Covid-19

When will the UK hit key vaccination targets?

As of 13 February, the UK had administered 15.1 million first doses of a Covid-19 vaccine. According to Department of Health & Social Care estimates of the country's highest risk cohorts, roughly 15 million were needed to ensure this top priority group is protected. The government had aimed to complete this task by 15 February, and as this infographic shows, that target has indeed been met.

Assuming the current rate of vaccination is maintained, and all vaccinated people up to this point were in fact in one of the relevant cohorts, all 32 million priority members of the population could expect to have received a jab by late March. Extending further, the UK's adult population of around 53 million would be covered by 12 May - well within the government's current aim of September. Of course, projections of this kind change from day to day as the average figure fluctuates, but the current trend continues to appear encouraging.

There are naturally potential logistical and supply issues, not to mention possible vaccine hesitancy among some members of the public, which mean the journey will likely not be quite as plain sailing as the current projections suggest. For now though, the programme is running well while also punching in a high weight category when compared globally.

Description

This chart shows the actual and projected number of UK adults to have received the first dose of a Covid-19 vaccination.

Download Chart
NBA all-time scoring list 1946-2025
Most used social networks 2025, by number of users
U.S. monthly inflation rate 2025
Number of civilian casualties during the war in Ukraine 2022-2025
MLB: World Series titles won by team 1903-2025
Premium statistics
OPEC oil price annually 1960-2025

Any more questions?

Get in touch with us quickly and easily.
We are happy to help!

Do you still have questions?

Feel free to contact us anytime using our contact form or visit our FAQ page.

Statista Content & Design

Need infographics, animated videos, presentations, data research or social media charts?

More Information