How to Become a Pharmacy Technician in South Carolina (2026 Guide)

How to Become a Pharmacy Technician in South Carolina (2026 Guide)

South Carolina has one of the most accessible pharmacy technician entry points in the Southeast: no national exam required, no minimum age, no high school diploma required to obtain the basic Registered Pharmacy Technician registration. A $56 application fee, a lawful presence affidavit, and copies of your ID and Social Security card are enough to get started.

But South Carolina also has a second, more advanced tier that most competitor pages fail to explain clearly — the State-Certified Pharmacy Technician. This designation is not the same as simply holding a PTCB or NHA national certification. It is a specific South Carolina Board of Pharmacy designation that requires a current SC registration, a high school diploma or GED, a national CPhT credential, an approved training program, and documented 1,000 hours of supervised practice. Critically, state-certified technicians can perform duties that registered technicians cannot — including receiving verbal orders, conducting prescription transfers, and administering vaccines — and their presence enables pharmacies to staff higher pharmacist-to-technician ratios under South Carolina law.

This guide covers both tiers in full, with step-by-step registration and upgrade instructions, the scope-of-practice table, CE rules, cost breakdown, and salary data across South Carolina’s major markets. For a national overview and exam comparison, see our Pharmacy Technician Career Guide.

Critical Terminology: “State-Certified” vs. National Certification in South Carolina

Before diving into requirements, this distinction must be clear because it causes more confusion in South Carolina than in almost any other state:

  • National certification (CPhT) — A credential issued by PTCB or NHA upon passing the PTCE or ExCPT exam. This is a national credential recognized across most U.S. states. Holding it does not automatically make you “state-certified” in South Carolina.
  • South Carolina State-Certified Pharmacy Technician — A specific Board of Pharmacy designation that requires national certification PLUS an approved training program PLUS 1,000 hours of supervised SC practice PLUS a high school diploma. The Board upgrades your registration record to reflect this designation once all documentation is verified.
  • South Carolina Registered Pharmacy Technician — The baseline registration that allows you to work in a licensed South Carolina pharmacy. No exam, no diploma, no minimum age required. This is the entry point for the profession in South Carolina.

In short: national certification is a necessary but not sufficient condition for South Carolina state-certified status. And state registration is the only requirement to begin working — national certification is entirely optional until you want to upgrade.

Tier 1: South Carolina Registered Pharmacy Technician

The Registered Pharmacy Technician registration is your entry credential. Under S.C. Code §40-43-82, the South Carolina Board of Pharmacy (administered through SC LLR — the Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation) registers all pharmacy technicians who perform pharmacy functions under pharmacist supervision.

Requirements for Registered Registration

  • Minimum age: None — the Board does not specify a minimum age
  • Education: Not required for basic registration — no high school diploma or GED needed at this tier
  • National exam: Not required
  • Lawful presence: Must submit an Affidavit of Eligibility confirming lawful presence in the United States (included in the application packet)
  • Identity documents: Copy of a government-issued photo ID (driver’s license, state ID, passport, or military ID) and a copy of your Social Security card
  • Background: Not automatically required by the Board; if you have past disciplinary actions or criminal convictions, you must attach explanations and a statewide criminal background check from the state where the incident occurred
  • Application fee: $56 (non-refundable)
  • Application: Online application through SC LLR for first-time applicants; download and print the supplemental forms and instructions before starting. Paper applications are separate from the online system — do not combine them.
  • Eligibility note: A pharmacist whose license was denied, revoked, suspended, or restricted for disciplinary purposes is not eligible to register as a pharmacy technician in South Carolina

Important Timing Rules

  • Registration is valid from July 1 through June 30 of the following year, renewable annually
  • You may not begin working until the Board formally issues your registration
  • If you apply before April 1, you must still renew by June 30 of that same year — your first registration period may be shorter than a full year
  • Your registration certificate must be displayed in a conspicuous place at your primary pharmacy, or you must carry your wallet registration card at all times when working at a location where the certificate is not posted
  • A registered technician who fails to renew by July 1 must immediately cease practice

Tier 2: South Carolina State-Certified Pharmacy Technician

State-Certified status is the advanced designation within South Carolina’s system. It unlocks additional legal duties, enables higher pharmacist-to-technician staffing ratios, and consistently commands higher wages from employers. You cannot apply for state-certified status without first holding an active SC registered pharmacy technician registration.

