6 travel tips for when you’re fully vaccinated

Itching for a trip? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated travel guidelines for people who are fully vaccinated. If it's been two or more weeks since your final dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, travel is much safer.

If you're still waiting your turn for a COVID-19 vaccine, stay put for now, says University Health Center Travel Clinic provider Szuhua Lambdin. COVID-19 variants are circulating both domestically and internationally. Travel increases the risk of getting and spreading COVID-19. Many more people need to be vaccinated, and we need to get variants under control before everyone can travel.

If you're fully vaccinated and planning a trip, Lambdin offers this timely advice.

1. Mask up, wash your hands and avoid crowds

Fully vaccinated people should continue pandemic prevention measures like good hand hygiene, wearing a face covering, and practicing physical distancing. The biggest risk with travel is when you have less control of your surroundings. For instance, distancing is sometimes impossible in check-in lines, security points, airport terminals and meals. Try researching times when airports are less busy to avoid crowds.

2. Research your destination: testing and quarantine requirements

Some domestic and international locations require a negative COVID-19 test or a period of quarantine before you can be out in public. Determine these requirements before you leave, or you may be denied entry. Some places use antigen testing. Rapid antigen testing will be less sensitive and specific in asymptomatic people, thus there’s a higher risk of false positives and false negatives.

3. Research your destination: COVID-19 levels

Some places have much higher rates of COVID-19 than others. Check before you leave to see how high COVID-19 levels are in other states and other countries. Remember that, outside of the United States, testing levels may be lower, so numbers can be deceiving.

Why is this important? You may still get COVID-19 even if you're fully vaccinated – the vaccines are not 100% effective in preventing mild disease. (The vaccines are completely effective at preventing hospitalization and death from COVID-19, however.)

4. Research your destination: other immunizations

Visit our Travel Clinic to ensure you have up-to-date vaccinations. The clinic doesn't offer COVID-19 vaccines at this time, but we provide other immunizations or preventive medications required for safe international travel. You should visit the Travel Clinic at least four weeks before an international trip since some vaccines must be given in series. We'll provide you with advice specific to your destination.

5. If you leave the U.S., you must test negative before returning

Even fully vaccinated people must test negative for COVID-19 before flying into the United States. It can be a rapid antigen test or a PCR test. This requirement applies to all air passengers, 2 years of age or older, including U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents. 

6. After returning home, self-monitor for symptoms

Domestic travelers who are fully vaccinated do not need a COVID-19 test after returning home. Unless you develop COVID-19 symptoms, you don't need to self-quarantine or isolate after returning home.

After you get home from international travel, get a COVID-19 test three to five days later. It can be an antigen or PCR test. Also, self-monitor for COVID-19 symptoms. If your test is positive or you develop symptoms, isolate yourself for 10 days.

Visit the University Health Center website to learn more about COVID-19 vaccines.