Three EU/EEA Countries Achieve 90% HPV Vaccination Coverage Target
Summary
The ECDC published a report on HPV vaccination programmes in the EU/EEA marking 15 years of progress. Three EU/EEA countries (Iceland, Portugal, Norway) have reached the 2024 EU Council Recommendation target of 90% HPV vaccination coverage among girls by age 15. All EU/EEA countries now recommend HPV vaccination for adolescent girls and boys. A Swedish study showed vaccination before age 17 reduces cervical cancer incidence by 88%. ECDC also launched a new vaccination coverage dashboard.
“A Swedish study suggested that vaccination of girls before their 17th birthday reduced the incidence of cervical cancer by 88%.”
What changed
The ECDC released a report confirming that three EU/EEA countries have achieved the 90% HPV vaccination coverage target for girls under 15, as set by the 2024 EU Council Recommendation. All EU/EEA countries now recommend HPV vaccination for both adolescent girls and boys. The report highlights evidence from Sweden, Denmark, and the Netherlands showing significant reductions in HPV infections, precancerous lesions, and cervical cancer rates among vaccinated women, with a Swedish study reporting an 88% reduction in cervical cancer incidence when vaccination occurred before age 17.
Healthcare authorities and public health bodies across the EU/EEA should note that school-based vaccination programmes have proven particularly effective in achieving high coverage. ECDC has launched a new vaccination coverage dashboard to support monitoring. While progress is significant, ECDC emphasizes that sustained vaccination efforts and continued screening programmes remain essential, as vaccines do not cover all HPV types that can cause cervical cancer.
Archived snapshot
Apr 20, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
For every generation, vaccines work: three countries reach 90% HPV vaccination target as Europe steps up action on cancer prevention
Press release
20 April 2026
After 15 years of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programmes across Europe, growing evidence confirms their long-term effectiveness. A new report from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) on HPV vaccination programmes in the European Union and European Economic Area (EU/EEA) highlights steady progress in cancer prevention efforts across the EU/EEA. As Europe marks European Immunization Week (EIW) 2026, ECDC reports continued progress in HPV vaccination across the European Union and European Economic Area (EU/EEA).
According to the new ECDC report, all EU/EEA countries now recommend HPV vaccination for adolescent girls and boys as part of their immunisation programmes, marking a major step forward in Europe’s’ cancer prevention efforts.
This progress is already translating into high vaccination uptake in several countries. The report indicates that three EU/EEA countries (e.g. Iceland, Portugal, Norway) have reached the 2024 EU Council Recommendation target of 90% HPV vaccination coverage among girls by the age of 15 years.
Fifteen years after HPV vaccination programmes were introduced in Europe, a growing body of evidence confirms that HPV vaccination is highly effective in preventing cervical cancer. Large-scale studies from European countries (e.g., Sweden, the Netherlands, and Denmark), as well as from other parts of the world, showed significant reductions in HPV infections and precancerous lesions, along with declining cervical cancer rates among women who are vaccinated.
Since 2020, European countries have reported a decreased incidence of cervical cancer among vaccinated women. Studies from Sweden, Denmark, and the United Kingdom show that early administration of the vaccine increases its full protective potential. A Swedish study suggested that vaccination of girls before their 17th birthday reduced the incidence of cervical cancer by 88%. In an additional six-year follow-up, the Swedish study showed a sustained cervical cancer risk reduction and a population-level decline in invasive cervical cancer incidence after HPV vaccination.*
‘The elimination of cervical cancer in the EU/EEA is becoming an achievable goal, thanks to the HPV vaccination programmes. The progress we are seeing across Europe demonstrates what can be accomplished when countries invest consistently in effective immunisation strategies.’ Said Bruno Ciancio, Head of Unit, Directly Transmitted Diseases and Vaccine Preventable Diseases, ECDC ‘We are closely monitoring this progress and actively supporting countries to accelerate uptake and move faster towards cervical cancer elimination.’
The ECDC report showed that vaccination programmes and health system design are critical factors to reach high levels of HPV vaccination coverage. As an example, evidence from across Europe showed that school‑based vaccination programmes are particularly effective and tend to reach higher levels of coverage among both girls and boys.
To support monitoring and action, ECDC is today launching a new dashboard displaying vaccination coverage for HPV and for other vaccine-preventable infections such as hepatitis B, measles and rubella vaccines. The dashboard provides a transparent, up-to-date overview of the performance of vaccination programmes across Europe and will support evidence-based decision-making to strengthen immunisation efforts.
Vaccination requires sustained efforts year after year to maintain protection across generations and prevent increasing numbers of people from not getting vaccinated, including those groups underserved by healthcare providers.
When high vaccination coverage is achieved and sustained, HPV vaccination has the potential to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem. Despite the progress of vaccines in reducing HPV infections leading to cancer, screening programmes are essential to continue complementing vaccination due to the risk of infection by virus types not covered by the vaccines.
European Immunization Week is a reminder that closing gaps through collective efforts, commitment, and investment are essential, not only to prevent infections today but also to reduce the burden of cancer and protect the health of generations to come.
***** References from Sweden, Denmark, and the UK regarding **** decreased incidence of cervical cancer among vaccinated women ****
Read the latest report
Surveillance and monitoring The State of Health of HPV vaccination programmes in the EU/EEA
- 20 April 2026
Learn more about European Immunization Week 2026
News European Immunization Week 2026: For every generation, vaccines work
- 20 April 2026
European Immunization Week (EIW) is an initiative led by the World Health Organization (WHO) to raise awareness about the vital role immunisation plays to prevent diseases and protect life. This year’s EIW runs from 19-25 April.
Share this page
Related changes
Get daily alerts for European Centre for Disease Prevention
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from ECDC.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when European Centre for Disease Prevention publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.