LIVE MARKET·15,806 POSTINGS · LAST 180 DAYS

Pharmacists salary: $68.74/hr median.

Across 15,806 active postings · 2 titles with data · 103 states.

Browse Pharmacists salary titles in Pharmacy Professional, including posting volume, median pay, state coverage, and role-level comparisons.

Titles
2
2 with data
Postings
15,806
Median /hr
$68.74
$142,981/yr
Coverage
103 states
1,408 employers
01·PAY DISTRIBUTION·P10 → P90

How Pharmacists pay is distributed across the market.

10% of postings pay under $62.00. The top 10% pay above $94.88.

P10
$62.00
P25
$66.50
P50
$68.74
P75
$85.90
P90
$94.88
P10
$62.00
$128,960/yr
P25
$66.50
$138,320/yr
P50 (median)
$68.74
$142,979/yr
P75
$85.90
$178,672/yr
P90
$94.88
$197,350/yr
03·STATE BREAKDOWN·n=15,806

Pharmacists pay across every state with live data.

01Alabama AL232 postings
$70.35/hr
02Alaska AK38 postings
$82.10/hr
03Arizona AZ586 postings
$73.33/hr
04Arkansas AR77 postings
$67.50/hr
05California CA1,534 postings
$74.73/hr
06Colorado CO495 postings
$73.30/hr
07Connecticut CT140 postings
$68.00/hr
08Delaware DE70 postings
$67.50/hr
09District Of Columbia DC5 postings
$72.50/hr
10Florida FL926 postings
$68.00/hr
11Georgia GA310 postings
$68.00/hr
12Hawaii HI33 postings
$68.00/hr
13Idaho ID58 postings
$71.60/hr
14Illinois IL509 postings
$67.62/hr
15Indiana IN375 postings
$68.12/hr
16Iowa IA118 postings
$75.05/hr
17Kansas KS89 postings
$70.07/hr
18Kentucky KY208 postings
$67.03/hr
19Louisiana LA145 postings
$68.00/hr
20Maine ME45 postings
$72.00/hr
21Maryland MD179 postings
$68.00/hr
22Massachusetts MA400 postings
$68.15/hr
23Michigan MI159 postings
$67.00/hr
24Minnesota MN376 postings
$74.42/hr
25Mississippi MS65 postings
$66.00/hr
26Missouri MO281 postings
$68.31/hr
27Montana MT60 postings
$68.42/hr
28Nebraska NE117 postings
$71.05/hr
29Nevada NV116 postings
$67.83/hr
30New Hampshire NH46 postings
$68.89/hr
31New Jersey NJ469 postings
$67.85/hr
32New Mexico NM128 postings
$72.67/hr
33New York NY842 postings
$68.55/hr
34North Carolina NC790 postings
$68.33/hr
35North Dakota ND18 postings
$70.00/hr
36Ohio OH473 postings
$67.89/hr
37Oklahoma OK191 postings
$76.66/hr
38Oregon OR145 postings
$86.60/hr
39Pennsylvania PA352 postings
$68.62/hr
40Rhode Island RI51 postings
$67.50/hr
41South Carolina SC313 postings
$68.59/hr
42South Dakota SD11 postings
$69.50/hr
43Tennessee TN199 postings
$66.50/hr
44Texas TX1,021 postings
$67.62/hr
45Utah UT100 postings
$72.00/hr
46Vermont VT80 postings
$73.30/hr
47Virginia VA378 postings
$71.41/hr
48Washington WA318 postings
$74.81/hr
49West Virginia WV79 postings
$66.50/hr
50Wisconsin WI517 postings
$74.57/hr
51Wyoming WY26 postings
$74.09/hr

Showing all 51 states with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.

05·HIGHEST MEDIAN HOURLY·LAST 180 DAYS

Highest-paying job titles in the Pharmacists track.

RoleCategory · TrackMedian /hrP25–P75PostingsΔ pay
Hospital PharmacistPharmacy Professional · Pharmacists$80.50$74.80–$85.90937 0.6%
PharmacistPharmacy Professional · Pharmacists$68.00$66.50–$72.5014,869 0.0%
06·HOW TO BECOME·CAREER PATHWAY·GENERAL TO PHARMACY PROFESSIONAL

How to become a Pharmacists.

Pharmacy professionals dispense medications, counsel patients, and manage drug therapy across hospital, retail, ambulatory, and specialty settings. The category spans two very different paths: pharmacists (PharmD doctorate plus licensure) and pharmacy technicians (certificate or short program plus state registration). Both work side by side under the same scope umbrella but on different pay and training ladders.

Education·Min: PharmD for pharmacists; HS diploma + certificate for technicians · Preferred: PharmD + residency (PGY-1/PGY-2) for clinical roles

Pharmacist path: bachelor's prerequisites (2-3 years) → 4-year PharmD → NAPLEX + MPJE → state license. Hospital and clinical roles add a 1-2 year residency. Technician path: HS diploma → certificate or on-the-job training → PTCE/ExCPT exam → state registration. Most states require both pharmacists and technicians to be registered or licensed before dispensing.

