One chart shows the most common COVID-19 booster side effects from Pfizer, Moderna, and J&J’s vaccines

healthcare worker in mask, smiling, getting booster shot.
A Thai healthcare worker receives a booster dose of Pfizer’s vaccine in Bangkok on August 9, 2021.

Second and third doses of COVID-19 vaccines generally produce similar side effects but there are some slight differences.

In September, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) gave the first comparison between booster shots of all three vaccines available in the US: Pfizer and Moderna (both mRNA shots), and Johnson & Johnson (an adenovirus vaccine).

It’s one of the most comprehensive looks at how people are responding to boosters to date.

Broadly, the CDC found that people who’d received three doses of either Pfizer or Moderna saw more local reactions — pain, itchiness, redness, or swelling at the injection site — after dose three compared to dose two. Other side effects such as fatigue, muscle aches, or headaches were less common, affecting 74% after their third dose, compared with 77% after dose two.

A second dose of J&J’s vaccine yielded the fewest side effects of all: Only 10% of J&J booster recipients said their side effects prevented them from performing normal daily activities — usually on the day after their booster shot — while the rest said they were able to go about their day as normal.

By comparison, 28% of Pfizer or Moderna booster recipients said the shots hindered their daily routine. However, the study included far more data on mRNA boosters — 12,000 people, compared to 48 who received two J&J doses.

The following table shows how booster shots affected people who got three doses of Moderna, three doses of Pfizer, or two doses of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, according to CDC data.

Aside from local reactions at the injection site, fatigue was most common among people who received a Pfizer or Moderna booster.

Overall side effects were more prevalent after Moderna's third dose: Half of Moderna booster recipients reported muscle aches and headaches, and around 60% reported fatigue.

Meanwhile, less than 40% of Pfizer booster recipients reported muscle aches and headaches and around 50% reported fatigue.

Just one-quarter of those who received a J&J booster had injection site reactions, compared with 70% who got a Pfizer booster and 80% who got a Moderna booster. And 20% of J&J booster recipients reported muscle aches and headaches.

The CDC recommends boosters for all adults and allows you to mix and match

The CDC now recommends booster shots for all Americans ages 16 and older. People who received two doses of Pfizer's or Moderna's vaccine should get boosted at least six months after their second shot, the CDC advises, whereas J&J recipients can get boosted as early as two months after their first dose.

The CDC has also approved a "mix and match" approach so people can select a booster of a different vaccine type or different manufacturer than their original dose.

An October study funded by the US National Institutes of Health (which has yet to be peer-reviewed) found that mix and match boosters yielded similar side effects to initial vaccine doses. More than half of the study's 458 participants reported malaise, headaches, and muscle aches after their booster while more than 70% experienced mild arm pain. 

A UK study similarly identified fatigue, headaches, and pain at the injection site as the most common side effects. The study looked at nearly 2,900 people who had received two doses of Pfizer or AstraZeneca, followed by one of seven different COVID-19 boosters. Overall, side effects from boosters were more common in people ages 30 to 69 than those ages 70 and up, the study found — regardless of which vaccines the participants received.

Fatigue, headaches, and muscles aches were also common after first and second doses

The mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna instruct the body to produce a harmless viral protein, then develop antibodies against it. The first dose of these vaccines generally produces the mildest side effects, since our bodies are being introduced to the instructions and the resulting protein for the first time.

By the time we receive a second and third dose, our bodies have learned to recognize that protein quickly, so are ready to attack it. That's why side effects are generally more pronounced. (If you've had COVID-19 before, though, your first dose may yield more intense side effects than your second or third, according to one preprint.)  

The following chart shows common vaccine side effects based on your age group, vaccine manufacturer, and which dose you received. Data is from each vaccine's clinical trial.

As with a booster shot, fatigue, headaches, and muscles aches were common after doses one and two.

In general, older people experience fewer side effects than younger adults because immune responses gradually weaken with age. That's also the reason why older people are in particular need of boosters: While vaccines still protect against severe disease for now, the Omicron variant seems to increase the risk of reinfection relative to other coronavirus strains.

It's also better than the original virus at evading antibodies from two vaccine doses, early lab studies suggest.

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One chart shows the most common COVID-19 booster side effects from Pfizer, Moderna, J&J’s vaccines

healthcare worker in mask, smiling, getting booster shot.
A Thai healthcare worker receives a booster dose of Pfizer’s vaccine in Bangkok on August 9, 2021.

Second and third doses of COVID-19 vaccines generally produce similar side effects, but there are some slight differences.

A recent study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provides the first comparison between booster shots of all three of the vaccines available in the US: Pfizer and Moderna (both mRNA shots), and Johnson & Johnson (an adenovirus vaccine).

While the study includes far more data on mRNA boosters – 12,000 people, compared to 48 who received two J&J doses – it gives valuable insights into how people are responding to different boosters outside clinical trials so far.

