After completing one year of internship in Australia, a registered pharmacist can earn a competitive full-time salary, often ranging from AUD 70,000 to AUD 90,000 per year, depending on location and role. For many interns, this is the moment when the long journey finally starts to feel worth it.
Clearing the intern pharmacy written exam marks a turning point. You are no longer required to work under supervision as you did during your internship. Instead, you become eligible to apply for general registration with AHPRA, allowing you to practise independently as a pharmacist in Australia.
This is exactly why the intern pharmacy written exam carries so much weight. It is not just another assessment. It is the final academic step that stands between supervised training and full professional freedom. The exam does not test how much you can memorise. It confirms whether your knowledge, judgment, and decision-making are safe, structured, and suitable for independent pharmacy practice in Australia.
This blog focuses on practical preparation for the pharmacy written exam. Preparation that fits realistically around internship life and reflects how the exam is actually assessed.
What the Intern Pharmacy Written Exam Is Designed to Do
The written exam is part of Australia’s final quality check before full registration. Its purpose is simple: to ensure that interns can apply knowledge safely, consistently, and professionally.
Rather than asking for isolated facts, the exam asks you to:
- Interpret clinical scenarios realistically
- Make decisions using accepted Australian practice standards
- Explain your reasoning clearly and logically
- Recognise when safety, law, or ethics should override convenience
This is why candidates who rely purely on memorisation often struggle, while those with strong practical reasoning usually perform better.
Why This Exam Feels Harder Than Expected
Many interns assume that daily work experience will automatically prepare them. While experience helps, the exam introduces one additional challenge: written justification.
At work, decisions happen quickly and often verbally. In the exam, everything must be explained on paper. If your reasoning is not visible to the marker, it cannot be rewarded.
This is the gap that preparation must address.
When to Start Preparing (and Why Timing Matters)
There is no benefit in starting months in advance with an unfocused study. At the same time, last-minute preparation almost always increases anxiety.
For most interns, six to eight weeks of steady preparation is enough when done correctly.
What matters most during this period is:
- Regular exposure to exam-style thinking
- Practising written responses early
- Reviewing and refining how you explain decisions
Short, consistent effort works better than irregular long sessions.
Studying While Working Full-Time as an Intern
Internship schedules are demanding, and any study plan that ignores fatigue is unrealistic.
A sustainable approach includes:
- Short daily study blocks
- Fewer topics studied more thoroughly
- Regular writing practice instead of endless reading
Many interns succeed with 60 to 90 minutes of focused study on most days, supported by lighter review on busier shifts.
Clinical Topics You Must Be Able to Explain Clearly
The intern pharmacy written exam focuses on conditions seen regularly in Australian pharmacy practice.
You should be comfortable writing about:
- Hypertension and cardiovascular risk management
- Diabetes, including insulin use and patient counselling
- Common infections and appropriate antibiotic selection
- Asthma and COPD management
- Pain management and medication safety
Knowing the guidelines is not enough. You must explain why a particular option is suitable for the patient described.
OTC and Primary Care Scenarios Are High-Value Areas
Over-the-counter scenarios are common in the exam because they reflect frontline pharmacy responsibility.
Markers want to see that you can:
- Take a relevant history
- Identify warning signs
- Choose safe options
- Refer appropriately when needed
A cautious, patient-centred response is always preferable to an overconfident one.
Pharmacy Law and Ethics: How to Approach These Questions
Law and ethics questions rarely ask you to quote legislation. Instead, they test how you apply professional judgment.
Strong answers show awareness of:
- Medicine scheduling and supply limits
- Documentation and record-keeping
- Confidentiality and consent
- Professional accountability
Always anchor your reasoning in patient safety and compliance.
How to Structure Answers So They Are Easy to Mark
Markers read many scripts under time pressure. A clear structure helps them follow your thinking.
A practical structure includes:
- Identifying the main issue
- Considering patient-specific factors
- Recommending a course of action
- Justifying that recommendation
- Addressing safety and follow-up
This mirrors how pharmacists reason in practice.
Why Writing Practice Is Essential
Many interns delay writing practice because early answers feel uncomfortable. This delay often becomes the biggest mistake.
Writing exposes:
- Gaps in reasoning
- Poor organisation
- Over-reliance on assumptions
Start writing full answers early, even if they are imperfect. Improvement comes quickly with repetition.
Using Your Internship Experience as Preparation
Are you currently working under supervision for your 1-year internship? Then know that your pharmacy job already contains exam material.
Each time you counsel a patient or resolve a clinical issue, ask yourself:
- Why did I choose this option?
- What risks did I consider?
- What alternatives did I reject?
Writing these thoughts later helps bridge real practice and exam expectations.
Common Reasons Interns Lose Marks
Marks are often lost due to:
- Unstructured answers
- Irrelevant detail
- Missing safety considerations
- Ignoring legal context
- Poor time management
Practising under exam conditions helps avoid these issues.
How to Use the Final Week Effectively
The final week should focus on consolidation, not new content.
Use this time to:
- Review previous written answers
- Refine structure and clarity
- Identify recurring mistakes
- Rest adequately
Confidence comes from familiarity and calm execution.
Concluding with…
How Academically Helps Pharmacy Interns Prepare
At Academically, we work with interns who often feel capable at work but are uncertain about the written exam. Our preparation focuses on:
- Exam-relevant clinical reasoning
- Structured answer-writing techniques
- Feedback on written responses
- Clear understanding of marking expectations
The goal is not to memorise more, but to think and write with clarity.