Did you know... Ireland’s pharmaceutical industry has grown at a 3.6% CAGR between 2021 and 2026? Yes, you heard it right. It underscores a sector that continues to expand as the country’s pharmacy system evolves to meet growing healthcare demand. The Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland (PSI) supports an “integrated and expanding health service” with new workforce reports and policy changes further shaping the global pharmacy career landscape. That growth makes the PSI Exam Ireland 2026 pathway highly relevant. In this blog, we have detailed everything about the license exam, TCQR process, eligibility, syllabus, fees and exam format. Let's get informed.
€80,678
Average pharmacist salary in Ireland
2,000+
Active pharmacist vacancies
4 Stages
TCQR recognition pathway
What Is the PSI Exam of Ireland?
The PSI exam of Ireland in 2026 is not a single test but the Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland’s Third Country Qualification Recognition (TCQR) process for pharmacists trained outside the EU/EEA.
It assesses whether your pharmacy degree, training, and professional experience are equivalent to Irish standards before you can register to practice in Ireland. Depending on the Stage 2 outcome, you may be required to sit the PSI Equivalence Examination, which can include an MCQ paper and an OSCE.
The exam focuses on pharmacology, pharmacy practice, calculations, Irish pharmacy law, ethics, patient counselling, and clinical decision-making.
In short, the PSI exam is the gateway that determines whether an internationally qualified pharmacist can move forward to registration in Ireland with PSI approval.
The TCQR Process: Step-by-Step Overview
The TCQR process has four distinct stages. Understanding exactly what happens at each stage and what determines your path is critical to planning your preparation effectively.
TCQR Recognition Pathway: PSI Ireland 2026
Stage 1: Application Submission & Internal Review
PSI checks your eligibility and verifies that all required documents have been submitted. Applications are classified as Valid & Complete, Incomplete (6-month window to complete), or Invalid.
Fee: €500 (non-refundable)
Stage 2: Holistic Assessment by Independent Assessors
External assessors evaluate your qualifications across three dimensions: Input (your education and training), Quality (the regulatory system and standards in your home country), and Output (your post-qualification experience and CPD). This determines your pathway.
Fee: €1,000 · Appeal fee: €300
Stage 3: Equivalence Examination (Path B only)
Candidates sit the MCQ (Pharmacology & Pharmacy Practice, Basic Sciences, Pharmaceutical Calculations) and/or OSCE (practical skills, patient counselling, Irish practice scenarios). You may be required to sit one or both components depending on the specific gaps identified.
Fee: €3,000
Stage 4: Certificate of Qualification Appropriate for Practice
Issued by PSI upon successful completion of all required stages. This certificate enables you to apply for full pharmacist registration in Ireland. First registration fees apply separately (see Fees section below).
Note: Separate registration fees apply from May 2026
What Actually Determines Path A vs. Path B?
This is the question every applicant wants answered and one that most coaching sites gloss over. The holistic assessors are not simply reading your transcripts.
They are making a professional judgment across three criteria simultaneously:
Input: The academic content, duration, and depth of your pharmacy degree. Does your curriculum substantially cover the domains that a 5-year Irish MPharm (Level 9 NFQ) would? Are the clinical training hours comparable?
Quality: How does the regulatory and education system in your home country compare to Ireland's? Countries with robust, internationally recognised pharmacy regulatory frameworks are assessed more favourably here.
Output: Your post-qualification experience; how long you have been practicing, in what settings, what CPD you have undertaken, and whether that practice bridges any gaps identified in the Input assessment.
The majority of non-EU applicants, particularly those from India with BPharm or PharmD qualifications, are placed on Path B. This is not a reflection of their competence but of the structural differences between training systems. Path A is more likely for candidates with extensive post-qualification hospital or clinical experience and qualifications from systems that closely mirror the Irish MPharm in scope and depth.
Eligibility Criteria for PSI TCQR 2026
Meeting the eligibility criteria correctly is essential. Incomplete or incorrect applications are a common reason for delays. Here is the full picture that you can bookmark:
Core Requirements
- Hold a pharmacy qualification from a non-EU/EEA country
- Completed full pharmacy education and training as required in your qualifying country, with a minimum
- 5-year pharmacy programme (typically 4-4.5 years academic + at least 6 months supervised practical training)
- Your qualification must entitle you to practice as a pharmacist in the country where it was obtained
- Must have obtained official registration from the pharmacy council of home country
- Hold a valid Certificate of Professional Status / Good Standing Certificate from your home regulator (this is submitted directly by the authority, not by you)
Note on Practical Training
Industrial & Academic Experience Does Not Count
Only internship or practical training completed in a community pharmacy or hospital pharmacy setting satisfies the practical training requirement. Experience in the pharmaceutical industry, academia, regulatory bodies, or research will not be counted. This is a common gap for Indian PharmD graduates who completed rotations in industry settings.