Broadly, the CDC found that people who’d received three doses of either Pfizer or Moderna saw more local reactions – pain, itchiness, redness, or swelling at the injection site – after dose three compared to dose two. Other side effects such as fatigue, muscle aches, or headaches were less common, affecting 74% after their third dose, compared with 77% after dose two.

A second dose of J&J’s vaccine yielded the fewest side effects of all. Just 10% of J&J booster recipients said their side effects prevented them from performing normal daily activities – usually on the day after their booster shot – while the rest said they were able to go about their day as normal. By comparison, 28% of Pfizer or Moderna booster recipients said the shots hindered their daily routine.

The following table shows how booster shots affected people who got three doses of Moderna, three doses of Pfizer, or two doses of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, according to CDC data.

Aside from local reactions at the injection site, fatigue was most common among people who received a Pfizer or Moderna booster.

Overall side effects were more prevalent after Moderna’s third dose: Half of Moderna booster recipients reported muscle aches and headaches, and around 60% reported fatigue.

Meanwhile, less than 40% of Pfizer booster recipients reported muscle aches and headaches, and around 50% reported fatigue.

Just one-quarter of people who got a J&J booster had injection site reactions, compared with 70% who got a Pfizer booster and 80% who got a Moderna booster. And 20% of J&J booster recipients reported muscle aches and headaches.

Fatigue, headaches, and muscles aches were common after first and second doses

The mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna instruct the body to produce a harmless viral protein, then develop antibodies against it. The first dose of these vaccines generally produces the mildest side effects, since our bodies are being introduced to the instructions and the resulting protein for the first time.

By the time we receive a second and third dose, our bodies have learned to recognize that protein quickly, so are ready to attack it. That’s why side effects are generally more pronounced. (If you’ve had COVID-19 before, though, your first dose may yield more intense side effects than your second or third, according to one preprint.)

The following chart shows common vaccine side effects based on your age group, vaccine manufacturer, and which dose you received. Data comes from each vaccine’s clinical trial.

As with a booster shot, fatigue, headaches, and muscles aches were common after doses one and two. In general, older people experience fewer side effects than younger adults because immune responses gradually weaken with age.

Boosters haven’t been authorized for everyone yet

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) first authorized Pfizer and Moderna boosters for people with severely weakened immune systems in August. That group includes people receiving cancer treatment, those with advanced HIV infections, or organ transplant patients. Third doses are necessary for this group, since they don’t develop the same protection from two shots as others do.

More recently, the FDA and CDC recommended Pfizer boosters for other vulnerable groups as well.

The FDA said last month that people 65 years and older and others at high risk of severe COVID-19 should seek a booster shot. That includes people who are more likely to get sick because of their health status, as well those who are at high risk of exposure to the virus due to where they live and work – such as healthcare workers, teachers and daycare staff, grocery store workers, and residents of homeless shelters or prisons.

The CDC, on the other hand, recommends boosters for people 65 years and older, nursing home residents, and people ages 50 to 64 with underlying medical conditions. The agency says younger adults with underlying medical conditions or those at increased risk of COVID-19 exposure because of their job or living arrangement may consider a booster shot.

For most Americans, though, there’s no need to run to the pharmacy for a booster right away. Vaccines are still highly effective in preventing severe disease, hospitalization, and death.

A recent CDC study suggests that unvaccinated Americans are 11 times more likely to die and 10 times more likely to be hospitalized from COVID-19 than people who are fully vaccinated.

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I got a 3rd Moderna vaccine shot at CVS because I have cancer. I was worried about the side effects, but it was worth it.

Andrea Kjelgaard,
Andrea Kjelgaard got a third Moderna vaccine dose in late August.

  • Andrea Kjelgaard, 44, is a nurse, currently on leave, based in Castle Rock, Colorado.
  • Since she is immunocompromised due to having cancer, Kjelgaard received a third dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.
  • This is what she says getting the shot at CVS was like, as told to freelance writer Suzie Glassman.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

My journey with cancer began in 2007. A year and a half prior, doctors noticed a nodule in the right lower lobe of my lung during a scan for a kidney stone. They weren’t sure what it was, so we agreed to take another scan in the future. When I went back, the nodule had grown from the size of a pea to a half dollar. I had a biopsy, and that’s when I learned I had a rare cancer called Epithelioid Hemangioendothelioma (EHE).

Doctors removed the nodules surgically, and I lived cancer-free for the next seven years. During that time, I got married and had two children. I enjoyed life as a nurse working at a small surgery center not far from where I lived in Castle Rock, Colorado. I was thriving in both my personal and professional life, so it came as a huge shock when the cancer returned in 2014.

