Several subvariants of Omicron have been discovered, and new ones continue to emerge. The 'standard' sublineage is now referred to as BA.1 (or B.1.1.529.1), and the two other sublineages are known as BA.2 (or B.1.1.529.2) and BA.3 (or B.1.1.529.3). In 2022, BA.4 (or B.1.1.529.4) and BA.5 (or B.1.1.529.5) were detected in several countries. They share many mutations, but also significantly differ from each other. In general, BA.1 and BA.2 share 32 mutations, but differ by 28. BA.1 has itself been divided in two, the original BA.1 and BA.1.1 (or B.1.1.529.1.1), with the main difference being that the latter has an extra R346K mutation. A 2025 study identified South Africa as the likely origin point of each of the major Omicron lineages that have emerged since 2021, with the
Gauteng Province of South Africa playing a major role in the emergence and/or amplification of those major Omicron lineages. Standard
PCR and
rapid tests continue to detect all Omicron subvariants as COVID-19, but further tests are necessary to distinguish the subvariants from each other and from other COVID-19 variants.
BA.2 BA.2 was first detected in a sample from 15 November 2021. A preprint released in February 2022 (published that May) suggested that BA.2 was more transmissible than BA.1 and may cause more severe disease. The latter was later disproven by a study in late October 2022, that found BA.2 actually caused less severe disease relative to BA.1 (which in turn, caused less severe disease compared to the delta variant). Another study from 2022 found that Omicron BA.2 had viral loads about twice as high as that of Omicron BA.1 in infected individuals, based on viral RNA tests; the authors suggested this property as a possible explanation for why BA.2 was more contagious than BA.1, and possibly one of the main reason why the BA.2 lineage rapidly replaced the BA.1 lineage worldwide that spring.
Spread By 17 January 2022, BA.2 had been detected in at least 40 countries and in all continents except
Antarctica. By 31 January, it had been detected in at least 57 countries. In global samples collected from 4 February to 5 March and uploaded to
GISAID, BA.2 accounted for c. 34%, compared to 41% for BA.1.1, 25% for BA.1 and less than 1% for BA.3. In a review two weeks later, covering 16 February to 17 March, BA.2 had become the most frequent. Based on GISAID uploads, BA.1 peaked in January 2022, after which it was overtaken by both BA.1.1 and BA.2. In North America, parts of Europe and parts of Asia, BA.1 was first outcompeted by BA.1.1. For example, in the United States, France and Japan, BA.1.1 became the dominant subvariant in January 2022. During December 2021–January 2022, BA.2 had become dominant in parts of India (already making up almost 80 percent of infections in
Kolkata in December 2021) and the Philippines, had become frequent in Scandinavia, South Africa and Singapore, and was showing signs of growth in Germany and the United Kingdom. In Japan, which has quarantine and detailed screening of all international travellers, as of 24 January 2022, the vast majority of BA.2 had been detected in people that had arrived from India or the Philippines, with cases going back at least to 1 December 2021 (far fewer BA.1 or other variants were detected among arrivals from the two countries in that period), but small numbers had also been detected in people arriving from other countries. In Denmark, the first BA.2 specimen was in a sample collected on 5 December 2021. By week fifty (13–19 December) it had started to increase, with BA.2 being at around 2 percent of sequenced cases compared to 46 percent BA.1 (remaining Delta). The frequency of both Omicron subvariants continued to increase throughout the last half of December; and by the end of the year BA.2 had reached 20 percent and BA.1 peaked at 72 percent. In January 2022, BA.1 began decreasing, whereas BA.2 continued its increase. By the second week of 2022, the frequency of the two was almost equal, both being near 50 percent. Trends from the other Scandinavian countries, India, South Africa and the United Kingdom also showed that BA.2 was increasing in proportion to BA.1. In February 2022, it had become the dominant subvariant in South Africa, in February it had become dominant in Germany and in March it had become dominant in the United Kingdom. In March, BA.1.1 was still heavily dominant in the United States (having overtaken BA.1 in January), but BA.2 was increasing in frequency, later becoming dominant in the US by 29 March.
