Where to Study Guides

Where to Study Pharmacy in Ireland

Where to study pharmacy in Ireland comes down to a small set of five-year integrated Master of Pharmacy (MPharm) degrees, all entered through the CAO at points near 600. This guide compares the PSI-accredited schools honestly, flags which programmes are brand new, explains the crucial difference between pharmacy and pharmaceutical science, and sets out the study-abroad and registration routes if the points are out of reach.

5-year
Integrated MPharm degree
4
PSI-accredited schools
~600
Typical CAO points

Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Science or Pharmacy Technician? Know the difference first

In Ireland, only three degrees lead directly to registration as a pharmacist: the five-year integrated Master of Pharmacy (MPharm) programmes at Trinity, UCC and RCSI, all accredited by the Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland (PSI). Alongside these sit two related but different tracks: Pharmaceutical Science degrees, which lead into Ireland’s enormous pharma manufacturing and research industry (not the dispensary), and Pharmacy Technician programmes, which qualify you to work in the pharmacy team supporting the pharmacist. All three tracks are covered on this page, because for many students the second and third are smarter starting points than chasing 600 points.

All Irish Pharmacy (MPharm) Programmes at a Glance

UNIVERSITY CAO CODE PROGRAMME AWARD YEARS 2025 R1
Trinity College Dublin TR072 Pharmacy MPharm (L9) 5 601*
University College Cork CK703 Pharmacy MPharm (L9) 5 602
RCSI University of Medicine & Health Sciences RC005 Pharmacy MPharm (L9) 5 589*

Points shown are 2025 CAO Round 1 cut-offs; * means not all applicants on that score received offers (random selection). Verify at cao.ie/points. Free Fees covers the tuition element of Years 1 to 4 for eligible EU students; a separate fee applies to the fifth (MPharm) year at all three schools.

School-by-School Breakdown

TR072

Trinity College Dublin

Ranked in the QS world top 40 for Pharmacy & Pharmacology (2025)
2025 Points (R1)
601* (random selection applied)
Duration
5 years, integrated B.Sc. (Pharm.) + MPharm, 75 places
Structure
Professional placements woven through Years 2, 4 and 5, plus a supervised research project that can be completed abroad
Standout Features
Research space in the Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute and the Boots Unit, a purpose-built dispensing and communication skills space. Entry needs O4/H6 Maths, H4 Chemistry and a H4 second science subject
CK703

University College Cork

Science and practice integrated, with an eight-month final-year placement
2025 Points (R1)
602
Duration
5 years, integrated BPharm + MPharm, approx. 74 EU places
Structure
Four core strands: pharmaceutical and medicinal chemistry, formulation design, drug action in the body, and the practice of pharmacy
Standout Features
Hands-on learning with industry and healthcare site visits and multiple placements, capped by an eight-month final-year placement. Entry needs H4 Chemistry and H4 in Physics or Biology
RC005

RCSI University of Medicine & Health Sciences

A clinically focused MPharm inside a dedicated health sciences university
2025 Points (R1)
589* (random selection applied)
Duration
5 years, integrated BSc Pharmacy + MPharm
Structure
Placements in all five years: a two-week community placement in Year 2, four months in Year 4 and an eight-month patient-facing placement in Year 5, ending with the Professional Registration Examination
Standout Features
Patient-centred care lab, one of Europe’s largest clinical simulation facilities, prescribing skills in the curriculum, and a Mental Health First Aid certificate built into the programme

Pharmaceutical Science & Pharmacy Technician Routes

These programmes do not lead to pharmacist registration, but they lead somewhere just as real: Ireland is one of the largest pharmaceutical exporting countries in the world, and its manufacturing, quality and regulatory teams are built on exactly these degrees. Technician programmes also open a laddered route back towards the MPharm.

What actually matters in this field

Only a PSI-accredited MPharm makes you a pharmacist, so if the dispensary or hospital ward is the goal, the three programmes above are the destination. But if what excites you is medicines themselves, how they are discovered, made, tested and regulated, no licence is required: pharmaceutical science graduates walk into the industry directly, and employers care far more about your laboratory skills, placement experience and quality-systems knowledge than about the CAO points printed beside your course.

