Results for Undergraduate Pharmacy Courses
60 universities offer 153 undergraduate courses
NEW SEARCHUniversity League Table: highest first
University of Manchester
UCAS points
136 - 144
University League Table
22nd
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
13th
136 - 144 UCAS points
136 - 144 UCAS points
136 - 136 UCAS points
UCAS points not available
King's College London
UCAS points
87 - 136
University League Table
24th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
21st
Queen's University Belfast
UCAS points
120 - 160
University League Table
25th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
2nd
120 - 144 UCAS points
UCAS points not available
120 - 144 UCAS points
136 - 160 UCAS points
Newcastle University
UCAS points
136 - 160
University League Table
26th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
12th
136 - 153 UCAS points
136 - 160 UCAS points
Cardiff University
UCAS points
128 - 136
University League Table
27th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
5th
University of Nottingham
UCAS points
112 - 147
University League Table
30th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
7th
128 - 141 UCAS points
112 - 147 UCAS points
136 - 147 UCAS points
136 - 147 UCAS points
University of Strathclyde
UCAS points
96 - 141
University League Table
32nd
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
3rd
96 - 120 UCAS points
104 - 141 UCAS points
96 - 136 UCAS points
University of Reading
UCAS points
88 - 147
University League Table
35th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
26th
120 - 141 UCAS points
88 - 141 UCAS points
120 - 141 UCAS points
120 - 141 UCAS points
88 - 141 UCAS points
Swansea University
UCAS points
88 - 136
University League Table
37th
Pharmacology & Pharmacy League Table
9th
120 - 136 UCAS points
96 - 96 UCAS points
120 - 128 UCAS points
88 - 112 UCAS points
Studying Pharmacy
Search through undergraduate Pharmacology degree courses to see what’s available from UK universities. Each page should give you an insight into what the course might be like, along with information on entry requirements, UCAS points and university league table performance.Pharmacology is the medical study of human-made, natural or endogenous substances, with degrees mostly awarded as BSc, BEng, MSci, MPharm or MChem. Depending on your course, you could be developing treatments for diseases and learning how molecules modify living systems. Related courses include in chemistry for drug discovery, bioprocessing of new medicines, and medical innovation and enterprise.