Local direct answer
RSV in San Diego, California Right Now (May 2026)
San Diego, California • Best available public signal for the city area
Here is the fastest honest answer for San Diego: RSV activity in the surrounding California surveillance area is low right now, and this page tells you what that means, what to do next, and where to click for deeper state context.
new admissions per 100K in the statewide surveillance area
Week ending Mar 14, 2026
→ Stable
1.0 per 100K below the national rate
San Diego inherits the same weekly RSV hospitalization signal as the rest of California. Use this page when you want the fastest local answer, then open the statewide RSV dashboard for the full trend chart and comparisons.
Sendable local answer
RSV in San Diego right now
LowBuilt for the moment someone asks about San Diego before a trip, event, school decision, or family visit.
If someone asks whether RSV is going around in San Diego, this is the best quick answer to send. It uses the latest California hospitalization signal as the most honest consistent public signal for the city area.
- Best current signal: 1.0 new admissions per 100K in California.
- San Diego should be read through the statewide hospitalization trend, not speculative city-specific counts.
- Next clicks should widen into the full city snapshot, the statewide RSV dashboard, or the travel checker.
CDC Recommendations at This Level
RSV activity is low — standard precautions for little ones
- • RSV season is quieter right now, but always wash hands before handling infants
- • Ask your pediatrician about RSV vaccines or antibody treatments for babies under 8 months
- • Older adults (60+) should ask about the RSV vaccine
This is general public health guidance based on CDC recommendations — not personal medical advice. Talk to your healthcare provider about what's right for you and your family.
Why this page is useful
Direct answer
This page is built to answer one question fast: what is the best current public signal for rsv in San Diego?
Honest scope
It uses the best public data we actually have for the city area instead of pretending there is precise weekly city-level surveillance when there is not.
Best next click
Every city answer should widen into a stronger state dashboard, city overview, or weekly roundup instead of dead-ending.
Best Next Clicks for San Diego
City overview
Open the full local snapshot
Move from this single-topic answer into the broader multi-disease picture for San Diego.
State dashboard
See the full rsv chart for California
Check the underlying statewide trend, nearby-state comparisons, and methodology behind this answer.
This week
Open the latest roundup
Use one shareable national update when you want to send context along with this local page.
More cities in California
Broader routes
The bigger pages that help after rsv in San Diego
Local answer pages should not dead-end. These broader hubs are the best next places to send someone when they need more context than one disease page can provide.
Direct answers
Popular Questions
Open the question bank when you want a sendable answer before opening a dashboard or local page.
Travel tool
Travel Health Check
Best starting point for destination questions, group trips, or something you can forward before travel.
This week
Weekly State Updates
Use the weekly change-log hub when the real question is what changed this week, not just the standing baseline.
Source and context
How this page is built
Updated
Mar 24, 2026
Coverage
California statewide RSV surveillance used as the best signal for San Diego
Best For
Fast rsv orientation for San Diego before deeper chart or state-page review
San Diego does not have a single public RSV dashboard we can rely on every week, so this page uses California statewide RSV hospitalization surveillance as the best consistent public signal for the San Diego area.
Local Health Signal is not affiliated with the CDC or any government agency. Data is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended for clinical decision making. See our methods page for details on data sources and limitations.