InstitutionCAO CodeProgrammeLevelDuration2025 R1 PointsLocation
Maynooth University MH210 Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Chemistry L8 4 yrs 441 Maynooth, Co. Kildare
TU Dublin TU875 Pharmaceutical Healthcare L8 4 yrs 388 Grangegorman, Dublin
TU876 Pharmaceutical Science L8 4 yrs 371 Tallaght, Dublin
TU763 Pharmaceutical Science L7 3 yrs Check CAO Tallaght, Dublin
TU654 Pharmacy Technician Studies L6 2 yrs 288 Grangegorman, Dublin
Dundalk IT DK783 Science - Pharmaceutical Science L7 3 yrs 192 Dundalk, Co. Louth
Munster TU MT682 Pharmacy Technician L6 2 yrs 231 Tralee, Co. Kerry
TU of the Shannon US660 Pharmacy Technician L6 2 yrs 226 Athlone, Co. Westmeath
South East TU SE511 Pharmaceutical Science L7 3 yrs Check CAO Waterford

Points shown are 2025 CAO Round 1 cut-offs. Several technological universities and ATU also run pharmaceutical science and pharmacy technician programmes not listed here; search cao.ie/courses for the full list in your region.

TU875 · TU876 · TU763 · TU654

TU Dublin

The biggest pharma-course cluster outside the MPharm schools
2025 Points (R1)
288 to 388 across the cluster
Structure
Level 6 technician, Level 7 and Level 8 pharmaceutical science, with 6 to 8 month industry placements and an on-campus pharmaceutical pilot plant
Standout Features
A genuine ladder: Pharmacy Technician (TU654) students who achieve an Upper Merit are eligible to transfer into the Level 8 Pharmaceutical Healthcare degree (TU875)
MH210

Maynooth University

Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Chemistry in a research university
2025 Points (R1)
441
Duration
4 years, Level 8 BSc
Standout Features
Chemistry-led route into drug discovery, analysis and quality roles, and a strong platform for postgraduate research in the pharma sector
DK783 · SE511

Dundalk IT & South East TU

Regional Level 7 pharmaceutical science with add-on Level 8 routes
2025 Points (R1)
From 192 (DK783)
Structure
3-year Level 7 degrees with progression to Level 8 add-on years, placing graduates into the pharma plants of the North East and South East
Standout Features
Among the most accessible points-routes into the pharmaceutical industry anywhere in the country
MT682 · US660 · TU654

Pharmacy Technician Programmes

Two years to a real pharmacy job, in Tralee, Athlone or Dublin
2025 Points (R1)
226 to 288
Duration
2 years, Level 6 Higher Certificate
Standout Features
Qualified technicians work in community and hospital pharmacies nationwide, and a technician qualification plus three years of experience opens a dedicated entry route to the RCSI MPharm
Your CAO points are not your career ceiling

The three MPharm programmes sat between 589 and 602 points in 2025, and that number frightens off students who would make excellent pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists. Look at the ladder instead: a 226-point technician course leads to a real job in two years, a 192-point Level 7 leads into a global industry, and both keep the road back to the MPharm open through transfer, mature entry and dedicated technician-entry routes. In this field, more than most, every rung is a career in its own right.

Alternative Pathways into Pharmacy

The Leaving Cert points race is only one door. These four routes lead to the same PSI register, or to the same industry, on a different timetable.

