|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
What Is the OPRA Eligibility Check?
Before you can register for the Overseas Pharmacist Readiness Assessment (OPRA), you must first confirm that you meet the minimum requirements set by the Australian Pharmacy Council (APC). This is what the eligibility check is, a formal review of your academic qualifications and background to determine whether you are permitted to sit the exam.
Think of it as the gate before the gate. Passing the eligibility check does not mean you have passed OPRA. It simply means APC has confirmed you qualify to attempt it.
The good news: once your eligibility is approved, it does not expire. You will never need to go through this step again, regardless of how many sittings you attempt or how much time passes between applications.
Who Is Eligible for the OPRA Exam in 2026?
The OPRA exam is designed for internationally trained pharmacists who did not obtain their degree from one of the following countries:
- Australia
- Canada
- Ireland
- New Zealand
- United Kingdom
- United States of America
If your pharmacy qualification is from any country outside this list, you are required to sit OPRA as part of the skills assessment pathway for Australian or New Zealand registration.
General eligibility requirements:
- Hold a pharmacy degree (BPharm, MPharm, PharmD or equivalent)
- Degree must meet the minimum academic duration requirements (see below)
- Hold a valid passport
- Meet English language proficiency requirements (if applicable)
What Pharmacy Degrees Are Accepted for OPRA?
APC assesses your degree against a minimum academic equivalency standard. Here is how it breaks down:
Accepted degree types include BPharm, MPharm, PharmD, and equivalent qualifications. Your degree must be in pharmacy specifically, degrees in pharmaceutical sciences, chemistry, or related disciplines without a clinical pharmacy focus are generally not accepted.
APC assesses the equivalency of your qualification, so degrees from institutions with non-standard structures may require additional documentation to demonstrate they meet the threshold.
Is Pharmacy Registration Required for OPRA Eligibility?
This depends on which country you are registering in.
For Australian registration (AHPRA pathway): Current registration in your home country is not mandatory. You can proceed with the OPRA eligibility check and exam without holding active registration elsewhere.
For New Zealand registration (Non-REQR pathway via PCNZ): Current registration as a pharmacist in the country where you earned your degree is required as part of the Preliminary Review process with the Pharmacy Council of New Zealand. PCNZ also requires evidence of relevant clinical work experience as a registered pharmacist before the Preliminary Review can be approved.
What English Language Scores Are Required for OPRA?
APC requires proof of English language proficiency as part of the eligibility assessment. Accepted tests include:
- IELTS
- PTE
- OET
- TOEFL iBT
For example, the accepted minimum scores in PTE test are:
Note the significant increase in the Speaking component. This is a major shift for PTE candidates.
Key points to note:
- Test results must be recent, most accepted tests have a validity period of 2 to 3 years
- Submitting expired English language scores is a common reason for delays or rejection at the eligibility stage
- Some candidates may be exempt if they completed their entire pharmacy degree in English, check APC’s current exemption criteria before assuming this applies to you
How to Apply for the OPRA Eligibility Check?
The application is submitted directly through the APC Candidate Portal. Here is a step-by-step overview:
- Create an account on the APC Candidate Portal at the Australian Pharmacy Council website
- Complete the eligibility check application form
- Upload all required supporting documents (see section below)
- Pay the AU$810 eligibility check fee via Visa or Mastercard
- Submit your application and wait for APC to review it
APC processes applications in the order they are received. Submitting a complete application, with all documents correct and in the required format, significantly reduces the chance of delays.
Lodge your eligibility check at least 8 weeks before the registration closing date of your target OPRA sitting. Processing takes up to 4 weeks officially, and any back-and-forth over missing documents will add time you may not have.
What Documents Are Required for OPRA Eligibility Verification?
You will need to provide the following when applying:
- Valid passport (identity verification)
- Pharmacy degree certificate (official copy)
- Official academic transcripts from your university
- English language test results (IELTS, OET, TOEFL, or PTE)
- Evidence of current pharmacy registration (required for the New Zealand pathway; may also strengthen your Australian application)
- Any additional documents requested by APC during assessment
Documents must typically be in English or accompanied by a certified translation. Unofficial or uncertified copies may not be accepted. Check APC’s current requirements on their website before uploading, as document standards can be updated.
How Much Is the OPRA Eligibility Check Fee?
The eligibility check fee is AU$810, payable at the time of application.
Here is a full breakdown of APC fees across the OPRA process to help you plan financially:
For New Zealand candidates, an additional NZ$950 is payable to PCNZ for the Initial Consideration of Registration under the Non-REQR pathway.
The AU$810 eligibility check fee is a one-time cost. Because your approval does not expire, you will not need to pay it again even if you resit the exam or apply for a later sitting.
How Long Does the OPRA Eligibility Process Take?
APC officially states processing takes up to 4 weeks for a complete application.