Requirements for State-Certified Upgrade

  • Current SC pharmacy technician registration — active and in good standing
  • High school diploma or GED (or equivalent) — required for this tier even though not required for basic registration
  • National certification — active PTCB CPhT credential or NHA ExCPT (CPhT) certificate
  • Approved training program completion — from a program that is either ASHP-accredited or recognized by PTCB. Other programs must apply directly to the Board for evaluation.
  • 1,000 hours of supervised pharmacy practice — documented via the Board’s Affidavit of Experience, completed under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist in a South Carolina permitted pharmacy. Out-of-state hours are accepted but the pharmacist must submit a letter on company letterhead including pharmacy name, address, permit number, pharmacist name and license number, and dates of service.
  • No separate fee — there is no additional application fee for the state-certified upgrade. Submit copies of all required documents to the Board and your registration record is upgraded upon verification.

How to Submit the State-Certified Upgrade

Mail copies of the following to the SC Board of Pharmacy (110 Centerview Drive, Columbia, SC 29210):

  1. Your current SC pharmacy technician registration (or registration number)
  2. High school diploma, GED certificate, or official transcript showing graduation
  3. Your PTCB CPhT certificate or NHA ExCPT certificate
  4. Pharmacy technician training program certificate (from an ASHP-accredited or PTCB-recognized program). If hours were gained through an ASHP/PTCB program, use the Board’s Pharmacy Technician Certification of Clinical Experience form — do not use this form if hours were gained through an employer-based program.
  5. Completed Affidavit of Experience documenting 1,000 hours of supervised pharmacy practice

The Board upgrades your registration record after reviewing and verifying all submitted documentation. No in-person appearance is required.

Scope of Practice: Registered vs. State-Certified

South Carolina’s scope of practice rules are among the most explicitly detailed in the Southeast, governed by S.C. Code §40-43-82(C) and Approved Technician Duties Policy and Procedure #140. The distinction between what each tier can and cannot do is legally significant.

South Carolina Pharmacy Technician Scope of Practice (2026)
Function Registered State-Certified
Enter patient demographic and prescription data
Prepare prescriptions for pharmacist verification
Assist with counting, measuring, and labeling
Process insurance claims and inventory management
Receive and initiate verbal telephone orders (non-controlled) ✓*
Conduct one-time non-controlled prescription transfers ✓*
Administer vaccines and immunizations ✓*
Check a technician’s refill in an institutional setting (administered by licensed HCP) ✓*
Check technician’s bulk-to-unit-dose repackaging in institutional setting ✓*
Counsel patients on prescriptions ✗ (pharmacist only)
Perform final prescription check in outpatient setting ✗ (pharmacist only)
Check another technician’s fill/refill for outpatient delivery ✗ (prohibited by statute)
Override DUR / drug interaction alerts ✗ (pharmacist only)
*State-certified duties require the supervising pharmacist to carefully consider the individual’s abilities and qualifications before delegating. Source: S.C. Code §40-43-82(C); Policy #140.

Why State Certification Matters for Employers

Beyond individual scope, state-certified technicians enable South Carolina pharmacies to operate with higher pharmacist-to-technician staffing ratios in certain settings. High-volume retail pharmacies and hospital pharmacy departments often prefer or require state-certified status because it directly affects how many technicians can work per pharmacist shift — similar to North Carolina’s two-technician rule, though South Carolina’s specific ratio rules should be verified with the Board’s current guidance for your pharmacy type.

Education and Training Programs in South Carolina

For the basic registered tier, no formal training program is required by the Board — your employer is expected to provide on-the-job training under pharmacist supervision. For the state-certified upgrade, you must complete an ASHP-accredited or PTCB-recognized program in addition to the 1,000 hours of supervised practice.

ASHP/ACPE-Accredited Programs

South Carolina has a strong network of community and technical college programs with ASHP accreditation. These include:

  • Greenville Technical College (Greenville)
  • Trident Technical College (Charleston)
  • Midlands Technical College (Columbia)
  • Aiken Technical College (Aiken)
  • Piedmont Technical College (Greenwood)
  • Florence-Darlington Technical College (Florence)
  • Horry-Georgetown Technical College (Myrtle Beach area)

ASHP-accredited programs in South Carolina average approximately $3,700 in tuition. Full-time students typically complete classroom training in four months; part-time students in six to eight months. These programs include experiential training at community or hospital pharmacy sites and prepare candidates directly for the PTCE or ExCPT.

PTCB-Recognized Online Programs

PTCB-recognized online training programs are accepted for the state-certified upgrade and are widely used by South Carolina candidates who prefer self-paced learning. These programs typically range from $300 to $1,200 and can often be completed in a few weeks to a few months. Candidates using online programs should still ensure they accumulate the required 1,000 hours of supervised in-pharmacy practice separately before submitting the state-certified upgrade documentation.

