D.Pharm ER-2020 — reference books recommended by PCI
The complete reading list for all 12 D.Pharmacy subjects under ER-2020, with edition guidance, pricing, and the difference between primary and reference texts.
The PCI ER-2020 annexure lists "recommended" textbooks per subject. The list is non-binding — colleges may use other texts — but in practice 80% of colleges follow it because it is what the examination committee uses to set question papers. If you want to know what your examiner is reading, this is it.
I update my college's library list against this annexure every August. Here is the current 2026 reading list, with my honest commentary on which books are essential ("buy and own") versus reference-only ("library is enough").
Buy-and-own — the 6 books every student needs
These six books are referenced 4-5 times a week throughout D.Pharm. Photocopying or borrowing slows you down. Budget ~₹3,500 total for these. They will outlast the course — keep them after graduation as your professional reference shelf.
Ross & Wilson Anatomy & Physiology
13th ed · for Subject 1 · readable, full coverage of ER-2020 anatomy
Tripathi — Essentials of Medical Pharmacology
9th ed · for Subject 9 + exit exam · the bible of Indian pharmacology
Bentley's Textbook of Pharmaceutics
8th ed (Indian) · for Subject 5 + Subject 7 · workhorse for compounding
Kokate, Purohit, Gokhale — Pharmacognosy
55th ed · for Subject 3 · standard text, all required monographs
Vasudevan — Textbook of Biochemistry
10th ed · for Subject 4 · medical-student depth, perfect for D.Pharm 4
B.M. Mithal — Drug Store & Business Mgmt
Latest ed · for Subject 11 · only solid Indian text on pharmacy retail econ
These six cover ~70% of your study time. Everything else can be library-based.
Library-only — reference texts to consult
These are heavier, costlier, or more specialised than what a student needs to own. Borrow from your college library or use the reading-room copy.
For Subject 2 — Pharmaceutical Chemistry-I
- N.K. Jain — Inorganic Pharmaceutical Chemistry (2nd ed, Vallabh Prakashan)
- A.O. Bentley — Cooper & Gunn's Tutorial Pharmacy (chapters on chemistry of pharmaceuticals)
- Chatwal — Synthetic Organic Chemistry (for organic basics)
For Subject 6 — Health Education & Community Pharmacy
- K. Park — Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (for public health depth)
- Indian Pharmacopoeia 2022 (mandatory reference, but expensive — library copy fine)
For Subject 7 — Pharmaceutics-II
- Aulton's Pharmaceutics — The Design and Manufacture of Medicines (4th ed) — the gold standard for sterile dosage forms but expensive
- Lachman, Lieberman, Kanig — The Theory and Practice of Industrial Pharmacy (3rd ed)
- Remington — The Science and Practice of Pharmacy (a 2-volume reference, library-only)
For Subject 8 — Pharmaceutical Chemistry-II
- Wilson & Gisvold — Textbook of Organic Medicinal & Pharmaceutical Chemistry (12th ed) — heavy, expensive, but the medicinal chemistry reference
- Foye's Principles of Medicinal Chemistry (8th ed) — alternative
- Bentley — Textbook of Organic Chemistry (Indian publisher edition for affordability)
For Subject 9 — Pharmacology & Toxicology (advanced reference)
- Goodman & Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics (14th ed) — the most authoritative pharmacology text in the world. Library-only — costs ~₹6,000.
- Rang and Dale's Pharmacology (9th ed) — alternative
- Katzung — Basic and Clinical Pharmacology — favoured by some colleges over Tripathi
For Subject 10 — Pharmaceutical Jurisprudence
- N.K. Jain — Pharmaceutical Jurisprudence (latest ed, Vallabh) — covers all relevant Acts
- B.M. Mithal — A Textbook of Forensic Pharmacy (older but still cited)
- The Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940 with the Rules 1945 — bare act, available free from PDF; print copy ~₹150
For Subject 12 — Hospital & Clinical Pharmacy
- William E. Smith — Hospital Pharmacy (specialised, library)
- R.S. Satoskar — Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapeutics (good for clinical applications)
- Roger Walker — Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics (5th ed) — gold standard for clinical reasoning
What edition to buy — the practical answer
Pharmacy textbooks update slowly. A 5-year-old edition is fine for foundational subjects (anatomy, biochemistry, pharmacognosy). For pharmacology and pharmaceutical chemistry, buy the latest edition — drug names, dosing, structure-activity insights all evolve.