If your application is incomplete, missing documents, incorrect formats, or additional information requested, this timeline extends. In some cases, candidates have experienced significantly longer waits due to document issues that could have been avoided upfront.
Practical timeline to follow:
- 8+ weeks before registration window closes: Lodge eligibility check
- 4 weeks later (approx.): Receive APC eligibility decision
- Immediately after approval: Register for your target sitting as soon as the window opens
Popular exam centres, particularly in India, the UAE, Singapore, and the UK, fill up quickly once registration opens. A delayed eligibility submission can mean missing your preferred centre or even your preferred sitting.
What Happens After Getting OPRA Eligibility Approval?
Once APC confirms your eligibility, you are cleared to register for the OPRA exam at any future sitting. There is no deadline by which you must sit, your eligibility approval stands indefinitely.
Next steps after approval:
- Monitor APC’s registration windows (opening dates for 2026: January, April, and August)
- Register on day one of the window to secure your preferred test centre
- Have your Visa or Mastercard ready, along with a recent passport-style photo
- Begin or continue your structured exam preparation
This is the point where preparation quality becomes everything. For New Zealand candidates, approval of your PCNZ Preliminary Review must also be in place before registration, confirm both clearances are active before booking.
At Elite Expertise, Mr. Arief Mohammad and Mrs. Harika Bheemavarapu provide candidates with a clear roadmap from eligibility to exam day. As accredited consultant pharmacists working in Australian hospitals, they understand exactly what the OPRA exam is looking for, and how to prepare for it efficiently.
Can Fresh B.Pharm or PharmD Graduates Apply for OPRA?
For Australian registration: Yes. APC does not require post-graduation work experience or home country registration as a condition of OPRA eligibility. A fresh graduate who holds a qualifying pharmacy degree and meets all other requirements can apply for the eligibility check and sit the exam.
For New Zealand registration: No, not directly. The PCNZ Non-REQR pathway requires current registration in your home country and relevant clinical experience as a registered pharmacist. Fresh graduates who have not yet registered or practised in their home country cannot meet the Preliminary Review requirements for the New Zealand pathway.
What Are the Common Reasons for OPRA Eligibility Rejection?
Understanding what can go wrong helps you avoid it. The most frequent reasons APC delays or rejects eligibility applications include:
- Expired English language test results submitted at the time of application
- Degree not meeting the minimum duration threshold (less than 4 years for post-2006 graduates)
- Degree in a related field rather than pharmacy specifically
- Missing or uncertified academic transcripts
- Incomplete or incorrectly formatted identity documents
- Degree from an institution APC cannot verify without additional documentation
If your application is rejected, APC will typically explain the reason and may allow you to resubmit with corrected documents. However, this costs time, and if you were close to a registration window, it may push you to the next sitting cycle.
Submitting a thorough, correctly formatted application the first time is always the better path.
Conclusion
The OPRA eligibility check is not a formality, it is the foundation of your entire registration journey. Without it, nothing else moves forward. And because processing takes up to 4 weeks, every day you delay your application is a day trimmed from your preparation time.
The good news is that this step is entirely within your control. The requirements are clear, the documents are predictable, and the AU$810 fee is a one-time cost that never needs to be paid again. Submit a complete, well-prepared application and you will clear this hurdle without unnecessary delays.
Once your eligibility is confirmed, the focus shifts entirely to exam preparation, and that is where the real work begins. The OPRA exam tests clinical judgement, not just textbook knowledge. It expects you to think like an Australian pharmacist, using Australian guidelines and Australian clinical frameworks. That gap between what you know and what the exam expects is exactly what structured coaching closes.
Elite Expertise, founded by Mr. Arief Mohammad and Mrs. Harika Bheemavarapu, both practising clinical pharmacists and accredited consultant pharmacists in Australian hospitals, has supported hundreds of internationally trained pharmacists through every stage of this journey, from eligibility to exam day and beyond. Their 95%+ first-attempt pass rate is built on one principle: the right preparation, mapped directly to what the APC syllabus actually tests.
Your eligibility check is the first step. Make it count, and give yourself the strongest possible start to what comes next
Key Takeaways
- The OPRA eligibility check is a mandatory first step before you can register for the exam, you cannot book a seat without APC approval
- The eligibility check fee is AU$810 and is paid once; approval does not expire
- Your pharmacy degree must be equivalent to at least 4 years of full-time study completed after 1 January 2006 (or 3 years if completed before that date)
- Current registration in your home country is not mandatory for Australian registration, but is required for the New Zealand Non-REQR pathway
- Processing typically takes up to 4 weeks for a complete application, lodge early, well before your target exam registration window opens
- Elite Expertise, founded by practising clinical pharmacists Mr. Arief Mohammad and Mrs. Harika Bheemavarapu, guides candidates through the eligibility process and opra exam preparation with a 95%+ first-attempt pass rate