English Language Requirements
English proficiency is not required at the TCQR application stage. It becomes mandatory only when you apply for full PSI pharmacist registration after receiving your Certificate of Qualification. The accepted tests and minimum scores are:
Test | Minimum Score / Grade Required | Notes |
IELTS Academic | 7.0 overall (no band below 6.5) | Most widely accepted |
TOEFL iBT | 95 overall | Accepted in prominent countries |
OET (Pharmacy) | Grade B (350) in all sub-tests | Healthcare-specific; recommended |
Cambridge English CAE (C1) | 180 overall |
|
A certificate from the State Examinations Commission confirming that the applicant has successfully completed at least six subjects in the Irish Leaving Certificate, including English or Irish.
Country-Specific Notes for Indian Applicants
Indian pharmacists are by far the largest group applying through the TCQR route. Several nuances are worth understanding:
- BPharm (4 years): A standard BPharm alone is unlikely to meet the 5-year threshold. Applicants will typically need an MPharm (additional 2 years) or a PharmD (6 years in India) to demonstrate the minimum training duration.
- PharmD (6 years including internship): Generally meets the duration requirement, but the holistic assessment will still evaluate whether the clinical content maps sufficiently to Irish MPharm competencies.
- Pharmacy Council of India (PCI) Registration: Your registration certificate and the Regulatory Data Form (TCQR4) must be submitted directly by PCI to PSI. Initiate this process early, it can take several weeks.
Complete Document Checklist for PSI TCQR Application
This is one of the most practical sections of this guide. A complete, well-compiled application avoids delays and signals professionalism to assessors. Every document listed here is required missing a single item can result in your application being classified as Incomplete.
- TCQR1 Application Form
Primary application form, completed and signed
- TCQR2 Statutory Declaration
Must be witnessed by a solicitor or commissioner for oaths
- TCQR3 Certificate of Identity Form
Identity verification, signed by an appropriate witness
- TCQR4 Regulatory Data Form
Completed and submitted directly by your home competent authority (e.g., Pharmacy Council of India). You cannot submit this yourself
- Copy of Birth Certificate
Certified copy; translate if not in English
- Copy of Passport
(all relevant pages)
- Copy of Marriage Certificate
If your name differs from your qualification documents
- Curriculum Vitae (CV)
Detailed, in reverse chronological order including all pharmacy employment
- Evidence of Formal Qualification as a Pharmacist
Degree certificate(s)
- Academic Transcripts & Programme Syllabus
Full subject-by-subject transcripts; a copy of your university's pharmacy programme syllabus is highly recommended to assist assessors
- Internship Certification / Letter
Official letter confirming community or hospital pharmacy internship (duration, site, supervisor details)
- Certificates of Professional Status
- Issued by your competent authority; confirms your registration status and good standing.
- Supporting Documents for Post-Qualification Experience, CPD & Training
- Employment letters, payslips, CPD certificates, any postgraduate qualifications
- Certified Translations
Any document not in English must be accompanied by a certified English translation
- Fee Payment Confirmation
Stage 1 application fee: €500
PRO TIP: CONTACT YOUR HOME REGULATOR EARLY
The TCQR4 Regulatory Data Form is the most common bottleneck. The Pharmacy Council of India and other regulators often have processing backlogs. Contact them as soon as you decide to apply. Allow at least 6–8 weeks for the form to be completed and sent to PSI. PSI gives incomplete applications a 6-month window, but you do not want to waste that time waiting on forms.
PSI Fees 2026: Complete Breakdown & Total Cost Planner
The single biggest weakness of almost every other blog on this topic is vague fee information. Here is a precise, complete breakdown, distinguishing between TCQR stage fees (which are set by PSI and have not changed for 2026) and first registration fees (which increased from 1 May 2026- given below).
TCQR Stage Fees
Stage | What It Covers | Fee (€) | Refundable? |
Stage 1 | Application submission and initial eligibility/completeness review | €500 | No |
Stage 2 | Holistic assessment by independent external assessors | €1,000 | No |
Stage 2 Appeal | Formal appeal of Stage 2 holistic assessment outcome | €300 | No |
Stage 3 (Path B only) | Equivalence Examination (MCQ and/or OSCE) | €3,000 | No |
Path A Total (TCQR only) | Stages 1 + 2 | €1,500 | - |
Path B Total (TCQR only) | Stages 1 + 2 + 3 | €4,500 | - |
Note: Fees are subject to change based on annual updates by council.
