Yes — where you live does affect which dog and cat vaccines are most important beyond the basic ones that nearly every pet should get. 🐶🐱 But the way it matters might be a bit more nuanced than you think. AAHA
🩺 Core vs. Optional Vaccines
1. Core vaccines — important everywhere
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These protect against diseases that are serious, widespread, and can affect many pets (and sometimes people).
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For dogs: rabies, distemper, parvovirus (usually in combo shots).
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For cats: rabies, feline viral rhinotracheitis, calicivirus, panleukopenia.
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These are typically recommended regardless of location — even indoor pets benefit, because exposure can happen in unexpected ways (like through wild animals, other pets, or even people). AAHA+1
2. Non-core (optional/lifestyle) vaccines — where location matters
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These protect against diseases that aren’t everywhere all the time and might only matter if your pet’s lifestyle or local environment puts them at risk. AAHA
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Examples include:
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Lyme disease — important in areas with lots of deer ticks (e.g., Northeast and upper Midwest in the U.S.). AAHA
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Leptospirosis — more common in regions with standing water, lots of wildlife, or heavy rainfall. AAHA
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Bordetella/kennel cough and canine influenza — useful if your dog goes to daycare, boarding, or dog parks. PetMD
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Feline leukemia (FeLV) — recommended for outdoor cats or those exposed to other cats; indoor cats at virtually no risk might skip it. AAHA
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So yes — your geography, climate, and local disease patterns affect which non-core vaccines your pet might benefit from. AAHA
🧭 How location changes risk
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Wildlife exposure (like bats, raccoons, skunks): increases risk of rabies, so that vaccine is crucial. AAHA
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Tick-rich areas: places with lots of ticks make Lyme and other tick-borne diseases more likely, so vaccines against those are more relevant. AAHA
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Water exposure: rural or flood-prone regions can have more leptospirosis risk. AAHA
Even regions with similar climates can differ in what diseases are present; that’s why vets tailor recommendations based on both locale and lifestyle. AAHA
🧠 In short…
✅ Core vaccines: important everywhere and usually recommended for all dogs and cats. AAHA
🔁 Non-core vaccines: more important depending on where you live and how your pet spends their time. AAHA
🐾 Best next step
Talk to a local vet — they’ll know what diseases are common in your area and can help build a vaccine schedule based on your pet (age, health, indoor/outdoor habits, travel, etc.). That way you’re protecting your companion without over- or under- vaccinating. AAHA