XE A new BA.1–BA.2
recombinant was isolated in the UK in January 2022, dubbed the "XE" recombinant. It was found by the WHO to be potentially 10% more transmissible than BA.2, making it about 43% to 76% to more transmissible than BA.1, and making the XE recombinant the most contagious variant identified at the time.
Deltacron In early 2022, multiple Delta–Omicron recombinants were identified, which were dubbed "
Deltacron". These included the XD and XF recombinants (Delta–BA.1 recombinants), XS (a Delta–BA.1.1 recombinant), and a Delta AY.4–Omicron BA.1 recombinant. Additionally, substantial scientific evidence has been produced supporting the existence of Deltacron (Delta–Omicron) viruses, characterized by Delta (AY.4, AY.x) and Omicron (BA.1, BA.1.1, BA.2, BA.x) variants, which have been identified and verified by various laboratories around the world. However, these viruses quickly went extinct, as Omicron BA.1 and then BA.2 became dominant around the world.
BA.2.75 and BA.2.75.2 The subvariant BA.2.75 (or B.1.1.529.2.75, nicknamed
Centaurus by the media), first detected in
India in May 2022, was classified as variant under monitoring by the WHO. Additional newer mutations in this line (like BA.2.75.2 aka B.1.1.529.2.75.2 or
Chiron) may be capable of escaping neutralizing antibodies.
BA.4 and BA.5 In April 2022, the WHO announced it was tracking the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants, with BA.4 having been detected in South Africa, Botswana, Denmark, Scotland and England. The BA.4 and BA.5 variants originated from South Africa, and were most likely descended from BA.2, with their spike proteins differing from BA.2 only in the 69–70 deletion, the L452R and F486V mutations, and the R493Q reversion that they had. The two subvariants themselves have a nearly-identical spike protein, differing mostly in the non-spike regions. The mutation profiles of BA.4 and BA.5 indicated that they diverged around mid-December 2021, and most likely emerged from BA.2 from a recombination event around late November 2021. BA.5 was dominant in
Portugal by 25 May, accounting for two-thirds of all new cases there. BA.4 and BA.5 were found to be the most infectious versions of SARS-CoV-2 yet, with Omicron BA.2 having an estimated 1.4x increase in transmissibility over BA.1, and BA.4 and BA.5 having an estimated further 1.4x increase in transmissibility, with some estimates for the variants'
basic reproduction number (R_0) being around 18.6, which would potentially make BA.4 and BA.5 more contagious than the
Measles virus. Subsequently, by 2023, some studies estimated that the R0 of the circulating Omicron subvariants had reached 20 or higher. By 24 June, BA.4 and BA.5 together had become dominant variants in the UK and Germany. These two subvariants became dominant in the United States by 28 June. By June, BA.5 became the dominant subvariant in
France, with 59% of new cases linked to it. The BA.5 variant spread significantly more than BA.4, and by early July 2022, BA.5 had become dominant in nearly every region around the world, challenged only by the BA.2.75 subvariant in India. In May 2022, a case of a new subvariant, BA.5.2.1, was reported in
California. On 10 July, the city of Shanghai reported its first case of BA.5.2.1, in a man who had flown in from Uganda, sparking a new wave of testing. On 22 July, the province of Ontario, Canada announced that subvariant BA.5.2.1 overtook BA.2.12.1 as the main variant in circulation in Ontario around 2 July. Regeneron is reporting that BA.5.2.1 is the main variant in Australia, Belgium, Brunei, Greece and Iceland. The government of Canada also reported in June and July, of the travelers arriving by air who test positive for COVID-19, a substantial proportion were BA.5.2.1. BF.7 is a shortened version of the sub-variants full name, which is BA.5.2.1.7. This sub-variant is part of Omicron's BA.5 variant, which had the highest number of reported cases globally, accounting for 76.2% of all cases.
BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 In October 2022, two BA.5 subvariants were found: BQ.1 (or B.1.1.529.5.3.1.1.1.1.1) and BQ.1.1 (or B.1.1.529.5.3.1.1.1.1.1.1). The variants were originally most prevalent in France. As of 17 November 2022, 93% of sequences in France were Omicron sub-lineage BA.5 and among the BA.5 sub-lineages, BQ.1.1 continued to rise (32% vs 25% in the prior week). In November 2022, it was reported in the US that the variants were accounting for 44% of new infections. Early laboratory tests found that these subvariants were better at escaping first and booster vaccines than previous variants. BQ.1 became known as "Typhon", while BQ.1.1 became known as "Cerberus". In March 2025, a hypermutated version of BQ.1.1.1 (BA.5.3.1.1.1.1.1.1.1) was identified in Canada, which bore at least 75 spike protein mutations and 122 mutations overall compared to the Wuhan wildtype virus, a mutation level similar to that of the
BA.3.2 variant uncovered in South Africa earlier that year. Researchers were interested in this finding, since the ancestral BQ.1.1 lineage hadn't circulated for at least 2 years by that point.
XBB and XBB.1 XBB, a recombinant of the BA.2.10.1.1 (BJ.1) and BA.2.75.3.1.1.1 (BM.1.1.1) sublineages, is an Omicron subvariant first detected in August 2022. Researchers traced the emergence of XBB to a recombination event around early July 2022, and it was thought to have emerged from
South Asia, where it was first detected. On 20 October 2022, the chief scientist of the World Health Organization (WHO), Soumya Swaminathan, warned that the XBB subvariant of Omicron may cause infections in some countries, while the severity of the new variants were still known. On 9 January 2023, the
European CDC said there was suggestive evidence the XBB.1.5 variant had a growth advantage relative to the earlier variants; after attaining dominance in the US, it could potentially become dominant in Europe in the following months. From preliminary evidence, they had assessed the XBB variants had no effect on disease severity and transmissibility. An early 2023 study estimated that during that winter, XBB.1.5 had a growth advantage 1.09–1.13 times greater than that of the BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 viruses from the previously-dominant BA.5 lineage, based on data from North America and Europe. XBB.1.5 was also estimated to have a growth advantage 1.2 times greater than that of the earlier XBB.1. By late 2023, a study estimated that the R0 of the circulating Omicron viruses had reached or even exceeded 20.
EG.5 and EG.5.1 EG.5 (or XBB.1.9.2.5), nicknamed "Eris" by some researchers and some media outlets, is a descendant of XBB.1.9.2. The lineage was detected as early as February 2023. On 6 August, the
UK Health Security Agency reported the EG.5 strain was responsible for one in seven new cases in the UK during the third week of July. It was identified as a "variant of interest" by the WHO on 9 August 2023. Its key difference from other strains is a "F456L amino acid mutation".
HV.1 HV.1 (or XBB.1.9.2.5.1.6.1) is a sublineage of XBB.1.9.2, of the Omicron family first detected in July 2023. HV.1 overtook EG.5 as the dominant subvariant in the US in October 2023. In October experts stated that there was no evidence that HV.1 was more severe or transmissible than other Omicron subvariants.
BA.2.86 NB.1.8.1 NB.1.8.1 is a sub-variant of the Omicron lineage of SARS-CoV-2, first identified in early 2025. It has been detected in more than 20 countries, including the
United Kingdom,
United States,
China,
India,
Singapore, and
Thailand. The variant has shown signs of increased transmissibility, contributing to a rise in COVID-19 cases in several regions. Genomic analysis of NB.1.8.1 reveals
mutations in the
spike protein that may contribute to its spread. Globally, NB.1.8.1, accounted for 24% of all sequences submitted to the World Health Organization in the week ending on 01 June 2025 which was an increase from 18% in the week ending on 4 May 2025. LP.8.1 accounted for 21% of all submitted sequences in the week ending on 1 June 2025, a decrease from 33% in the week ending on 4 May 2025. NB.1.8.1 became detectable in US wastewater at the end of the first week in June 2025. Despite its rapid transmission, available data suggest that the variant does not lead to more severe disease compared to earlier strains. Commonly reported symptoms include sore throat, fever, fatigue, cough, muscle aches, and nasal congestion. The World Health Organization categorized NB.1.8.1 as a in June 2025.
Later subvariants == Transmission ==