Once again, doctors removed the tumors. But I couldn’t believe my bad luck when I found a lump in my breast during a self-exam only a few months later. After a double mastectomy, several rounds of chemo, and intense radiation, I was once again cancer-free. But the radiation left my left lung scarred and not functioning at 100%.

When COVID took over the news in February and early March 2020, I had an awful feeling in my gut.

I was already dealing with fluid in my lung, and the fear of catching the virus was debilitating. My husband is an anesthesiologist, so each day he went to work felt like sending him to war. I feared he’d get sick, and I panicked daily that he’d give it to me.

I was desperate to put space between myself and the virus, so I packed up my 3rd and 5th-grade kids and drove to my parent’s house in Ohio. They weren’t there, so we had the place to ourselves.

Andrea Kjelgaard
Kjelgaard with one of her children.

We kept up with remote school and isolated ourselves from the world. When the case counts were lower, and I was confident my husband had enough PPE to protect himself and not bring the virus home, we came back.

Just as I began to relax and feel we could manage life with masks and a small social circle, the EHE returned.

A flood of biopsies, doctor’s visits, and scans showed the cancer had spread to other parts of my body and couldn’t be removed with a scalpel. I started intense chemotherapy right as the rest of the world rang in 2021.

Going through chemo without visitors was terrifying – even my husband had to wait in the car while I went inside. I’d never felt so alone. My world shrunk to the size of my house  -  mainly my bedroom. Friends wanted to bring food, walk my dogs, and clean my house, but I couldn’t risk it. It’s like I could see COVID crawling on everyone and everything.

In January, I asked my doctor about the vaccine.

I was worried it might make me really sick. I was a shell of my former self, unable to keep much of anything down. I needed reassurance the shot was safe for cancer patients.

She said, without hesitation, to get it as soon as I could. I got my first shot in early March, and I’m glad I did. I suffered no side effects other than a sore arm and a headache a few days later. I had the same experience with the second shot.

Suddenly, I felt like I had a layer of protection over me I didn’t have before. I left the house again. I ran errands and drove my kids to places. When I read the news about getting a 3rd shot for immunocompromised patients, once again, my doctor said go. On August 31, I walked into CVS, told the pharmacy staff I was a cancer patient, and had my third shot within minutes. I felt more fatigue the next day, but still no fever or chills.

I understand when people are hesitant or scared of how they might react to the vaccine or the booster. But the security I feel with having protection from COVID means I can enjoy company again, even as I continue chemo medication. I have hope for my future. If cancer (and isolation) has taught me anything, it’s that time with loved ones is precious.

I’ve been a nurse all my career, and I believe in science. I say to anyone who is immunocompromised, as confidently as my doctor said to me: Get the vaccine and the booster. It’s worth it.

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I just got the Pfizer booster shot at Walgreens – I felt a sense of urgency to do it since I can’t socially distance at my job

Sagar Tolani Sarah Prager
Sagar Tolani is a math teacher in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

This as-told-to essay is based on a transcribed conversation with Sagar Tolani, a math teacher from Milwaukee, about getting the Pfizer booster vaccine shot. It has been edited for length and clarity.

When I got my first COVID vaccination shot on March 1, 2021, I chose Pfizer because I could get fully vaccinated in five weeks instead of six. Every week and every day mattered, as my wife was home with our toddler and baby. I felt a similar urgency when booking my booster shot at Walgreens last weekend.

I teach math at a public high school in Milwaukee, where nine out of 10 of my students live in households below the federal poverty level.

We barely have room to maintain three feet of distance between us in the 24-by-32-foot classroom where I teach up to 23 teens who often don’t keep their masks on. We’re back to fully in-person school for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, and many of my students still haven’t gotten their first shot.

I’d been eager to get my first shot to protect my family, but after the side effects hit me, I almost didn’t get the second one. I had a fever, chills, and aches for about 24 hours, which I’d never experienced before because I usually didn’t get a flu shot before COVID (now I do).

Despite being hesitant, I mentally prepared myself before my second shot and stocked up on ibuprofen and every other over-the-counter remedy that could possibly help. In the end, it just felt like I had a bad hangover the morning after my second dose. I took a couple of ibuprofen and that was it.

With my 3-and-half-year-old and 15-month-old in daycare and COVID cases on the rise in Milwaukee, I felt a sense of urgency to get the booster shot, no matter the side effects.

I didn’t want to wait, so I scheduled an appointment as soon as I was able to sign up.

I booked my appointment at 3:45 p.m. on Monday, September 27 at a Walgreens out of my way instead of my regular location, since all of the appointments there were booked.

I showed up a few minutes early but there were eight or so people waiting ahead of me. Most seemed to be in the over 65 age group, and one looked about 12 years old with a parent. I got my jab at 4:15 p.m. My side effects were manageable this time – some aches and chills that lasted only that evening – worse than my second shot, but not as bad as my first. I went to bed early after taking some ibuprofen, and woke up fine. I’m waiting out my two-week clock now, hopefully building up some additional immunity to protect my children while we wait for their vaccine to become available.

