ATAR for Pharmacy in Australia | Entry Requirements 2026

ATAR for Pharmacy in Australia

Pharmacy ATARs in 2025 sit between roughly 63 and 92. But here’s the number that matters more: if you didn’t pick up Chemistry and Mathematics Methods in Year 11, your ATAR is largely irrelevant. You’re not getting into a Bachelor of Pharmacy directly — at any university in the country. That subject requirement is the defining feature of pharmacy admissions and the thing that separates it from almost every other health degree, including ones with similar ATAR ranges.

Assuming you have the right subjects, the ATAR picture looks like this: Monash and Sydney sit in the high 80s to low 90s. UQ, Tasmania, and Newcastle occupy the high 70s to mid-80s. The bulk of programs — QUT, Curtin, UniSA, UTS, Griffith, Charles Sturt, JCU — sit between 68 and 80. And at the accessible end, UniSQ accepts students from around 63.

Every figure below comes from 2024–2025 published admissions data. They’re indicative — not guarantees.

Top Tier
88–92
Monash, University of Sydney
Prerequisites + strong ATAR required
Middle Band
68–86
UQ, Newcastle, Tasmania, QUT, Curtin, UniSA, UTS, Griffith, JCU, CSU
Where most offers are made
Accessible Entry
63–70
UniSQ, lower-campus offers at CSU and JCU
Same degree, lower threshold

The Chemistry Wall: Why Subjects Matter More Than Your ATAR

We’re putting this first because it’s the thing that catches the most people off guard, and it doesn’t get enough attention in most ATAR guides.

Compare pharmacy to other degrees with similar ATAR requirements. Occupational therapy asks for English and maybe assumes Biology. Nursing asks for English. Psychology asks for English. Even architecture — which has strict portfolio requirements — doesn’t mandate specific Year 12 science subjects the way pharmacy does.

Pharmacy demands three things at almost every institution: Chemistry, Mathematics Methods, and English. All three. No exceptions. If you’re in Year 10 right now and thinking about pharmacy, the most important decision you’ll make isn’t which university to preference — it’s whether to pick up Chemistry and Methods in Year 11. Get that wrong and the ATAR conversation becomes academic (literally).

Chemistry
Required everywhere
Mandatory at all 14 undergraduate BPharm programs. Non-negotiable.
Maths Methods
Required everywhere
Mathematical Methods or equivalent. General Maths won’t suffice.
English
Required everywhere
Standard or Advanced depending on the university. Check minimum grade thresholds.
Biology
Assumed, not required
Listed as assumed knowledge at most unis. Helpful but not a formal barrier.
Physics
Not required
No BPharm program in Australia lists Physics as a prerequisite.
Specialist Maths
Not required
Methods is sufficient. Specialist helps your ATAR but isn’t expected.
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The Year 11 timing trap

In most states, you need to be studying Chemistry and Maths Methods in Year 11 to complete them as Year 12 subjects. If you’re reading this in Year 12 and you’re not already enrolled in both, direct entry to a Bachelor of Pharmacy this year is extremely unlikely. Bridging courses exist (see Section 6) but they add months — and you’ll need to plan around that.

Every Bachelor of Pharmacy Program in Australia

Here’s the complete picture for 2025. We’ve included campus, approximate ATAR range, and selection method. Note that “ATAR-driven” doesn’t mean supplementary requirements don’t exist — it means the ATAR is the dominant factor rather than a multi-criteria process.

University Campus ATAR Range Selection
Monash University Parkville (VIC) ~90.00–92.00 ATAR-driven
University of Sydney Camperdown (NSW) ~88.00–91.00 ATAR-driven
University of Queensland St Lucia (QLD) ~84.00–88.00 ATAR + Interview
University of Tasmania Hobart (TAS) ~82.00–86.00 ATAR-driven
University of Newcastle Callaghan (NSW) ~78.00–83.00 ATAR-driven
QUT Gardens Point (QLD) ~76.00–80.00 ATAR-driven
Curtin University Bentley (WA) ~75.00–79.00 ATAR-driven
University of South Australia City East (SA) ~74.00–78.00 ATAR-driven
UTS Ultimo (NSW) ~73.00–77.00 ATAR + Personal Statement
Griffith University Gold Coast (QLD) ~72.00–76.00 ATAR-driven
James Cook University Townsville (QLD) ~70.00–75.00 ATAR + Rural preference
Charles Sturt University Wagga Wagga (NSW) ~68.00–74.00 ATAR-driven
Charles Sturt University Orange (NSW) ~65.00–70.00 ATAR + Regional bonus
University of Southern Queensland Toowoomba (QLD) ~63.00–68.00 ATAR-driven

A few things worth noting that aren’t obvious from the table. UQ is the only top-tier program that interviews. Monash and Sydney are purely ATAR-driven (assuming you meet the prerequisite thresholds). That makes UQ’s process more unpredictable — a student with an 86 ATAR and a strong interview can receive an offer over someone with an 88 and a weak one.