ROUTE 1

PLC / QQI Level 5

The further education stepping stone
1
Take a QQI Level 5 in Pharmacy Assistant (5M4468) or Applied Science
One year in a local further education college, with pharmacy-specific modules and work experience.
2
Progress via the Higher Education Links Scheme
QQI Level 5 Pharmacy Assistant links to pharmacy technician programmes (TU Dublin, TUS, MTU, SETU, ATU) and to pharmaceutical science at TU Dublin Tallaght.
3
Be honest about the MPharm
Direct QQI entry to the three MPharm degrees is effectively not available, so treat the QQI year as the first rung of a ladder, not a shortcut to the register.
ROUTE 2

Technician & Transfer Ladder

Start lower, climb with results and experience
1
Qualify as a pharmacy technician (Level 6, 2 years)
TU654 at 288 points, MT682 at 231 or US660 at 226 in 2025, and you are employable in a pharmacy on graduation.
2
Transfer upward inside the system
TU654 students with an Upper Merit are eligible to transfer into TU875 Pharmaceutical Healthcare (Level 8), and Level 7 graduates can take Level 8 add-on years.
3
The technician-to-pharmacist route
RCSI runs a dedicated entry route to its MPharm for qualified Level 6 pharmacy technicians aged 23+ with at least three years of post-qualification experience, applied for directly with an interview.
ROUTE 3

Mature Entry (23+)

Your Leaving Cert year does not define you
1
Be 23 on 1 January of the year of entry
Mature applicants are assessed on relevant life, work and educational experience rather than points alone.
2
Apply the right way for each school
Trinity and UCC mature applications go through the CAO by 1 February; UCC asks for a statement of interest and may interview. RCSI mature applicants apply directly to RCSI between 1 November and 15 January, with an interview.
3
Mind the science requirements
UCC still requires H4 Chemistry and H4 Physics or Biology (or equivalent) from mature applicants, and RCSI accepts approved Access to Science programmes, so plan a science refresher if needed.
ROUTE 4

Graduate Entry

Already hold a degree? There is a route for you too
1
RCSI Graduate Entry to the MPharm
A minimum 2H2 in a Level 8 honours degree, applied for directly to RCSI. Note that graduate entrants are not covered by Free Fees and pay EU fees for the programme.
2
Reapply through the CAO
Graduates can also compete again on Leaving Cert points for TR072 or CK703; your original results still count.
3
Industry conversion instead
Science and engineering graduates can pivot into pharma through taught masters in pharmaceutical science, regulatory affairs or biopharmaceutical processing at several Irish universities, with no licence required.
Every path leads to the same finish line

Whether you arrive at the MPharm straight from sixth year, after a technician qualification, as a mature student or as a graduate, you sit the same professional examinations and join the same PSI register. Nobody standing at the pharmacy counter will ever ask which door you came in through.

Studying Pharmacy in Europe

English-taught pharmacy degrees exist in Europe, mostly at long-established medical universities in Poland, Czechia, Hungary and the Baltics. Unlike some other fields, the Netherlands teaches pharmacy in Dutch only, so the map looks different for this subject.

Critical: check the route back to the Irish register before you commit

Pharmacy is one of the professions covered by automatic EU recognition under Directive 2005/36/EC, which means a pharmacy qualification that meets the EU training requirements and is listed for that member state can be recognised by the PSI without re-training. But the detail matters: the specific programme must be the recognised one for that country, EU internship requirements must be met, and UK degrees no longer benefit from automatic recognition since Brexit (a separate PSI recognition process applies). Always confirm your exact programme with the PSI before accepting a place, and remember that practising in Ireland means counselling patients in English while your clinical training may have happened elsewhere.

Know the fee picture

Unlike some subjects, most English-taught pharmacy programmes in Europe are fee-paying international tracks, even for EU students. Fees vary widely by university, so compare the five-year total against the Irish route before deciding.

Taught in English

Lectures, labs and exams run fully in English, though patient-facing placements usually require some local language, which universities support with classes.

Entry on your terms

Admission is typically by science entrance exam or school results in chemistry and biology rather than CAO points, which suits strong science students who missed 600 points.

