Yemen

Middle East · Updated April 2026

See a travel doctor 4–6 weeks before you leave.

Current alert — Global Polio

Some international destinations have circulating poliovirus. Before any international travel, make sure you are up to date on your polio vaccines.

Current alert — Global Measles

Measles cases are rising in many countries around the world. All international travellers should be fully vaccinated against measles with the MMR vaccine.

For most travellers to Yemen, CDC recommends hepatitis A and typhoid vaccines, with hepatitis B, cholera and rabies advised for some travellers. CDC also recommends antimalarial medicine for certain areas below 2,000 m elevation, and notes global polio and measles advisories. Rabies vaccines are often unavailable locally. See a travel doctor 4–6 weeks before departure to arrange vaccines and a malaria prescription.

Malaria risk is present year-round in areas below 2,000 m elevation, so antimalarial medication and mosquito-bite prevention are advised.

Required for entry

No vaccines are currently required for entry to Yemen from most countries.

Recommended for most travellers

CDC advises these for all visitors to Yemen.

Recommended for some travellers

Depends on your itinerary, activities, duration, or health.

Malaria

Not a vaccine

CDC recommends that travellers to certain areas of Yemen take prescription medicine to prevent malaria. Risk is present in all areas below 2,000 m elevation, with no transmission in Sana'a, and chloroquine-resistant P. falciparum predominates.

Discuss prescription chemoprophylaxis with a travel doctor if your itinerary includes risk areas.

Food & water safety

High risk

Tap water and ice are generally unsafe. Stick to sealed bottled water, boiled water, or water from a reliable filtration system. Avoid raw salads, unpeeled fruit, raw shellfish, and street food from vendors with poor hygiene. Wash hands thoroughly before eating.

Cholera vaccine may be recommended for some travellers — discuss with your travel doctor if you plan to work in high-risk areas or during outbreaks.

Routine vaccines to be up to date on

CDC advises every international traveller to have these current.

Measles-Mumps-Rubella (MMR)
Two doses at least 28 days apart, ideally completed at least 2 weeks before travel. Adults born before 1957 or with documented immunity are already considered protected.
Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis
A single Tdap or Td booster, effective within days. Adults should have a booster every 10 years — or after 5 years if you've had a dirty wound or burn. Pregnant travellers should receive Tdap during every pregnancy.
Polio
A single lifetime adult IPV booster for travellers to at-risk countries. For some destinations, the booster must be received 4 weeks to 12 months before departure and documented on an International Certificate of Vaccination.
Flu (Influenza)
An annual dose at least 2 weeks before travel to areas with active flu circulation. A single current-season vaccine covers travel to either hemisphere.
Chickenpox (Varicella)
Two doses at least 28 days apart for adolescents and adults without immunity. Children get doses at 12–15 months and 4–6 years. Two documented doses protect most people for life.
Shingles
Two doses of Shingrix 2–6 months apart. Protection stays high for at least 7 years. Adults 19+ with weakened immune systems can use a faster schedule (2nd dose 1–2 months after).
COVID-19
Follow the current CDC schedule for your age and risk group. If you had COVID-19 recently, you may delay vaccination for up to 3 months from the onset of infection.

Entry requirements

For US citizens. Non-US travellers should check their government's guidance.

Not required

Avoid contaminated freshwater (schistosomiasis) and prevent bug bites (dengue, leishmaniasis). Rabies is common in dogs and rabies vaccines are typically not readily available; tuberculosis and MERS are also present.

Also in Middle East

Source: CDC Travelers' Health — Yemen.

Disclaimer:This information is for general guidance only, based on CDC Travelers' Health. It does not replace advice from a qualified travel health professional. Consult a doctor 4–6 weeks before your trip.