JCU gives preference to applicants from rural and remote backgrounds. If you’re from a regional area, JCU’s effective entry threshold could be several points lower than the published range suggests. They’re also one of the few programs with a genuine tropical and rural health focus woven through the curriculum — which matters if you’re interested in working outside major cities.

UniSQ’s program is relatively new and still building its cohort. That’s partly why the published ATAR sits lower — it hasn’t yet developed the competitive reputation of the longer-established programs. The degree is fully accredited and the same length (4 years) as every other BPharm.

Melbourne’s Model and the Graduate-Entry Question

The University of Melbourne doesn’t offer an undergraduate pharmacy degree. They only offer a Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) — a 3-year graduate-entry program that requires you to complete a relevant bachelor’s degree first. This is the same model Melbourne uses for medicine, dentistry, and most of their other health programs.

The question is whether this route makes sense for you — and the honest answer is: it depends on when you realise you want pharmacy.

If you’re in Year 10 or 11 and you’re confident about pharmacy, there’s no good reason to go through Melbourne’s graduate-entry route. You’d add 2–3 extra years of study for the same professional outcome. Go direct into a Bachelor of Pharmacy somewhere and start your career sooner.

But if you’re already partway through a biomedical science degree, or you’re a mature-age student, or you didn’t take Chemistry in Year 11 and can’t fix that now, the graduate-entry route is genuinely valuable. It resets the clock. Your bachelor’s degree GPA replaces your ATAR. And you can pick up the prerequisite science knowledge during your first degree — something you can’t do in a direct-entry BPharm.

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Graduate-entry pharmacy programs beyond Melbourne

Several other universities accept graduate-entry students into streamlined or accelerated pharmacy pathways, even if they don’t market them as separate degrees. If you’ve completed (or are completing) a relevant bachelor’s with strong grades, it’s worth contacting the pharmacy school directly at universities like Sydney, UQ, or Newcastle to ask about credit transfer and accelerated pathways. You might shave a year off the standard timeline.

Subject Choices That Actually Move the Needle

Since you’re locked into Chemistry and Maths Methods anyway (they’re prerequisites), the real subject strategy for pharmacy comes down to your remaining slots. And unlike degrees where you have freedom to choose, pharmacy effectively makes two of your choices for you — so the margin for strategic picking is narrower.

Here’s how the subjects pharmacy applicants typically take actually scale:

Maths Methods
+2 to +5 pts
Specialist Maths
+3 to +6 pts
Chemistry
+2 to +5 pts
English Advanced
+0 to +3 pts
Physics
+1 to +4 pts
Biology
−1 to +2 pts
English Standard
−1 to −3 pts

What this means for your remaining slots

If you can handle Specialist Maths alongside Methods, do it. Specialist is the single highest-scaling subject available to a pharmacy applicant. Even if you find it tough, a mediocre result in Specialist often scales to a higher contributed score than a strong result in a lower-scaling subject. The maths pairing (Methods + Specialist) is the most ATAR-efficient combination a pharmacy student can choose.

English Advanced over Standard, without question. The scaling gap is 3–6 points in pharmacy’s favour. Since English is a prerequisite anyway, there’s no reason to take Standard unless you genuinely can’t cope with Advanced — and if that’s the case, you need to be honest with yourself about whether the English communication demands of a pharmacy degree (patient counselling, clinical writing) will be manageable.

Physics vs Biology for your final slot? Physics scales better, but Biology is more directly useful in a pharmacy degree (pharmacology, physiology, microbiology). If your ATAR needs a boost, Physics is the pragmatic choice. If you’re already tracking above your target, Biology will serve you better in first year. Either works — just be clear about why you’re picking it.

For a deeper look at how subject selection interacts with ATAR calculation broadly — not just for pharmacy — our breakdown of strategies for subject selection that actually boost your ATAR is worth reading alongside this.

