What Is the OPRA Exam, and Why Does It Exist?
The OPRA, Overseas Pharmacists Readiness Assessment, is the mandatory assessment for international pharmacists who want to practise in Australia. OPRA is designed to assess clinical decision-making, communication, and practical pharmacy skills relevant to the Australian healthcare system.
In short, Australia is not just checking if you know pharmacology. It is checking if you can think on your feet in a real pharmacy.
The Full Cost of the OPRA Pathway
Here is what you are actually paying before you even land in Australia.
| Step | Cost (AUD) | Cost (INR approx.) |
| Eligibility Check | AUD 810 | ₹55,558 |
| OPRA Exam | AUD 2,245 | ₹1,53,985 |
| Skills Assessment Outcome | AUD 300 | ₹20,577 |
| Total | AUD 3,355 | ₹2,30,120 |
These are the official APC fees. On top of this, factor in your preparation course costs, which can vary widely, any travel to a Pearson VUE test centre if one is not in your city, and AHPRA provisional registration fees once you clear the exam.
Intern pharmacists completing their internship in Australia can expect to earn between AUD 65,000 to just over AUD 75,000 annually. Once you clear both your intern written and oral exams and get full general registration, an average Australian pharmacist with general registration can expect an annual salary between AUD 80,000 and AUD 100,000, depending on location and job setting. With seniority, this can increase to anywhere between AUD 100,000 and AUD 140,000.
The Payback Period, How Fast Do You Recover the Investment?
Let’s do the math properly.
Your total pre-arrival investment is approximately AUD 3,355 in APC fees alone. Add conservatively AUD 1,500 to 2,000 for preparation. Total is around AUD 5,000.
As a registered pharmacist in Australia, you can expect to earn roughly AUD 95,000 to AUD 110,000. Even at the lower end of the intern salary, AUD 65,000, you recover your entire pre-arrival investment in less than one month of working.
That is the number that stops most Indian pharmacists mid-scroll.
For context, the average pharmacist salary in India sits significantly below what a first-year intern pharmacist earns in Australia. The gap is not slight, it is generational. Most pharmacists who make the move recover their full OPRA investment within weeks, not years.
Who Is the OPRA Worth It For?
| You ARE the right candidate if… | You might want to reconsider if… |
| You want to settle in Australia long-term | You are planning to return to India within 2 to 3 years |
| You are willing to relocate, at least initially | You cannot commit 4 to 6 months to serious preparation |
| You have clinical pharmacy experience | Your degree was heavily theoretical with limited patient exposure |
| You are open to regional or rural postings for faster PR | You expect to land in Sydney or Melbourne immediately |
| Your family is on board with relocation | You are the primary caregiver with no support system abroad |
The Non-Money Factors That Actually Matter
This is where the real decision gets made.
Permanent Residency
After clearing OPRA, you become eligible for the Subclass 190 State Nominated PR Visa, which is a direct PR path, or the Subclass 491 Regional Visa, with which you can get PR after 3 years. Australia is experiencing a significant shortage of pharmacists, making it an attractive destination for professionals worldwide. One key incentive is the opportunity for permanent residence after a designated period of practice. For Indian pharmacists, this is often the bigger prize, not just the salary.
Education for your children
Public school education in Australia is free for PR holders. If you have children or are planning to, this is a significant long-term saving that never shows up in salary comparisons.
Work-life balance
Pharmacists in America generally earn higher salaries, but working in Australia offers a better work-life balance. Regulated working hours, proper leave entitlements, and a culture that respects off-time are real differences that Indian pharmacists often mention after making the move.
Career growth
Pharmacy managers in Australia often cross AUD 120,000, and hospital pharmacists in senior roles in oncology, ICU, or clinical specialisation can reach AUD 140,000 to 150,000. The ceiling is real and reachable.
The Honest Hard Parts
No honest breakdown skips this section.
The exam itself requires genuine preparation. The OPRA has a pass rate of nearly 80 percent, and with proper preparation, most candidates clear it. Experts recommend starting 4 to 6 months before the exam date. The exam has 120 questions in 150 minutes with no breaks, meaning you need to maintain focus and mental stamina throughout. It is not impossible, but it is not a formality either.
The internship adds a year. After clearing OPRA and getting provisional registration, the internship period covers a minimum of 1,575 hours, which usually takes about 6 to 12 months. You will be working under supervision, not independently. That is a real adjustment for pharmacists with years of experience back home.
Relocation is non-negotiable, at least for the internship phase. You can prepare and clear OPRA from India, but the supervised practice has to happen on Australian soil. The earlier you accept this, the better your planning will be.
Regional placements may be required. If you want faster PR or better sponsorship options, smaller towns and regional areas often have more openings. Not everyone is ready for that, and that is a valid consideration.
Dr. Akram’s Perspective, What It Looks Like From Australia
When Dr. Akram first moved to Australia, something struck him immediately. He kept meeting pharmacists, qualified and experienced, driving cabs and working supermarket checkouts. Not because they weren’t good enough, but because the registration pathway felt too complicated to navigate alone.
That’s what pushed him to start helping.
“I knew exactly what they were capable of. They just needed someone to show them the way.”
Now his phone rings for a different reason. Pharmacists calling to say they cleared the OPRA, finished their internship, received their first Australian salary. Some are writing from their new apartments. Some mention their kids just started school.
That’s the whole point.
So, Is the OPRA Worth It?
If you are an Indian pharmacist who wants a stable career, a genuine PR pathway, and a salary that reflects your education and effort, the OPRA pathway is one of the clearest routes available to you right now. The numbers work. The demand is real. The pathway is structured.
It is not easy. It is not quick. And it is not for everyone.
But for the pharmacist who is ready to invest the time and preparation, the return, financial and otherwise, is hard to argue with.
Ready to find out if you are eligible?
The first step costs nothing. Check your eligibility with Academically’s free assessment and find out exactly where you stand before you spend a single rupee.