First Registration Fees [Updated 2026]
Fee Category | Pre-May 2026 Fee | From 1 May 2026 | Change |
Application for First Registration | €540 | €698 | +€158 |
Continued Registration (Annual) | Check psi.ie | See psi.ie | Phased increases |
Total Realistic Cost: Path A vs. Path B
Cost Item | Path A Estimate | Path B Estimate |
TCQR Stage Fees | €1,500 | €4,500 |
First Registration (from May 2026) | €698 | €698 |
Document apostilles/notarisation | €80–150 | €80–150 |
Document translations (if required) | €50–200 | €50–200 |
English language test (IELTS/OET) | €150–300 | €150–300 |
Preparation course / coaching (Path B) | — | €500–1,500+ |
Study materials & books | — | €100–250 |
Estimated Total Range | ~€2,500–2,850 | ~€6,000–7,500+ |
Note: Estimates only. Individual costs will vary based on country of origin, documentation requirements, and preparation choices. The table assumes the exam sitting fee covers one attempt. Re-sit fees, if applicable, are additional.
ALL PSI FEES ARE NON-REFUNDABLE
Every fee paid at every stage of the TCQR process is non-refundable. Ensure your application is complete and accurate before submitting to avoid losing the Stage 1 fee due to an invalid application.
PSI Exam Format: MCQ + OSCE Explained
If you are placed on Path B, you will be required to sit the Equivalence Examination. Depending on the specific deficiencies identified by the holistic assessors, you may need to complete the MCQ only, the OSCE only, or both. Here is a precise breakdown of each component.
Component 1: MCQ (Multiple Choice Questions)
The MCQ is a computer-based examination covering three core domains:
Domain | Topics Covered |
Pharmacology & Pharmacy Practice | Mechanisms of action, therapeutic uses, adverse drug reactions, drug interactions, patient counselling, dispensing, Irish pharmacy practice settings |
Basic Pharmaceutical Sciences & Properties of Medicines | Medicinal chemistry, pharmaceutics, pharmacokinetics, drug formulation, physicochemical properties of medicines |
Pharmaceutical Calculations | Dosage calculations, concentration expressions, IV fluid calculations, paediatric dosing, compounding calculations |
Component 2: OSCE (Objective Structured Clinical Examination)
The OSCE is an interactive, practical assessment and for most non-EU candidates, the more challenging of the two components. It assesses competence across real-world Irish pharmacy scenarios:
- Patient counselling: Medication advice, adherence support, lifestyle counselling in community settings
- Clinical decision-making: Assessment of prescriptions, identification of interactions or errors, referral decisions
- Communication skills: Professional communication with patients, carers, and healthcare colleagues using an Irish clinical communication framework
- Ethics and professionalism: Scenarios testing knowledge of the Pharmacy Act 2007, PSI Code of Conduct, patient confidentiality, and duty of care
- Patient safety: Recognising and responding appropriately to adverse events, near misses, and vulnerable patient scenarios
- Irish medicines and regulatory context: Knowledge of HSE formulary, Misuse of Drugs regulations, prescription requirements in Ireland.

"The OSCE is where most internationally trained pharmacists underestimate the challenge. It's not a test of whether you know pharmacology. It's a test of whether you can practice pharmacy based on Irish healthcare standards. The communication framework, the patient-centred approach, the specific legal context. These require deliberate preparation, not just revision of what you learned in your degree."
Dr. Akram Ahmad, Founder, Academically Global | B.Pharm, PharmD, PhD, Univeristy of Sydney, International Healthcare Career Coach
Exam Format & Delivery
The exam is conducted as a computer-proctored assessment in a supervised environment. Candidates can sit the exam remotely provided their environment meets PSI's technical and surveillance requirements. The examination is typically conducted over one to two days. PSI does not publish fixed annual exam dates publicly. Sittings are scheduled on a demand-driven basis following the completion of Stage 2 assessments. Once assigned to Path B, PSI will communicate next steps and examination scheduling.
Detailed Indicative Syllabus for TCQR Equivalence Exam 2026
The PSI Equivalence Examination syllabus is aligned with PSI's Accreditation Standards for the 5-year MPharm (Level 9 NFQ) and the PSI Core Competency Framework. The following breakdown synthesises that framework with the three MCQ domains and OSCE competency areas.