Anatomy / Pharmacognosy / Biochemistry / Jurisprudence
Any edition from 2018 onwards is fine. Used books from senior students are cost-effective.
Pharmacology / Medicinal Chemistry
Latest edition only. New drug classes and updated mechanisms appear every 3-4 years.
Pharmaceutics
8th edition Bentley or any post-2020 print is sufficient. Compounding principles are stable.
Drug Store / Business
Latest edition only — GST rules, schedule updates, retail-pharmacy economics change yearly.
Where to buy in India
Vallabh Prakashan, Delhi
Publishes most Indian pharmacy texts. Best price; usually 30-40% cheaper than market.
CBS Publishers, Delhi
Indian editions of international texts (Tripathi, Vasudevan, Aulton-Indian).
Pharma Med Press, Hyderabad
Strong on south Indian distribution; same titles as CBS at similar price.
Local college bookshop
Convenience but ~10% premium. Use for emergency replacements only.
Used / senior students
Year-2 students sell their year-1 books at 40-60% off in May. Coordinate via your batch WhatsApp group.
Avoid Amazon / Flipkart for technical texts — they sometimes ship counterfeit reprints from grey market suppliers. The text is identical but the print quality is poor and figures get lost. Buy from publisher direct or established academic book stores.
A note on pirated PDFs
Your senior may share PDFs via WhatsApp or Telegram. Pragmatic reality: students do study this way, especially for the expensive references like Goodman & Gilman. I will not pretend otherwise.
But understand the trade-offs: digital reading reduces retention by 20-30% vs paper for technical material (the research is consistent). And if a respected examiner sees you taking exam notes from a PDF folder, they will judge — and they sit on the practical viva panel.
My honest advice: own the six core books in print. Use library / digital for the heavier references. Don't try to do D.Pharm entirely off PDFs — it shows in your viva.
Other resources beyond books
- Indian Pharmacopoeia (IP) 2022Mandatory mention in every practical viva. ~₹15,000 retail price — use library copy. Know the structure: how to look up a monograph for a drug.
- Pharmacopoeia of India CD / digital editionFree download from ipc.gov.in for some sections. Useful for last-minute monograph lookups.
- PCI sample papersPCI publishes 3 sample papers for the exit exam. Solve all 3. Available on pci.nic.in under 'Examinations'.
- AICTE NPTEL pharmacy lecturesFree, recorded by IIT/NIPER faculty. Quality varies but the pharmacology and pharmaceutics modules are excellent.
- Your college's lab manualUsed for the practical exam. Read it cover-to-cover before the exam — examiners reference it during viva.
My personal recommendation — minimum viable book budget
If you can afford only ₹1,800 total, buy these three:
- Tripathi — Essentials of Medical Pharmacology (~₹950)
- Ross & Wilson Anatomy & Physiology (~₹600)
- Kokate Pharmacognosy (~₹500)
These three alone cover ~50% of your D.Pharm exam questions. Use the college library for everything else. Many of my students have graduated successfully on this minimum kit.
Frequently asked
Can I use international (foreign) editions?
What if my college recommends a different book?
Are there Hindi / regional editions?
How early should I start buying?
Are old editions of Goodman & Gilman acceptable?
In closing
The cost of being a pharmacist starts with these books. They are the cheapest investment in your career — under ₹4,000 — for a profession that will earn you ₹15-50 lakh over a lifetime. Buy them. Read them. Underline them. Keep them.
Beyond books, the best learning happens at the dispensing counter and at the bedside. Your 500 hours of pharmacy training will teach you more than any text. But the books frame the questions you'll ask during those hours.
— Prof. M. A. Shaikh