MRI based multicenter studies which target neurological pathologies affecting the spinal cord and brain – including spinal cord injury (SCI) – require standardized acquisition protocols and image processing methods. We have optimized and applied a multi-parameter mapping (MPM) protocol that simultaneously covers the brain and the cervical cord within a traveling heads study across six clinical centers (Leutritz et al., 2020). The MPM protocol includes quantitative maps (magnetization transfer saturation (MT), proton density (PD), longitudinal (R1), and effective transverse (R2*) relaxation rates) sensitive to myelination, water content, iron concentration, and morphometric measures, such as cross-sectional cord area. Previously, we assessed the repeatability and reproducibility of the brain MPM data acquired in the five healthy participants who underwent two scan-rescans (Leutritz et al., 2020). This study focuses on the cervical cord MPM data derived from the same acquisitions to determine its repeatability and reproducibility in the cervical cord. MPM matrices of the cervical cord were generated and processed using the hMRI and the spinal cord toolbox. To determine reliability of the cervical MPM data, the intra-site (i.e., scan-rescan) coefficient of variation (CoV), inter-site CoV, and bias within region of interests (C1, C2 and C3 levels) were determined. The range of the mean intra- and inter-site CoV of MT, R1 and PD was between 2.5% and 12%, and between 1.1% and 4.0% for the morphometric measures. In conclusion, the cervical MPM data showed a high repeatability and reproducibility for key imaging biomarkers and hence can be employed as a standardized tool in multi-center studies, including clinical trials.