For the vaccines themselves — what each one covers, schedules, and why each matters for gay men — read The Vaccine Checklist first. This guide covers the European-specific picture: what's publicly funded, what it costs privately, and how to access each vaccine.
Public Funding by Vaccine
| Vaccine | EU Public Funding Status |
|---|---|
| HPV (Gardasil 9) | Free for young people (up to 18–26 depending on country) in nearly all EU countries. Many EU countries now also offer free HPV for gay and bisexual men up to age 45 at sexual health clinics. Private cost: €150–500 for the full course. |
| Hepatitis A | Free at sexual health clinics in most EU countries for gay and bisexual men (listed as a risk group). Private cost: €50–150 for both doses. Often combined with Hepatitis B as Twinrix. |
| Hepatitis B | Free in most EU countries for gay and bisexual men. Many people were vaccinated in childhood — check your records; you may only need a booster. Private cost: €30–150 for the series. |
| Mpox (Imvanex / Jynneos) | Free for gay and bisexual men in nearly all EU countries following the 2022 outbreak response. 2 doses, 28 days apart. Available at sexual health clinics and some GPs. |
| Meningitis MenACWY | Available at GPs and vaccination centres. Often free during public health campaigns. Private cost: €50–80. |
| Meningitis MenB (Bexsero) | Less commonly publicly funded outside of outbreak settings. Private cost: €80–120 per dose (2 doses required). Worth asking about at sexual health clinics. |
Don't assume you have to pay. Many EU countries fund all of these for gay and bisexual men through sexual health clinics. Ask before paying privately.
How to Get Vaccinated in Europe
Sexual health clinics: The best route for gay men. Most offer free or heavily subsidised vaccination and understand which vaccines are relevant to you. Drop-in vaccination days are common in major cities.
GP (general practitioner): Can administer all vaccines, though may require a referral or appointment. Coverage via insurance or public health depends on your country and the specific vaccine.
Vaccination centres: Available in most EU countries; efficient for standard vaccines. May be less aware of the specific risk profile for gay men — bring a list of what you need.
Cross-border vaccination: If a vaccine is expensive in your country, some neighbouring EU countries offer it at lower cost or free to visitors. Insurance typically won't cover vaccines obtained abroad — verify costs first. Pharmacies in France, Germany, and the Netherlands often offer walk-in vaccination at competitive prices.
Keeping a Vaccine Record
EU countries increasingly offer digital vaccination records accessible through government health portals or apps. Take a photo of any paper vaccination card as a backup. Your record matters for travel, boosters, and confirming coverage to your doctor.
Priority Order If Access or Cost Is a Barrier
If you can only access some vaccines, prioritise: Hepatitis B first (high transmission risk, serious long-term consequences), then HPV (cancer prevention — most valuable when given young), then Hepatitis A (especially if you rim), then Mpox (usually free, prevents painful illness). Meningitis is situational — most relevant if you're in nightlife and festival circuits.
Related:
- > The Vaccine Checklist — what each vaccine covers, schedules, and why each one matters
- > STI Testing in Europe: Access & Costs — the quarterly testing that complements your vaccine schedule
- > Oral Sex: The Real Risk Picture — HPV, Hep A, and rimming risk in context
- > The Medical Audit: How to Talk to Your Doctor — how to ask for the vaccines you need without pushback