There have already been at least half a dozen positive COVID cases in my school this year, and I have a family history of diabetes and heart disease, so I’m hopeful this shot will help me and my family. My wife works from home now, so I’m the one out there exposing my family to the virus – I feel it was my duty to get the shot.

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The most common side effects to expect after your coronavirus vaccine, based on which shot you get

vaccine selfie colorado
A person after getting the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in Colorado.

  • Coronavirus vaccines can have similar side effects, but reactions vary slightly.
  • Injection-site pain is common after you’ve had your shot, no matter which one you got.
  • More than 60% of participants in Moderna’s and Pfizer’s trials also reported fatigue.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

It’s normal to feel discomfort after a coronavirus shot.

Once a vaccine goes into your arm, blood flow increases and immune cells rush to the scene. This can result in pain at the injection site – the most common side effect of all three US-authorized coronavirus vaccines.

The reaction is more common after Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccines than Johnson & Johnson’s. Less than 50% of participants in Johnson & Johnson’s clinical trial reported pain at the injection site, compared with 92% of Moderna participants and 84% of Pfizer participants.

In AstraZeneca’s case, injection-site tenderness was most common, affecting 64% of trial participants. Around 54% of participants reported injection-site pain. (The shot has been authorized in more than 110 countries, but not yet in the US.)

When our immune systems detect the ingredients of a vaccine, they also release inflammatory chemicals to protect us. That’s why people can develop a fever, muscle pain, fatigue, or headaches shortly after their shots.

Fatigue was the second most common side effect in Moderna’s and Pfizer’s trials. Nearly 69% of Moderna participants and 63% of Pfizer participants reported it.

But headaches were slightly more common than fatigue among Johnson & Johnson participants: 39% reported headaches, compared with 38% who reported fatigue.

In AstraZeneca’s trial, fatigue and headaches were equally as common: around 53% of participants reported these side effects.

Here’s a breakdown of how vaccine side effects differ by age and manufacturer. (Data for Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson are based on clinical trials. AstraZeneca’s data are based on a small study of nearly 130 vaccine recipients.)

Fatigue and headaches are more common after Pfizer’s and Moderna’s second dose – but not AstraZeneca’s

A recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report examined side effects among more than 1.9 million Americans who’d received both doses of Pfizer’s or Moderna’s vaccines.

Overall, side effects were slightly more common after both of Moderna’s shots than Pfizer’s two. And side effects across the board were more numerous and severe after the second dose of either vaccine.

Reports of injection-site pain rose from 68% after dose one of either vaccine to 72% after dose two. Fatigue rose from 31% to 54% from the first to second shot, while headaches rose from 26% to 47%.

Nearly 82% of Moderna recipients reported some reaction at the injection site – pain, redness, itching, or swelling – after their second dose, while 69% of Pfizer recipients said the same. In addition, 60% of Moderna recipients reported fatigue and 53% reported headaches after dose two. After the second dose of Pfizer’s shot, 48% of vaccine recipients reported fatigue and 40% reported headaches.

AstraZeneca’s shot tends to have worse side effects after the first dose for reasons scientists don’t fully understand. Experts say the reaction may have to do with the vaccine’s technology, which uses a genetically engineered common-cold virus to introduce a coronavirus gene into the body. That common-cold virus could potentially stimulate a stronger immune response right away.

Muscle pain and fever are more common than gastrointestinal issues

Muscle pain was among the most common side effects across all four trials.

In Moderna’s trial, 60% of participants had muscle pain, while 38% of Pfizer participants reported the symptom. About one-third of Johnson & Johnson participants and 44% of AstraZeneca participants reported muscle pain as well.

Chills were less common but not rare: 43% of people in Moderna’s trial reported chills, as did 32% of Pfizer and AstraZeneca participants. Just 2% of Johnson & Johnson participants felt that effect. In both Pfizer’s and Moderna’s trials, 15% of participants reported fever, compared with 9% in Johnson & Johnson’s trial and 8% in AstraZeneca’s.

woman getting vaccine
A physician administers the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.

For the most part, gastrointestinal issues like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea weren’t commonly associated with Pfizer’s or Moderna’s shots, but about 14% of Johnson & Johnson participants and 22% of AstraZeneca participants reported nausea.

Side effects were fleeting across all four trials.

The majority of Moderna participants said their side effects started the day they got their shot and lasted two days after each dose. On average, Pfizer participants also experienced side effects one to two days after their shot, with the reaction usually lasting just one day.

Johnson & Johnson participants saw side effects within two days of their injection. On average, fatigue, headache, and muscle pain lasted two days, while nausea and fever lasted one day.

AstraZeneca’s side effects usually resolved within a few days as well.

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