How Pharmacy Stacks Up Against the Rest

Pharmacy doesn’t sit neatly in one category. It’s harder to get into than most health degrees but easier than the elite clinical programs. It has heavier prerequisites than almost any non-engineering degree. And its career trajectory doesn’t follow the same pattern as the professions it’s usually grouped with.

Here’s how it compares — not just on ATAR, but on the things that actually affect your decision:

ATAR 95–99.95. 7–10 points higher than pharmacy at every university. Also requires Chemistry and Methods but adds UCAT/GAMSAT and interviews. Much longer training. Pharmacy is the more realistic path for students who want a health science career but aren’t in the 95+ band.
ATAR 90–99. Similar prerequisite structure to pharmacy (Chemistry, Methods, English) but at a much higher ATAR threshold and with additional testing. If you meet pharmacy’s prerequisites, dentistry is at least on the same subject track — just a different league of competitiveness.
ATAR 80–98. Often overlaps with pharmacy’s top end. Physio usually requires two sciences but is less prescriptive about which ones — Chemistry isn’t always mandatory. Similar career prestige but different day-to-day work.
Pharmacy
ATAR 63–92. The widest range of any health degree with strict prerequisites. The Chemistry + Methods wall is its defining feature — it keeps people out who could otherwise meet the ATAR, but it also means that once you’re over that wall, the ATAR thresholds are more moderate than the prestige suggests.
ATAR 60–90. Similar ATAR spread but dramatically lighter prerequisites — English only. OT is more accessible at the subject level but competitive through multi-criteria selection at top programs. If you didn’t take Chemistry, OT is your realistic option; pharmacy isn’t.
ATAR 70–95. No subject prerequisites at most universities. Completely different prerequisite philosophy — CS cares about your ATAR and sometimes a portfolio or interview, but won’t block you for lacking Chemistry. An interesting contrast if you’re weighing science-heavy vs flexible-entry degrees.
ATAR 50–88. The most accessible health degree. English prerequisite only. Multi-criteria selection is common. If pharmacy’s subject wall is a problem, nursing is the obvious pivot — though it’s a different profession entirely, not a “lesser” version of pharmacy.

What Happens If You Don’t Have the Right Subjects

This section exists because we know a lot of people reading this are already in Year 12 — or beyond — and realising they don’t have Chemistry or Maths Methods. If that’s you, direct entry to a Bachelor of Pharmacy this year isn’t happening. But you’re not out of options. Here’s what’s actually available, in order of practicality.

Realistic pathways without Year 12 Chemistry and Methods
1
Bridging courses (3–6 months)

Most universities offer Chemistry bridging programs through their continuing education or enabling units. UNSW, UQ, and several others run these. They typically cost $1,000–$3,000 and run intensive (often over summer). If you complete one successfully, it satisfies the Chemistry prerequisite at many (but not all) universities. Check with each pharmacy school before enrolling — some accept external bridging, others only their own.

2
Single-subject university enrolment

You can enrol in first-year Chemistry and/or Mathematics as a non-degree student at most universities. This takes a semester and costs money, but it’s a recognised pathway that satisfies prerequisites across the board. It also gives you a taste of university-level science before committing to a full degree.

3
Bachelor of Pharmaceutical Science first (lower ATAR, same prerequisites — or sometimes lighter)

Some universities offer a Bachelor of Pharmaceutical Science with slightly lower ATAR requirements and, in a few cases, slightly lighter prerequisites. This degree doesn’t lead to pharmacist registration, but it can serve as a pathway into graduate-entry pharmacy or credit transfer into a BPharm. It’s not the most efficient route, but it works.

4
Any bachelor’s degree + graduate-entry pharmacy

The nuclear option. Complete any bachelor’s degree — biomedical science, health science, science, whatever — making sure to include Chemistry and Maths/Statistics units. Then apply for graduate-entry programs like Melbourne’s PharmD. Total time: 6–7 years. But your Year 12 subject choices become irrelevant once you have a degree with the right units.

The honest assessment

Bridging courses and single-subject enrolment are the most time-efficient options if you just missed the prerequisites. But be realistic: if you didn’t take Chemistry because you don’t enjoy science, pharmacy might not be the right fit anyway. The degree is chemistry-heavy from day one — pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, formulation science, medicinal chemistry. Bridging gets you in the door, but it doesn’t make the content easier once you’re there.

Pharmacy vs Pharmaceutical Science: Don’t Mix Them Up

This confusion costs people time and money every year. They sound similar, some universities offer both, and the first-year units overlap. But they lead to fundamentally different careers.

Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm): A professional degree that qualifies you to register as a pharmacist with the Pharmacy Board of Australia. You learn to dispense medications, counsel patients, understand drug interactions, and manage pharmaceutical care. Four years, followed by a 12-month intern training program to get full registration. This is the degree you want if you picture yourself working in a community pharmacy, hospital pharmacy, or in clinical roles.

Bachelor of Pharmaceutical Science (BPharmSci): A science degree focused on how drugs are designed, developed, manufactured, and tested. You do not learn to dispense medications or counsel patients. You do not qualify for pharmacist registration. Graduates work in drug development, quality assurance, regulatory affairs, clinical trials, and research. It’s a lab-based, research-oriented degree — closer to a chemistry or biomedical science degree than to a pharmacy degree.

Some universities (like Monash) offer both and allow credit transfer between them if you change your mind early. But going into Pharmaceutical Science thinking it’s a backdoor into pharmacy is a mistake — you’d need to essentially start the BPharm from scratch or apply for very limited credit transfer.

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Check the degree title carefully when you apply

Some universities name their pharmaceutical science degrees in ways that sound like pharmacy — “Bachelor of Pharmaceutical Sciences” vs “Bachelor of Pharmacy” is one letter different. Make absolutely sure you’re applying for the right one. If the course code doesn’t include “BPharm” or the word “Pharmacy” without “Science” attached, verify with the university before submitting your preferences.

Questions People Actually Ask

What ATAR do you need for pharmacy in Australia?

For 2026, undergraduate Bachelor of Pharmacy ATARs range from approximately 63.00 at the University of Southern Queensland to around 92.00 at Monash University. Most students receive offers in the 70–85 range. However, ATAR is only part of the story — Chemistry and Mathematics Methods are hard prerequisites at virtually every program, and some universities add interviews or supplementary applications on top.

Is it hard to get into pharmacy?

Pharmacy is moderately to highly competitive depending on the university. What makes it harder than many people expect isn’t the ATAR itself — it’s the subject prerequisites. If you haven’t studied Chemistry and Mathematics Methods in Year 11 and 12, you cannot enter a Bachelor of Pharmacy directly at almost any Australian university. That subject wall eliminates more applicants than the ATAR cut-off does.

Can I do pharmacy without Chemistry?

Not directly into a Bachelor of Pharmacy. Chemistry is a formal prerequisite at every accredited undergraduate pharmacy program in Australia. If you didn’t take Chemistry, your options are: complete a bridging course (usually 3–6 months), take Chemistry through a single-subject enrolment, or take an alternative route like a Bachelor of Pharmaceutical Science followed by graduate-entry pharmacy.

Is pharmacy a good career in Australia?

Pharmacy offers solid graduate outcomes — starting salaries around $55,000–$65,000, rising to $85,000–$120,000+ with experience. The profession is evolving with expanded scope of practice (including pharmacist prescribing in some states), rural demand, and growing roles in primary care. Community pharmacy remains the largest employer, but hospital, industry, and research roles are expanding. Job security is strong, though graduate positions in metropolitan community pharmacy can be competitive.

What’s the difference between pharmacy and pharmaceutical science?

A Bachelor of Pharmacy qualifies you to become a registered pharmacist. A Bachelor of Pharmaceutical Science is a science degree focused on drug development, formulation, and analysis — it does not lead to pharmacist registration. Pharmaceutical science graduates work in drug development, quality control, regulatory affairs, and research. If you want to dispense medications and counsel patients, you need the Pharmacy degree, not Pharmaceutical Science.

Which Australian universities offer pharmacy?

Undergraduate Bachelor of Pharmacy programs are offered at Monash, University of Sydney, University of Queensland, University of Tasmania, University of Newcastle, University of South Australia, QUT, Curtin, UTS, Griffith, Charles Sturt, James Cook University, and University of Southern Queensland. The University of Melbourne offers a graduate-entry Doctor of Pharmacy only — no undergraduate pharmacy degree.

Disclaimer: ATAR cut-offs shift between years and offer rounds. The numbers above reflect 2024–2025 published data from individual university admissions pages and should be treated as indicative ranges, not fixed thresholds. Always verify current requirements with the university directly. This article is informational and does not constitute formal admissions advice.

To see where your current marks might land, try our ATAR calculator. If you want to understand the mechanics behind how your subjects turn into a score, our breakdown of the calculation process walks through it properly.

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