POLAND

Medical University of Warsaw

Long-running English-division pharmacy programme
Duration
5.5 years including internship
Irish recognition note
Confirm the English-division award is the recognised Polish qualification with the PSI
CZECHIA

Charles University

Faculty of Pharmacy in Hradec Králové
Duration
5 years, English-taught Master of Pharmacy
Irish recognition note
One of Europe’s oldest universities; verify the programme and internship meet EU directive requirements via the PSI
HUNGARY

University of Szeged

English-language PharmD-style pharmacy training
Duration
5 years, English-taught
Irish recognition note
Hungarian pharmacy awards fall under the EU directive; confirm your specific programme with the PSI before enrolling
Beyond these three

The Lithuanian University of Health Sciences in Kaunas, Semmelweis University in Budapest and several other Central European medical universities also run English-taught pharmacy degrees. The UK offers four-year MPharm programmes, but since Brexit these no longer carry automatic EU recognition, so a UK graduate returning to Ireland goes through the PSI recognition process for third-country qualifications. Whatever you choose, get the recognition answer in writing from the PSI first.

Becoming a Registered Pharmacist

Pharmacy is a regulated profession. The Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland (PSI) accredits the degrees, sets the competency standards and holds the register you must join before you can practise. Here is how the journey actually works.

THE STANDARD ROUTE

The Five-Year Integrated MPharm

Degree, placements and registration in one continuous programme
1
Years 1 to 4: the BSc phase
Integrated science and practice at Trinity, UCC or RCSI, with experiential placements coordinated nationally through APPEL, the shared placement body for all three schools.
2
Year 4: the four-month placement
An extended placement in community, hospital, industry or a regulatory setting, after which you hold the BSc award and progress to the Masters year.
3
Year 5: the MPharm year
An eight-month patient-facing placement running roughly January to August, alongside campus teaching, culminating in the professional registration examination.
4
Register with the PSI
With the MPharm and the registration exam complete, you apply to join the PSI register and can practise as a pharmacist in Ireland, with your qualification also recognised across the EU.
OTHER DOORS TO THE SAME REGISTER

Recognition & Alternative Entry Routes

Graduate, technician, EU-qualified and third-country routes
1
Graduate entry
RCSI admits graduates with at least a 2H2 honours degree directly into the MPharm; graduate entrants pay EU fees rather than Free Fees.
2
Pharmacy technician entry
A Level 6 technician qualification plus three years of post-qualification experience opens a dedicated RCSI entry route, applied for directly with interview.
3
EU-qualified pharmacists
Qualifications meeting Directive 2005/36/EC benefit from automatic recognition; the PSI processes the registration.
4
UK and non-EU qualifications
Since Brexit, UK degrees join other third-country qualifications in the PSI recognition process, which can involve assessments and adaptation before registration.
What It Costs to Qualify
StageWhat you payNotes
Years 1 to 4 (BSc phase) Student contribution of up to €3,000 per year Tuition is covered by the Free Fees Initiative for eligible EU students at all three schools; SUSI grant holders may have the contribution covered too. Recent budgets have reduced the contribution, so check the current figure.
Year 5 (MPharm year) A separate fee set by each school The Masters year is not covered by Free Fees. As a guide, RCSI estimates approximately €9,000 for students entering in 2026; confirm the current figure with each school and check SUSI postgraduate supports.
PSI examination and registration Exam and first registration fees Set by the PSI and updated periodically; see thepsi.ie for current fees.
Financial supports exist at every stage

SUSI grants cover the student contribution and provide maintenance for eligible families across the BSc years, and postgraduate fee supports may apply to the MPharm year. The Year 5 placement is a structured working placement, and university access programmes (HEAR and DARE) offer reduced-points entry and supports at all three schools. Do not rule the profession out on cost before checking what you qualify for.

Salary & Job Market

€45,000 to €58,000
Newly Qualified Pharmacist

Indicative starting range in community pharmacy, with hospital basic grades on published HSE scales. Demand for pharmacists is consistently strong nationwide.

€60,000 to €85,000
Experienced / Supervising Pharmacist

Supervising and managing pharmacists, senior hospital grades and experienced industry pharmacists typically sit in this band.

€90,000+
Owner, Specialist & Industry Leadership

Pharmacy owners, chief hospital pharmacists and senior pharma industry and regulatory leaders can earn well beyond this, with ownership carrying business risk as well as reward.