Pharmacology & Therapeutics
- Mechanisms of drug action
- Drug-receptor interactions
- Adverse drug reactions & interactions
- Clinical pharmacokinetics
- Drug use in special populations (pregnancy, paediatrics, renal/hepatic impairment)
- Therapeutic drug monitoring
MCQ + OSCE
Pharmaceutical Sciences
- Drug formulation types & routes of administration
- Physicochemical properties of drugs
- Medicinal chemistry basics
- Stability and storage of medicines
- Compounding & extemporaneous preparation
- Biopharmaceutics & bioavailability
MCQ Focus
Pharmaceutical Calculations
- Dose calculations (weight-based, BSA)
- Concentration & dilution problems
- IV infusion rates & fluid balance
- Paediatric & geriatric dosing
- Compounding calculations
- Error prevention in drug arithmetic
MCQ Focus
Clinical Pharmacy & Patient Care
- Pharmaceutical care planning
- Medicines reconciliation
- Prescription review and validation
- Screening for drug therapy problems
- Patient counselling techniques
- Adherence and self-management support
MCQ + OSCE
Irish Pharmacy Law, Ethics & Regulation
- Pharmacy Act 2007 (Ireland)
- Misuse of Drugs Acts & Regulations
- PSI Code of Conduct
- Medicinal Products (Prescription & Control) Regulations
- HSE pharmacy guidelines
- Data protection & patient confidentiality
MCQ + OSCE
Communication, Professionalism & Public Health
- Patient-centred communication
- Motivational interviewing & health literacy
- Interprofessional collaboration
- Public health pharmacy (smoking cessation, emergency contraception, vaccination)
- Patient safety frameworks
- Reflective practice & CPD
- OSCE Focus
IRISH LAW & ETHICS: THE MOST IMPORTANT SECTION
Candidates from India and other non-EU countries consistently underestimate how heavily the TCQR exam, particularly the OSCE, tests knowledge of Irish-specific pharmacy law and ethics. The Pharmacy Act 2007, Misuse of Drugs regulations, and HSE guidelines are not directly comparable to any other country's framework. Start studying these early.
Recommended Study Materials
Aulton's Pharmaceutics
The standard reference for pharmaceutical sciences and formulation.
Rang & Dale's Pharmacology
Core pharmacology textbook; widely referenced in PSI's suggested reading.
British National Formulary (BNF)
Widely used in Ireland for prescribing reference; online access available.
Preparation Tips, Study Plan & Resources for 2026
Once you receive your Stage 2 outcome and are placed on Path B, you will typically have a window to prepare before the next exam sitting. Most serious candidates allocate three to six months of focused preparation. Here is how to structure that time effectively.
Recommended Preparation Timeline
Month | Focus Area |
Month 1 | Master Irish pharmacy law, ethics, and the PSI regulatory framework. Begin pharmaceutical calculations daily practice. Understand the Pharmacy Act 2007 and Misuse of Drugs regulations inside out. |
Month 2 | Pharmacology deep-dive: mechanisms, ADRs, interactions, and therapeutics for major drug classes (cardiovascular, CNS, respiratory, diabetes, infections). Map to MCQ domain. |
Month 3 | Pharmaceutical sciences: formulations, pharmacokinetics, stability, compounding. Begin OSCE preparation: study patient counselling frameworks and communication scripts specific to Irish community/hospital pharmacy. |
Month 4 | Intensive mock practice: full MCQ timed sessions, OSCE station practice with peer/mentor feedback. Focus on weak areas identified in mocks. Practise calculations under exam pressure. |
Months 5–6 | Revision and consolidation. Mock grand tests. OSCE role-play sessions focusing on patient safety scenarios, ethical dilemmas, and drug counselling for common Irish pharmacy presentations. |
Self-Study vs. Structured Coaching: An Honest Assessment
Self-study is achievable for candidates with strong academic foundations and significant post-qualification clinical experience. The MCQ, in particular, draws on knowledge that many experienced pharmacists have. However, two areas are genuinely difficult to prepare for without external support:
Irish-specific law and regulations: The Pharmacy Act 2007 and associated regulations are not intuitive for non-Irish graduates. Without a guide, candidates often study the wrong framework or miss key nuances.
OSCE communication and clinical scenarios: The OSCE cannot be adequately prepared for through textbook revision alone. It requires practising structured interactions, receiving feedback on communication style, and getting comfortable with Irish pharmacy scenarios, patient presentations, HSE guidelines, referral pathways. This is where structured coaching with qualified practitioners adds measurable value.
