[Differences in Influenza Types] “Type A, Type B, and Type C” Super Simple Comparison! Which One is the Real Threat?

When you hear the word “influenza” in the winter, most people probably imagine high fever and severe body aches. However, there are three main types of influenza—Type A, Type B, and Type C—and they differ completely in the severity of symptoms, frequency of outbreaks, and the level of vigilance we should maintain.

Which type causes the “Novel Influenza” that makes the news every year? Is it true that “Type B is better than Type A”? And what exactly are the symptoms of “Type C,” which is barely known to exist?

Influenza Type A, Type B, and Type C Differences (Super Simple Summary)

ItemType AType BType C
Annual Outbreak?Major outbreak every yearModerate outbreak every yearRarely circulates
Symptom SeveritySevere to extremely severeModerate to slightly severeMild (Level of a common cold)
Typical Symptoms39–40∘C + severe body aches38–39∘C range + fatigueRunny nose and light cough
Severity in ChildrenHigh risk of severe illness, common acute encephalopathyCan be severe, but less commonAlmost never causes severe illness
Causes Novel Flu?All Novel/Pandemics are Type ANever causes novel fluNever causes novel flu
Speed of MutationExtremely fastSlowAlmost non-existent
Included in Vaccine?Yes (2 subtypes)Yes (1–2 lineages)No (Not necessary)
Infects Animals?Yes (Birds, pigs, etc.)Rarely infects animalsNo
Impression in JapanThe image of “Influenza = Type A”“Slightly better than Type A”“Wait, was that even the flu?” level
As of 2025Currently a major outbreakExpected to increase from Jan–MarAlmost zero

✅ Summary

  • Type A → The genuinely frightening one (the main culprit every year).
  • Type B → Slightly better, but caution is essential (especially for children).
  • Type C → Practically just a common cold (nobody worries about it).

In Japan, when someone says they “caught the flu,” it is 99.9% Type A or Type B. Type C is so rare that hospitals barely even test for it.