Lipopolysaccharide O-antigen is an immunodominant target of protective antibodies. Variation in O-antigen structures limits antibody-mediated cross-protection between closely-related pathogens includingSalmonellaTyphimurium (STm) andS. Enteritidis (SEn). Bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMV) are vaccine platforms presenting surface antigens in their natural conformations. To assess how O-antigen lengths impact antibody responses and control of homologous or heterologous infection, mice were immunized with STm-OMV containing wild-type O-antigen unit repeats (wt-OMV), ≤1 O-antigen unit (wzy-OMV), or no O-antigen units (wbaP-OMV) respectively and challenged with either STm or SEn. Unexpectedly, anti-STm LPS IgG and protection to STm were comparable after immunization with either wt-OMV or wzy-OMV. Anti-porin responses were elevated after immunization with wzy-OMV and wbaP-OMV. A single immunization with any OMV induced minimal cross-protection against SEn, except in blood. In contrast, boosting with O-antigen-expressing OMV enhanced control of SEn infections by >10-fold. These results suggest that i) Antibody to single or variable-length O-antigen units are comparably protective againstSalmonella; ii) Antigens other than immunodominant O-antigens may be targets of cross-reactive antibodies that moderate bacterial burdens; iii) Boosting can enhance the level of cross-protection against relatedSalmonellaserovars and iv) High tissue burdens ofSalmonellacan be present in the absence of detectable bacteraemia.