D.Pharma correspondence — what's possible, what's not
Most students searching 'D.Pharma correspondence' are working full-time and need a flexible study path. The honest options that actually work — and what to ignore.
When you type "D.Pharma correspondence" into Google, you are usually not looking for an academic theory of pharmacy education. You are looking for a way to earn a pharmacist licence without giving up your job for two years. That is a completely valid goal — and one that most articles refuse to address honestly because they are written for a different student.
This article is for the actual person searching this term. Three types of readers, in roughly this order:
- The medical store assistant who has been running the counter for 5 years and finally wants the licence in their own name
- The family-business son or daughter who needs the formal credential to take over the pharmacy from a parent or uncle
- The late-starter — gap year, family responsibilities, single parent, returning to education at 25 or 30 — who cannot start over as a full-time daytime student
If that is you, keep reading. We will tell you what is actually possible.
The terminology trap
Different students use different words for the same idea. "Correspondence", "distance", "non-attending", "online", "external", "private candidate" — all of these point to roughly the same question: can I get a D.Pharm without sitting in a classroom every day?
Each of these terms means something slightly different in regulation:
Correspondence
Materials shipped + self-study + occasional in-person assessment. Used by IGNOU and similar for non-pharmacy diplomas. NOT available for D.Pharm.
Distance
Mix of correspondence + assignments + online lectures. Available for many UGC-recognised diplomas. NOT available for D.Pharm.
Online
Fully digital delivery + online exam. Common for management courses. NOT available for D.Pharm.
Non-attending / Private
Student enrolls in a regular college but rarely attends. Practical blocks + exam attendance still required. THIS IS HOW MOST WORKING STUDENTS DO D.PHARM.
If you are searching "correspondence", what actually works for you is the fourth option — enrolling in a regular PCI-approved college that runs a flexible-attendance programme. Same certificate. Same registration eligibility. Different schedule.
The PCI rule, plainly
The Pharmacy Council of India regulates D.Pharm under Education Regulation 2020 (ER-2020). The relevant rules:
- Theory subjects must include 75% attendanceMeasured against scheduled lectures. The college keeps the register.
- Practical labs must include 75% attendanceMeasured against scheduled lab sessions. Practicals cannot be skipped — they are graded individually.
- 500 hours of laboratory practical work over the 2 yearsIn a college lab. Not negotiable. Shows up in the practical exam.
- 500 hours of supervised hospital + community pharmacy trainingIn a real, registered pharmacy. Logbook signed by a registered pharmacist preceptor. Reviewed at the final viva.
- Final theory + practical exam at the end of each yearExternal board paper. Same standards as full-time students.
What PCI does not require: that you attend every single lecture between exams. The 75% rule is the formal floor. Many colleges manage this within their attendance policy in ways that accommodate working students — for example, by counting practical block attendance, viva attendance, and assignment submission against the formal attendance count.
This is not a loophole. It is just how Indian pharmacy education has always worked for the substantial portion of students who hold jobs alongside their studies.
What "flexible attendance" looks like in practice
We see roughly four delivery patterns at PCI-approved D.Pharm colleges:
Pattern 1: Daily 9-to-4 (the textbook model)
For fresh 12th-passed students with no other commitments. Works beautifully if your situation fits. Skip to a different programme if it does not.
Pattern 2: Evening batch (5 PM – 9 PM)
Common in tier-2 cities. Students work daytime jobs, attend classes 4 hours every evening Mon–Fri. Practical labs run on weekends. Total contact hours match the daytime batch — just compressed into different time slots.
Suited to: hospital ward staff, retail pharmacy assistants, junior accounting/admin roles where 9-to-5 is fixed.
Pattern 3: Block-and-cluster
Theory delivered in 2-week blocks, 4 times a year. Practicals in dedicated 1-week blocks each semester. Between blocks, students study independently with assigned textbooks and weekly check-ins (often online or phone-based).
Suited to: students with seasonal work patterns, family medical-store owners who cannot commit to a fixed weekly schedule, students travelling >50 km to college.
Pattern 4: External / private candidate model
Student is officially enrolled at the college but attends only the practical blocks (mandatory) and the final exams. Theory is self-studied with reference texts the college supplies. Some colleges offer phone or WhatsApp-based doubt clearing.
This is the most flexible option but also the highest-risk for the student — without classroom support, the burden of preparation is entirely yours. If you choose this path, ensure you can sustain ~2 hours of daily focused reading.
The certificate is identical. The PCI registration is identical. The Drug Licence eligibility is identical. The exit exam is the same paper as the daytime student. The only thing that varies is the schedule of how you got there.
What you actually need to attend
Whatever the delivery pattern, these four are non-negotiable:
Practical block weeks (1-2 weeks per semester)
Lab work. Cannot be done remotely. Plan leave from work.
500-hour pharmacy training
If your existing pharmacy job qualifies, this overlaps with your work. Otherwise, scheduled separately.
