This document discusses herd immunity, including its definition, basic concepts, beneficial and deleterious effects, and recent concepts. Herd immunity is achieved when a high percentage of a population is vaccinated, reducing the spread of an infectious disease. The threshold for herd immunity depends on the basic reproduction number (R0) of a disease. Vaccines can provide herd protection for unvaccinated individuals by decreasing transmission. While beneficial for disease elimination and protecting those who cannot get vaccinated, herd immunity can also increase the average age of infection. Imperfect vaccines, heterogeneous mixing in populations, non-random vaccination, and freeloaders who opt out of vaccination make achieving herd immunity more complex.