This research project seeks to explore vaccine hesitancy among Muslims living in the United States. Its purpose is part of a series of work aiming to expand the visibility of Muslim-American communities within the discipline of medical anthropology. Some literature exists on the susceptibility of Muslim communities to infectious disease outbreaks as a result of vaccination patterns, or on mosques as epicenters for disease. However, much of this excludes personal experiences or understandings of why that may be (mistrust of the medical system? religious views on sickness and health? vaccine ingredients? delivery? surveillance?). This project explores how the relationship between the medical community and Muslim communities has impacted the willingness of Muslim individuals to get vaccinated, and for what reasons. The research methods consist of a series of interviews and ethnographic engagement over the course of six months, understanding vaccine hesitancy among Muslim communities in the United States. Specifically, the geographic focuses of the research are mosque communities in Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Florida, as well as clinics connected to places of worship. The latter of these included the Muslim Center of Greater Princeton’s Free Clinic and the UHI Clinic in Miami, Florida.