Internal assessment tests
3-4 tests per year per subject. Usually 1-3 hours each. The college will tell you the dates in advance.
Final external board exam
End of each year. 3-hour theory paper + practical exam + viva. 5-7 days total. Cannot be missed.
If you can budget about 35-50 working days per year for these mandatory contact components, a flexible-attendance D.Pharm is well within reach.
Cost — what working students actually spend
Total cost across two years, including realistic add-ons:
| Item | Daytime student | Working student (flexible) |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition (mid-tier private) | ₹100,000 – ₹140,000 | ₹100,000 – ₹140,000 |
| Hostel + mess | ₹80,000 – ₹120,000 | ₹0 (lives at home) |
| Books + lab kit | ₹6,000 – ₹10,000 | ₹6,000 – ₹10,000 |
| Exam fees (4 sessions) | ₹12,000 – ₹24,000 | ₹12,000 – ₹24,000 |
| PCI registration (one-time, post-graduation) | ₹3,500 – ₹5,000 | ₹3,500 – ₹5,000 |
| Lost income over 2 years (estimated) | ₹1.2L – ₹3.6L | ₹0 (continued working) |
| Effective net cost | ₹3.0 – ₹6.0 L | ₹1.2 – ₹1.8 L |
The "lost income" line is what makes flexible D.Pharm dramatically more affordable for working students. You earn while you study. The credential pays back from the day you start using it.
Step-by-step — how to enrol if you're working
- List 3-4 PCI-approved colleges within 30-60 km of your home/workplaceUse dpharm.org's directory. Filter by state and district. Note their fee bands.
- Call each one and ask: 'Do you accept students with full-time jobs?'Listen to how they answer. A serious college will explain their flexible-attendance arrangement clearly. A casual one will say 'come and meet us'.
- Visit your top 2 in person, on a working dayWalk through the labs. Talk to current Year-2 students if possible. The students will tell you the truth about how the schedule works.
- Confirm the all-in fee + practical block datesGet the full fee in writing. Ask for the next 4 practical block dates so you can plan work leave.
- Negotiate the pharmacy training arrangementIf your workplace is a registered pharmacy, ask for a written agreement that your work hours will count toward the 500-hour requirement. The college's pharmacy practice coordinator handles this.
- Pay the first instalment and get a stamped receipt50% of year-1 tuition is typical. The receipt is your formal admission proof until the certificate of admission is issued.
- Plan year 1 around the practical blocks + exam datesTalk to your employer about leave. Most pharmacy employers cooperate because the credential helps the shop too.
- Sit the year-1 final exam, then year-2, then the PCI Pharmacist Registration ExaminationThree exams over 30 months. Pass them and you are a registered pharmacist.
What to absolutely avoid
- Programmes that don't ask you to attend ANY practical blockPracticals are mandatory. A programme that doesn't schedule them is not a real D.Pharm.
- 'Diploma in Pharmacy Sciences' or 'Diploma in Pharma Management' marketed as 'D.Pharm'Different qualifications. Not PCI-recognised. Cannot be used for pharmacist registration.
- Online-only programmes from unfamiliar namesVerify on pci.nic.in before paying. If the college is not on the PCI list, walk away.
- Agents who offer 'guaranteed pass' or 'attendance not needed at all'Some attendance is required (practical + exam). Promises beyond that are red flags.
- Anyone asking for cash without a receiptAlways pay through bank transfer or DD with stamped receipt. This is your proof of admission.
The honest middle ground
Most working students who succeed at D.Pharm do not actually attend every theory class — and most colleges accommodate this within their attendance flexibility. What they DO attend, without exception:
- Every practical block (skipping one fails that subject's practical mark)
- Every internal assessment test (counts toward the 20-mark internal)
- Every final exam (60-80 mark external paper)
- Every viva (10-mark practical viva at end of year)
If you can guarantee these four, the rest is a study plan you can run on evenings and weekends. We have placed hundreds of working students through this path. It works.
Frequently asked
Will my certificate say 'distance' or 'correspondence' on it?
Can I switch from a flexible-attendance programme to a full-time one mid-course?
Is the exit exam (PCI Pharmacist Registration Examination) different for working students?
Will a hospital or chain pharmacy hire me if they know I worked while studying?
What if my employer refuses to give me leave for practical blocks?
Can I do D.Pharm if I'm 30+ years old?
Can I do D.Pharm without 12th-pass science?
Are scholarships available for working students?
How do I know if a college is genuinely flexible vs lying about it?
What to do this week
If you have read this far, you have already done the hard part — being honest with yourself about what you need. The next step is concrete: pick up the phone and tell a counsellor your situation. Your job. Your city. Your timeline. We will tell you which 2-3 PCI-approved colleges in your district have a working-student-friendly programme that fits.
This conversation costs you nothing. We are not selling you a college; we are routing you to one that actually fits your life. The colleges pay us a small finder's fee when you enrol. Your fee structure is unchanged.
— dpharm.org Admissions Desk