Travel Flu Vaccine in London

Annual flu vaccination for travellers, cruise passengers and business trips. Book at our Goswell Road clinic before airports, meetings or winter travel.

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Flu before a trip is not just bad timing

A flight, conference, cruise or family visit can put you close to a lot of coughing people in a short space of time. Flu vaccination will not cover every winter bug, but it can reduce your risk of influenza and serious illness. City Of London Clinic in London sees travellers who want straight advice on whether the flu jab belongs in their travel plan, especially before long-haul trips, cruises and busy business travel.

A flight, conference, cruise or family visit can put you close to a lot of coughing people in a short space of time. Flu vaccination will not cover every winter bug, but it can reduce your risk of influenza and serious illness. City Of London Clinic in London sees travellers who want straight advice on whether the flu jab belongs in their travel plan, especially before long-haul trips, cruises and busy business travel.

A respiratory virus that moves well through crowds

Influenza is a viral infection of the lungs and airways. It usually starts suddenly, often with fever, chills, a dry cough, headache, sore throat, muscle aches and heavy tiredness. Many healthy adults recover within a week. Some do not. Flu can trigger bronchitis or pneumonia, and it can worsen asthma, heart disease, diabetes and other long-term conditions. Older adults, pregnant women, very young children and people with weakened immune systems are more likely to become seriously unwell. For travellers, exposure often happens in ordinary places: airport queues, aircraft boarding, packed trains, cruise dining rooms, large meetings and family gatherings. People can pass flu on from around a day before symptoms appear, so avoiding only the visibly ill is a poor strategy. It is also easily confused with other respiratory infections, including COVID-19, which is not covered by the flu vaccine.

Influenza is a viral infection of the lungs and airways. It usually starts suddenly, often with fever, chills, a dry cough, headache, sore throat, muscle aches and heavy tiredness. Many healthy adults recover within a week. Some do not. Flu can trigger bronchitis or pneumonia, and it can worsen asthma, heart disease, diabetes and other long-term conditions. Older adults, pregnant women, very young children and people with weakened immune systems are more likely to become seriously unwell. For travellers, exposure often happens in ordinary places: airport queues, aircraft boarding, packed trains, cruise dining rooms, large meetings and family gatherings. People can pass flu on from around a day before symptoms appear, so avoiding only the visibly ill is a poor strategy. It is also easily confused with other respiratory infections, including COVID-19, which is not covered by the flu vaccine.

What the flu vaccine does and what it cannot do

Flu vaccines used in the UK are updated each year to match the influenza strains expected to circulate. Most are inactivated injections, which means they cannot give you clinical flu. Some children may receive a nasal spray vaccine in other settings; the right product depends on age, medical history and current guidance. For most adults, the schedule is one flu vaccination for the season. Protection is usually expected to develop within about 14 days, and it tends to last for several months, which is why annual vaccination matters. If you are travelling late in the season, or heading to the southern hemisphere between April and September, timing is worth discussing early because UK vaccine supplies may be limited outside the usual autumn and winter programme. Common side effects include a sore arm, redness or swelling at the injection site, tiredness, mild fever or feeling generally off-colour for a day or two. Vaccination may need to wait if you are acutely unwell with a fever, and anyone with a serious allergy to a previous flu vaccine or a vaccine component needs individual assessment.

Flu vaccines used in the UK are updated each year to match the influenza strains expected to circulate. Most are inactivated injections, which means they cannot give you clinical flu. Some children may receive a nasal spray vaccine in other settings; the right product depends on age, medical history and current guidance. For most adults, the schedule is one flu vaccination for the season. Protection is usually expected to develop within about 14 days, and it tends to last for several months, which is why annual vaccination matters. If you are travelling late in the season, or heading to the southern hemisphere between April and September, timing is worth discussing early because UK vaccine supplies may be limited outside the usual autumn and winter programme. Common side effects include a sore arm, redness or swelling at the injection site, tiredness, mild fever or feeling generally off-colour for a day or two. Vaccination may need to wait if you are acutely unwell with a fever, and anyone with a serious allergy to a previous flu vaccine or a vaccine component needs individual assessment.

Trips where flu vaccination is particularly sensible

Flu occurs worldwide. In the northern hemisphere, activity usually rises from October to March; in the southern hemisphere it is more often seen from April to September. In tropical countries, influenza can circulate at any time of year, which catches some travellers out. The flu jab is not a country-entry vaccine like yellow fever. It is a risk-management vaccine. It may be especially relevant for cruises, pilgrimages, ski trips, long flights, school or university travel, conferences, work placements and business trips involving repeated indoor meetings. It is also worth considering for travel to countries where you may spend time in hospitals, care settings or large family households, or if illness abroad would be particularly disruptive.

Flu occurs worldwide. In the northern hemisphere, activity usually rises from October to March; in the southern hemisphere it is more often seen from April to September. In tropical countries, influenza can circulate at any time of year, which catches some travellers out. The flu jab is not a country-entry vaccine like yellow fever. It is a risk-management vaccine. It may be especially relevant for cruises, pilgrimages, ski trips, long flights, school or university travel, conferences, work placements and business trips involving repeated indoor meetings. It is also worth considering for travel to countries where you may spend time in hospitals, care settings or large family households, or if illness abroad would be particularly disruptive.

Plan it around the season, not the suitcase

If your trip involves crowded transport, a cruise, winter travel or a schedule you cannot afford to lose to fever, book the flu vaccine early enough for the 14-day immune response window. At our Goswell Road clinic, near Farringdon and Moorgate, we can also discuss other travel needs such as travellers’ diarrhoea medicines, altitude sickness tablets and period delay treatment where appropriate. Call 02072539691 to arrange an appointment.

If your trip involves crowded transport, a cruise, winter travel or a schedule you cannot afford to lose to fever, book the flu vaccine early enough for the 14-day immune response window. At our Goswell Road clinic, near Farringdon and Moorgate, we can also discuss other travel needs such as travellers’ diarrhoea medicines, altitude sickness tablets and period delay treatment where appropriate. Call 02072539691 to arrange an appointment.

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 long before travel should I get the flu vaccine?

Aim to have it at least 2 weeks before you leave, because your immune response takes time to build. If you are travelling sooner, it may still be worth having, but do not expect full protection the next day.

Do healthy travellers need a flu jab for every trip?

Is the flu vaccine suitable if I am pregnant or have a long-term condition?

Can I get the flu vaccine for travel to Australia, South Africa or South America?

Can I have the flu jab at the same appointment as other travel vaccines?

How long before travel should I get the flu vaccine?

Aim to have it at least 2 weeks before you leave, because your immune response takes time to build. If you are travelling sooner, it may still be worth having, but do not expect full protection the next day.

Do healthy travellers need a flu jab for every trip?

Is the flu vaccine suitable if I am pregnant or have a long-term condition?

Can I get the flu vaccine for travel to Australia, South Africa or South America?

Can I have the flu jab at the same appointment as other travel vaccines?

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