All unvaccinated adults in Wales will be offered a Covid jab by this time next week, the First Minister has announced.
Mark Drakeford said all over-18s the country will be offered a first dose by next Monday, if they've not had one yet.
The Welsh Government also aims to offer a second dose by the end of September, he said.
He said: "We will make the offer of vaccination to all eligible adults six weeks ahead of schedule and we expect to reach 75% take-up across all priority groups and age groups a month ahead of target.
"This is a remarkable achievement and a tribute to the hard work of all those involved in the programme - to all those doing the complex work of planning behind the scenes and to the thousands of people vaccinating and helping to run the clinics across the country."
It comes after Wales last week said it had started to vaccinate people in the 18-29 age group.
In England, under-30s will be able to start signing up for their Covid jabs this week - giving the government plenty of time to hit its July 31 target.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock announced people in their 20s would begin receiving invitations to get inoculated within days as he urged people to get vaccinated as soon as they can.
He also signalled support for vaccinating secondary school pupils after the UK's medicines regulator said the Pfizer jab was safe for children over 12-years-old.
Ministers are ramping up the vaccine programme to see off the threat of the new Delta variant - with latest evidence showing the strain is 40% more transmissible than the previously dominant Kent variant.

Mr Hancock said vaccines had "severed but not broken" the link between surging Covid cases and a rise in people being admitted to hospital.
Some 33,496 people have tested positive for Covid in the UK in the latest seven days - up 49% in a week.
But the number of patients admitted to hospital was 869, down 0.3% on the week before.
Solicitor General Lucy Frazer told LBC: "What we know at the moment is that the infection rate is rising, but that’s not seeping out in hospitalisations at the rate that it did in the other lockdowns.
"So we are seeing a flat lining of hospitalisations and the reason for that is, the reason you were identifying earlier on your programme, that the vaccination programme has been so successful."