ACADEMICALLY'S PSI PHARMACY EQUIVALENCE EXAM (TCQR) PROGRAMME
Academically offers a structured 4-month online preparation course for the PSI Equivalence Exam (TCQR), taught by PSI-qualified registered pharmacists in Ireland, including Dr. Juliya Susan Reji (PSI Qualified, Registered Pharmacist Ireland) and Hannah Cleary (MPharm, PhD Ireland, Registered Pharmacist Ireland). The programme includes 120 hours of live training, 3,000+ recall questions, study handouts, mock tests, and extended trainer access.
What's Next After Passing the Exam: PSI Registration, Jobs & Visa Pathway
Passing the Equivalence Examination (or being awarded Path A) is not the end of the process. It is the beginning of the final phase. Here is what happens next.
Applying for Full PSI Registration
After receiving your Certificate of Qualification Appropriate for Practice, you will need to submit a separate application for first registration as a pharmacist with PSI. This requires:
- Completed registration application form
- English language proficiency certificate (IELTS 7.0 / OET B / TOEFL 95 / Cambridge CAE 180)
- Valid Certificate of Qualification from PSI (TCQR)
- Good standing certificate (must be current, check validity date)
- Payment of first registration fee: €698 from 1 May 2026
- Professional indemnity insurance (required before practice)
CPD Obligations
From the date of registration, you are required to fulfil PSI's Continuing Professional Development (CPD) requirements. PSI operates an annual CPD cycle. All registered pharmacists must maintain a CPD portfolio accessible through PSI's online system. Failure to meet CPD requirements can affect continued registration.
The Job Market: Salaries & Demand
The Irish pharmacy job market remains strong for qualified pharmacists. Community pharmacy roles are the most common entry point, followed by hospital pharmacy (which often requires additional postgraduate training in Ireland for senior roles). The average pharmacist salary of €80,678 is a national average. Dublin and urban centres tend to offer higher packages, while rural areas (designated under the HSE) may offer additional incentives.
Visa & PR Pathway
Pharmacy is included on Ireland's Critical Skills Occupation List. This means that non-EU pharmacists with a job offer and the relevant qualifications can apply for a Critical Skills Employment Permit, which provides a faster route to Stamp 4 permission (allowing you to live and work in Ireland without an employer sponsor) compared to a standard work permit. It is important to note that PSI registration and the employment permit are separate processes. You cannot practice without both.
PSI TCQR vs. Other Global Pharmacy Licensing Exams
Feature | PSI TCQR (Ireland) | OPRA (Australia) | PEBC (Canada) | GPhC (UK) |
Exam Type | MCQ + OSCE (Path B only) | MCQ-2.5 hrs- 1 paper only (No OSCE) | OSCE (OSPE) + MCQ-based evaluating exam or EE. (No EE for CCAPP or ACPE accredited institutions) | OSPAP course of 1 year +GPhC Part I and Part II registration exam |
Total TCQR/Exam Fees | €4,500 (Path B, TCQR stages) | AUD 2,245 per attempt | ~CAD 2,000–4,000 | £1,600–2,500+ (OSCEs + registration) |
Immigration Pathway | Critical Skills List; Stamp 4 to PR | Skilled migration; state nomination | Express Entry; Provincial Nominee | Skilled Worker Visa; post-Brexit changes |
Average Salary | ~€80,678 / year | ~AUD 70,000-105,000+ | ~CAD 88,000-100,000 | ~£35,000-55,000 |
Preparation Timeline | 4-6 months (exam prep post-assessment) | 4-5 months | 6–12 months | 1-1.5 years |
Process Complexity | Moderate | Easy | High (especially due to H1B Visa issues) | High (especially post-Brexit changes) |
Note: This comparison is for general guidance only. All pathways have unique requirements and conditions. Fees, timelines, and immigration rules change regularly. Verify independently before making decisions.
To Conclude with...
The PSI TCQR process is one of the more rigorous pharmacist registration pathways globally. But it is also one of the most rewarding. Ireland's Critical Skills visa pathway, strong pharmacist salaries, and quality of life make it a compelling destination for internationally trained professionals.
The most important things to remember: start your document compilation early (especially the TCQR4 from your home regulator), understand that most non-EU candidates will be placed on Path B, take Irish pharmacy law and the OSCE seriously, and budget the full realistic cost rather than just the exam fees.
All the best for a successful pharmacy career in Ireland.