rules, and whether your medical history makes extra protection sensible. The vaccine is given as an injection, usually in the upper arm. Adults and children need individual assessment, particularly where age, pregnancy, immune suppression, previous reactions or recent infection are relevant. Plan several weeks before departure if you can. Some side effects, such as a sore arm, tiredness, headache or a feverish feeling, usually settle quickly, but nobody wants them on the day of a long-haul flight.

Where COVID-19 vaccination may be relevant

COVID-19 has been reported across the world, so this is not a vaccine linked neatly to one region. It may matter for people travelling to visit older relatives, attending conferences, joining cruises, working in healthcare or care settings, or spending time in crowded indoor places. Business travellers can be caught out by changing company policies, airline requirements, client-site rules or proof-of-vaccination requests. For popular long-haul trips, including India, Bangladesh, Kenya and South American destinations, COVID-19 sits alongside the usual travel health review rather than replacing it. Your appointment may also cover hepatitis A, typhoid, malaria tablets, travellers’ diarrhoea, altitude sickness or period delay if those issues fit the itinerary.

COVID-19 has been reported across the world, so this is not a vaccine linked neatly to one region. It may matter for people travelling to visit older relatives, attending conferences, joining cruises, working in healthcare or care settings, or spending time in crowded indoor places. Business travellers can be caught out by changing company policies, airline requirements, client-site rules or proof-of-vaccination requests. For popular long-haul trips, including India, Bangladesh, Kenya and South American destinations, COVID-19 sits alongside the usual travel health review rather than replacing it. Your appointment may also cover hepatitis A, typhoid, malaria tablets, travellers’ diarrhoea, altitude sickness or period delay if those issues fit the itinerary.

Bring your dates and vaccine record

The most useful COVID-19 vaccine appointment starts with specifics: departure date, countries, length of stay, previous doses, medical conditions and any entry or employer requirements you have been given. If you are based near Farringdon or Moorgate, the clinic is easy to fit around work. Book an appointment or call 02072539691, and bring any vaccine record you can find. A phone screenshot is better than memory.

The most useful COVID-19 vaccine appointment starts with specifics: departure date, countries, length of stay, previous doses, medical conditions and any entry or employer requirements you have been given. If you are based near Farringdon or Moorgate, the clinic is easy to fit around work. Book an appointment or call 02072539691, and bring any vaccine record you can find. A phone screenshot is better than memory.

FAQ

Travel Health FAQs

Find clear answers to the most common travel health and malaria prevention questions.

Find clear answers to the most common travel health and malaria prevention questions.

How early should I book a COVID-19 vaccine appointment before travel?

Book as soon as your dates and destination are fairly firm, ideally several weeks before departure. That gives time to check your previous doses, discuss suitability, and avoid having common side effects just before you fly.

Do I need a COVID-19 booster if I have already had vaccines?

Can children have a COVID-19 travel vaccine?

Is the COVID-19 vaccine suitable if I am pregnant or immunosuppressed?

Do countries such as India, Kenya or Brazil still require COVID-19 vaccination proof?

How early should I book a COVID-19 vaccine appointment before travel?

Book as soon as your dates and destination are fairly firm, ideally several weeks before departure. That gives time to check your previous doses, discuss suitability, and avoid having common side effects just before you fly.

Do I need a COVID-19 booster if I have already had vaccines?

Can children have a COVID-19 travel vaccine?

Is the COVID-19 vaccine suitable if I am pregnant or immunosuppressed?

Do countries such as India, Kenya or Brazil still require COVID-19 vaccination proof?

Speak to the team or arrange your visit

If you are comparing clinics or unsure which service you need, we are happy to help. Call the clinic, send us a message or visit us on Goswell Road to speak with the team.

We are easy to reach from the City of London, Farringdon, Moorgate, Liverpool Street, King’s Cross and surrounding central London areas.

CoL

C

City Of London
Clinic

36 Goswell Rd., Golden Lane Estate, London EC1M 7AA

02072539691

info@cityoflondonclinic.co.uk

Hours

Monday

9am - 6:30pm

Tuesday

9am - 6:30pm

Wednesday

9am - 6:30pm

Thursday

9am - 6:30pm

Friday

9am - 6:30pm

Saturday

9am - 2pm

Sunday

Closed

Speak to the team or arrange your visit

If you are comparing clinics or unsure which service you need, we are happy to help. Call the clinic, send us a message or visit us on Goswell Road to speak with the team.

We are easy to reach from the City of London, Farringdon, Moorgate, Liverpool Street, King’s Cross and surrounding central London areas.

CoL

C

City Of London
Clinic

36 Goswell Rd., Golden Lane Estate, London EC1M 7AA

02072539691

info@cityoflondonclinic.co.uk

Hours

Monday

9am - 6:30pm

Tuesday

9am - 6:30pm

Wednesday

9am - 6:30pm

Thursday

9am - 6:30pm

Friday

9am - 6:30pm

Saturday

9am - 2pm

Sunday

Closed

Speak to the team or arrange your visit

If you are comparing clinics or unsure which service you need, we are happy to help. Call the clinic, send us a message or visit us on Goswell Road to speak with the team.

We are easy to reach from the City of London, Farringdon, Moorgate, Liverpool Street, King’s Cross and surrounding central London areas.

36 Goswell Rd., Golden Lane Estate, London EC1M 7AA

02072539691

info@cityoflondonclinic.co.uk

Hours

Monday

9am - 6:30pm

Tuesday

9am - 6:30pm

Wednesday

9am - 6:30pm

Thursday

9am - 6:30pm

Friday

9am - 6:30pm

Saturday

9am - 2pm

Sunday

Closed

City Of London
Clinic

CoL

C