DegreeDurationNotes
Doctor of PharmacyPharmD4 years post-prerequisites (typically 6 years total)Required for pharmacist licensure. Includes didactic plus advanced pharmacy practice experiences (APPEs) in hospital, community, and ambulatory care.
Pharmacy ResidencyPGY-1 / PGY-21-2 years post-PharmDPGY-1 covers general clinical pharmacy. PGY-2 is sub-specialty (ICU, oncology, infectious disease, pediatrics, etc.). Required for most hospital and clinical pharmacist roles.
Pharmacy technician certificateCert6 months - 2 yearsShort certificate or AAS program leading to PTCE/ExCPT certification. Sufficient for most retail and inpatient technician roles.
Licenses & Exams·3 credentials
Pharmacist licenseRegistered Pharmacist (RPh)Required
Exam: NAPLEX + MPJE · Issued by: State Board of Pharmacy

State-issued license required to practice as a pharmacist. Eligibility requires graduation from an ACPE-accredited PharmD program plus passing NAPLEX and the state's MPJE.

Pharmacy technician registrationState-registered pharmacy technicianRequired
Exam: PTCE or ExCPT · Issued by: State Board of Pharmacy

Required in most states. Eligibility typically requires PTCB or NHA certification plus a background check. A small number of states still allow on-the-job training without certification.

Immunization certificationImmunization training certificateOptional
Issued by: APhA or state-approved provider

Required to administer vaccines under pharmacist scope. Standard for retail pharmacy roles today.

Optional Certifications·Pay boost where known
CredentialIssued byPay impact
BCPS
Board Certified Pharmacotherapy Specialist
The broadest specialty board certification for clinical pharmacists. Demonstrates competence across acute and ambulatory pharmacotherapy.
BPS+5-15%
BCOP / BCCCP / BCIDP / BCPP
Oncology / Critical Care / Infectious Diseases / Psychiatric Pharmacy
Sub-specialty boards. Typically pursued after PGY-2 in matching specialty.
BPS+5-15%
CSPT / CPhT-Adv
Certified Compounded Sterile Preparation Technician / Advanced CPhT
Advanced technician credentials for sterile compounding, hazardous drugs, billing/reimbursement, or medication therapy management.
PTCB+5-10%
Career Path·5 steps
  1. 0-3 years
    Pharmacy technician

    Entry point. Dispensing, inventory, insurance processing, and (with training) sterile compounding. Many techs use this as a stepping stone into pharmacy school.

  2. 0-1 years post-license
    PharmD intern / new-grad pharmacist

    Newly licensed pharmacist or PGY-1 resident. Building speed in dispensing and clinical review under preceptor oversight.

  3. 1-5 years
    Staff or clinical pharmacist

    Independent practice in hospital, retail, ambulatory, or specialty pharmacy. Many add BCPS or sub-specialty board certification.

  4. 5-10 years
    Lead / specialty pharmacist

    Service-line leadership: anticoagulation, ID stewardship, oncology, transplant, pediatrics. Often holds a sub-specialty board credential.

  5. 10+ years
    Pharmacy manager / Director of Pharmacy

    Owns operations, budget, formulary, and staffing for a department or store. Director-level roles typically require an MS or MBA in addition to PharmD.

Work Environment
Hospital inpatient and ED pharmacyRetail and community pharmacyAmbulatory care clinicsSpecialty and infusion pharmacyLong-term careMail-order and central fillIndustry and managed care

Schedule. Retail pharmacy is open 7 days a week including evenings. Hospitals run 24/7 — inpatient pharmacy includes overnight and weekend coverage. Ambulatory and specialty pharmacy generally run business hours.

Physical demands. Mostly on your feet in retail; mixed sitting and standing in hospital. Sterile compounding requires PPE and isolator-hood work. Cognitive precision matters more than physical exertion in this category.

Job Outlook·Mixed
+3% pharmacists, +6% techs (2022-2032)

Pharmacist job growth has moderated as retail consolidates and PharmD graduate volume catches up to demand. Hospital, clinical, ambulatory care, and specialty pharmacy still grow above average. Pharmacy technician demand is solid and likely to keep rising as scope expands (vaccinations, MTM, point-of-care testing).

FAQ — Becoming this role·3 questions
How long does it take to become a pharmacist?

Typically 6-8 years total: 2-3 years of prerequisites + 4 years of PharmD school. Add 1-2 years if you pursue a residency (required for most hospital and clinical pharmacy jobs).

Is pharmacy still a good career?

It depends on the setting. Retail pharmacy has tightened — slower growth, more stressful workloads, fewer new positions in saturated markets. Hospital, clinical, ambulatory care, specialty pharmacy, and industry roles remain healthy. Residency-trained PharmDs have meaningfully better opportunities than non-residency-trained graduates.

Do I need a residency to be a pharmacist?

Not to be licensed. But most hospital clinical positions (and essentially all sub-specialty roles) now require or strongly prefer PGY-1 residency, and academic/sub-specialty roles require PGY-2. Retail and community pharmacy do not require residency.

05·BROWSE 2 ROLES·FROM CNA TO PERFUSIONIST

Every clinical role we track, with live pay ranges.

Showing 2 of 2 roles. Median is hourly P50 across active postings.Browse the full directory →