Whooping cough (pertussis) vaccine - Whooping cough vaccination in pregnancy
The whooping cough (pertussis) vaccine is offered to all pregnant women between 16 and 32 weeks of pregnancy to protect their babies from this serious disease.
You can have the vaccine after 32 weeks, but it may not offer the same level of protection. The vaccine is required in every pregnancy.
Babies who are too young to be vaccinated against whooping cough are at higher risk of serious health problems such as severe lung infections (pneumonia) or, in rare cases, death. This includes babies under two months old, especially those whose mothers weren’t vaccinated during pregnancy between 16 to 32 weeks.
For more information about the symptoms of whooping cough, visit NHS 111 Wales.
Getting vaccinated in pregnancy is important
The protection you receive from the whooping cough vaccine passes to your unborn baby and helps protect them in the first few weeks of their life, until they have their first routine immunisation when they are eight weeks old.
The vaccine also protects you from getting whooping cough and lowers the risk of you passing it on to your baby.
There is no vaccine that only protects against whooping cough. The vaccine you will be given is a combined vaccine that protects against different diseases, including whooping cough. The vaccine is not live, and it cannot cause whooping cough. You will be offered one dose of the vaccine, which is given as an injection in the upper arm.
Eligibility for the vaccine
About the vaccine
Safety and effectiveness
More information
- Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists information for the public
- Pertussis/whooping cough vaccine – Vaccine Knowledge Project
Page last reviewed: 27th April 2026