Where Pharmacy Graduates Work
Community Pharmacy

The largest employer of pharmacists, from independents to national chains, with growing clinical roles in vaccination, minor ailments and prescribing.

Hospital & Clinical

Ward-based clinical pharmacy, aseptic compounding, medication safety and specialist roles across public and private hospitals.

Industry & Regulation

Ireland hosts most of the world’s leading pharmaceutical companies, creating roles in manufacturing, quality, medical affairs, regulatory bodies and research for pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists alike.

Salary figures are indicative ranges drawn from published Irish pharmacy and healthcare recruitment salary guides and vary by employer, location, setting and experience.

Application & Qualification Timeline

From first researching the course to signing the PSI register, here is the full journey in order.

TY & 5th YearResearch phase

Visit open days at Trinity, UCC and RCSI, and check the subject requirements early: Chemistry at H4 is essential everywhere, plus a second science. Try to arrange work experience in a local pharmacy; it will sharpen your decision more than any prospectus.

CAO Opens5 November

The CAO application opens for the following September. RCSI mature-entry, graduate-entry and technician-entry applicants apply directly to RCSI from 1 November.

Early Bird Deadline20 January, 5pm

Apply by this date for the discounted application fee. You can still change everything later, so get the application in early.

Critical Deadline1 February, 5pm

The main CAO deadline, and the hard deadline for mature applicants and for restricted-entry considerations. RCSI direct applications for alternative entry routes close on 15 January.

Change of MindMay to 1 July, 5pm

Reorder your choices free of charge. This is the moment to be honest about points expectations and make sure a pharmaceutical science or technician course sits below the MPharm codes on your list.

Results & OffersLate August

Leaving Cert results arrive, followed by CAO Round 1 offers. Pharmacy points can involve random selection at the cut-off, so an asterisked score means not everyone on that number got a place.

Years 1 to 4The BSc phase

Integrated science and practice, with APPEL-coordinated placements building from short community placements to the extended four-month Year 4 placement in community, hospital or industry.

Year 5The MPharm year

Campus teaching, then an eight-month patient-facing placement from around January to August, finishing with the professional registration examination. Remember this year carries its own fee.

QualifiedJoin the PSI register

Register with the Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland and begin practising, roughly five years and one summer after opening your CAO account. Continuing professional development runs for the rest of your career through the Irish Institute of Pharmacy.

How to Choose Your Pharmacy Programme

All three MPharm degrees reach the same register

Trinity, UCC and RCSI graduates all join the same PSI register with the same professional standing. Choose on the things that differ: city and campus life, class size, placement structure, research opportunities and the flavour of the school, not on a perceived pecking order.

Chemistry H4 is the real gatekeeper

Every Irish pharmacy programme requires H4 Chemistry, plus a H4 second science (Physics or Biology at UCC; a wider list at Trinity), and Trinity also asks for O4/H6 Maths. Lock these subjects in for senior cycle before you worry about the points, because without them the points are irrelevant.

Pharmacist, scientist or technician: name the actual job

If it is patients and medicines-in-use you love, that is the pharmacist and the MPharm. If it is the molecules, the manufacturing and the laboratory, pharmaceutical science gets you there for hundreds of points fewer. If you want to be working in a pharmacy within two years, the technician route is the direct road. Chasing 600 points for the wrong job is the most expensive mistake on this page.

Build the ladder into your CAO list

Put the three MPharm codes at the top in your genuine order of preference, then pharmaceutical science (Level 8, then Level 7), then a technician course. Every rung is a good outcome, and the transfer, mature and technician-entry routes mean an offer further down the list is a detour, not a dead end.

Remember

There is no single best place to study pharmacy in Ireland. All three schools produce pharmacists who stand behind the same counters, work the same hospital wards and lead the same companies. What separates graduates five years on is not the crest on the degree; it is the placements they threw themselves into, the patients they learned to listen to, and the professional curiosity they kept after the exams ended. Pick the programme where you will do those things best.

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