Key points
CDC now recommends shared decision-making for hepatitis B birth doses when mothers test negative. Infants born to mothers who test positive for hepatitis B or whose status is unknown should still receive the vaccine within 12 hours of birth.
Overview
At its December 2025 meeting, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevent (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) voted to recommend individual-based decision-making for infants born to mothers who test negative for hepatitis B. The CDC adopted this recommendation on December 16, 2025. This means:
- Parents and clinicians may decide together whether to administer the hepatitis B vaccine at birth or begin the series later in infancy.
- If the birth dose is deferred, it is suggested that the series should begin no earlier than 2 months of age.
- Infants born to mothers who test positive for hepatitis B or whose status is unknown should continue to receive the hepatitis B vaccine within 12 hours of birth.
Why the Hepatitis B Immunization Recommendation Changed
This change to the child immunization recommendation for hepatitis B reflects the conclusions of ACIP, which determined:
- High reliability of prenatal hepatitis B screening, which identifies nearly all hepatitis B infections during pregnancy.
- Very low incidence of perinatal hepatitis B transmission in the U.S. due to existing prevention systems.
- Families and providers should be afforded flexibility when maternal hepatitis B status is confirmed negative.
- The need to maintain protections where risk is highest while allowing individual-based decision-making, including for timing, in low-risk infants.
What Expecting Parents Should Know
- Pregnant women should get tested for the hepatitis B virus. This test is covered across all insurance programs.
- Infants born to hepatitis B-positive or unknown-status mothers should receive hepatitis B vaccine and Hepatitis B Immune Globulin (HBIG) shortly after birth.
- For infants whose mothers test negative, parents and providers now have flexibility to determine if and when to begin the hepatitis B vaccine series.
- The hepatitis B vaccine remains a safe, effective tool for preventing serious liver disease in infants at risk.
- Individual-based decision-making — referred to as shared clinical decision-making on the CDC immunization schedule — means parents and health care providers weigh vaccine benefits, vaccine risks and infection risks together, then decide when or if a child should begin the hepatitis B vaccine series.
- Risk factors for hepatitis B include a household member with the virus or frequent contact with people from areas where hepatitis B is common.
Next Steps
CDC will:
- Update CDC.gov, including the child and adolescent immunization schedule webpages, to reflect shared clinical decision-making for infants born to women who test negative for hepatitis B.
- Develop materials to support clinicians in discussing vaccination timing with families.
- Continue to update the surveillance data for hepatitis B trends and vaccination coverage.