Enterovirus 71 (EV71) is an enterovirus that could lead to severe neurological disorders and fatalities. The inactivated vaccine is an appropriate EV71 vaccine format for meeting current needs. Large-scale preparation of the inactivated EV71vaccine depends on a scalable cell culture system for industrial mass production. In this paper, Vero cells were found to produce higher titers of EV71 than did MRC-5 and WI-38 cells. High-density microcarrier Vero cell cultures were established using 5 g/L Cytodex I microcarriers and found to promote the release of EV71s from infected Vero cells. For the large-scale production of the inactivated vaccine antigen, the extracellular virus titers produced in the 2 L bioreactor were found to be 10 times lower than the spinner flask culture but improved by 30-folds using glucose/glutamine feedings during infection. A serum-free Vero cell microcarrier culture was also established in the bioreactor, yielding a high-titer of 5.8 x 10(7) TCID50/mL for EV71 production. The immunogenicity of the inactivated virions produced in serum-free culture elicited a slightly higher level of neutralizing antibody response in immunized mice. These results constitute valuable information on the development of a large-scale microcarrier cell culture process for producing inactivated EV71 vaccine.