Kitten Vaccination Schedule: Why 8 Weeks Is the Magic Start

Kitten Vaccination Schedule: Why 8 Weeks Is the Magic Start

When kittens get their first shots, which vaccines are core, what indoor cats really need, and how to keep every booster on time.

4 min read

Kittens typically get their first vaccines at 8 weeks old, boosters every 3 to 4 weeks until about 16 weeks, and a final round at one year. After that, most cats settle into boosters every 1 to 3 years. As always: this is the general shape, and your vet sets the exact dates for your kitten.

Here's what each stage covers, plus the question every cat person eventually asks (yes, the indoor one).

The typical timeline

8 weeks

  • First FVRCP (feline viral rhinotracheitis, calicivirus, panleukopenia). You'll hear it called the "core combo" or "distemper shot."

  • FeLV (feline leukemia) testing often happens around now, before the FeLV vaccine series

11 to 12 weeks

  • Second FVRCP

  • First FeLV for kittens who'll have any outdoor or multi-cat exposure (many vets recommend it for all kittens)

14 to 16 weeks

  • Third FVRCP

  • Second FeLV

  • Rabies, where law or lifestyle calls for it (many regions require it for cats too)

Around 1 year

  • FVRCP booster

  • Rabies booster per local law

  • FeLV booster if your cat's lifestyle still calls for it

Adult years

  • FVRCP every 1 to 3 years depending on the vaccine and your cat's exposure

  • Your vet may adjust as your cat's lifestyle changes

Why 8 weeks and not earlier?

Same logic as puppies: kittens drink protection from their mother's milk, and that maternal immunity interferes with vaccines. Around 8 weeks it starts to fade, which opens the window where a vaccine can actually teach the kitten's own immune system. The series of boosters exists because that window opens at a slightly different week for every kitten, and nobody can see it.

Panleukopenia, the "P" in FVRCP, is the reason vets take this series seriously. It's the feline cousin of parvo: fast, ugly, and almost entirely preventable with a completed series.

"But she's an indoor cat"

Indoor cats still need core vaccines. Three honest reasons:

  1. Viruses commute. Calicivirus and panleukopenia can ride in on shoes, clothes, and used furniture. Your hallway is not a biosecure airlock.

  2. Plans change. Cats escape, families move, an emergency vet stay or boarding happens. Every one of those moments assumes vaccination.

  3. It's often the law. Rabies vaccination is legally required for cats in many places, indoor or not.

What indoor status does change is the non-core conversation: a strictly indoor, single-cat home may reasonably skip FeLV boosters after the kitten series. That's a vet conversation, not a default.

Keeping the series on track

A kitten series is five or six appointments across three months, usually booked one at a time as you leave the clinic. That's five or six chances to lose the thread, especially in a home where two people share the cat duties.

The fix is boring and effective: log each shot the day it happens, set the next reminder before you forget, and keep it where everyone can see it.

  • The vaccination tracker holds the record and the rhythm

  • Reminders nudge the right person before the booster, not after

  • The certificate photo lives in document storage, ready for the cattery or the emergency clinic

  • If a sitter or partner takes a clinic run, the care team sees what happened without a text thread

Frequently asked questions

My kitten came vaccinated from the shelter. Done? Probably not done. Shelters usually give the first round or two. Bring the shelter's paperwork to your vet, who'll slot your kitten into the right point in the series. Photograph that paperwork before it disappears into a drawer.

Can littermates share one appointment? Usually yes, and it saves money and stress. Just make sure each kitten's shots get logged separately. "The orange one had hers" is not a medical record.

Side effects to watch for? Mild sleepiness or a tender spot for a day is common. Vomiting, facial swelling, or trouble breathing is rare and is an immediate call to the clinic.

What if we adopted an adult cat with no history? Vets treat unknown history as unvaccinated and restart the core series. Two visits, then the adult rhythm. Simple, safe, done.

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Kitten Vaccination Schedule: Why 8 Weeks Is the Magic Start | MoaTails