Employer-Based Training

For the basic registered tier, employer-provided on-the-job training is the norm. Major South Carolina pharmacy employers — including MUSC Health, Prisma Health, Bon Secours, CVS, Walgreens, Publix, Harris Teeter, Walmart, and Kroger — provide in-house training for newly registered technicians. Note that employer-based programs generally do not qualify for the ASHP/PTCB training program requirement for state certification; candidates pursuing the state-certified upgrade should confirm whether their employer’s program meets Board standards.

How to Register with the SC Board of Pharmacy: Step-by-Step

Step 1: Registered Pharmacy Technician Application

  1. Download and review the application forms before starting online
    Visit llr.sc.gov/bop/techs.aspx. The online first-time application requires you to download and print supplemental forms first. The online and paper applications are separate systems — do not mix them.
  2. Gather required documents
    Copy of a government-issued photo ID (driver’s license, state ID, passport, or military ID); copy of your Social Security card; completed Affidavit of Eligibility (lawful presence verification, included in the application packet). If you have past disciplinary actions or criminal convictions: a written explanation for each, plus a statewide criminal background check from the state where the incident occurred.
  3. Submit the online application and pay the $56 fee
    Complete the application through SC LLR’s online portal. The $56 fee is non-refundable. Payment accepted online.
  4. Wait for registration issuance — do not begin working before this step
    You may not perform pharmacy technician duties until the Board formally issues your registration. Processing time varies; contact the Board at Contact.Pharmacy@llr.sc.gov or 803-896-4700 with questions.
  5. Display your registration certificate or carry your wallet card
    Your registration must be posted conspicuously at your primary pharmacy, or your wallet registration card must be in your possession when working at any other location.
  6. Renew annually by June 30
    Your registration expires June 30 each year regardless of when it was issued. Renew before this date. If you apply before April 1, you must still renew by June 30 of the same year. After renewal windows close (after June 30), paper applications are required for lapsed renewals.

Step 2: State-Certified Upgrade (After Gaining Experience and Certification)

Once you have accumulated 1,000 hours of supervised practice, passed the PTCB or ExCPT, earned your high school diploma or GED, and completed an ASHP-accredited or PTCB-recognized training program, mail copies of all required documents to the Board. No additional fee is required. The Board upgrades your registration record upon verification. Allow processing time for the Board to review and confirm all documentation.

Lapsed Registrations

  • Lapsed less than 1 year: Submit the Lapsed Pharmacy Technician Registration Application with required documentation (paper only after June 30)
  • Lapsed 1–2 years: Lapsed application with documentation; additional requirements may apply
  • Lapsed 2+ years: Reinstatement Application required; must submit 20 hours of CE completed within the past two years

South Carolina Pharmacy Technician CE Requirements

South Carolina’s CE structure includes a practical exemption period that gives new technicians time to get established before CE obligations kick in.

South Carolina Pharmacy Technician CE Requirements (2026)
Situation CE Required? Hours
First renewal after initial registration Exempt 0 hours
While enrolled in a pharmacy technician program Exempt 0 hours
First renewal after completing a pharmacy technician program Exempt 0 hours
All subsequent annual renewals Required 10 hours ACPE or CME Category I annually
Carryover of excess hours Permitted (1 year only) Excess can apply to next renewal year; cannot carry forward beyond that
Reinstatement after 2+ year lapse Required 20 hours completed within the past 2 years

The 10-hour annual CE requirement applies to all registered technicians — both Registered and State-Certified — once the exemption period ends. CE must be from ACPE-accredited providers or CME Category I programs; general employer training hours do not count. South Carolina uses the NABP CPE Monitor system to electronically validate credits — set up your NABP e-Profile ID at nabp.pharmacy and provide it to CE providers so credits are automatically reported to the Board. This is separate from PTCB’s or NHA’s independent CE requirements for maintaining national certification (20 hours every 2 years).

Cost Breakdown: Becoming a Pharmacy Technician in South Carolina

South Carolina Pharmacy Technician Cost Breakdown (2026)
Item Cost (Estimated) Notes
Registration application fee (Tier 1) $56 Non-refundable; paid online through SC LLR; no exam or diploma required at this tier
State-certified upgrade fee $0 No additional fee to upgrade; submit documentation and Board updates your record
Annual renewal fee To be confirmed with SC LLR Renew by June 30 annually; verify current fee at llr.sc.gov/bop before renewing
Training program (ASHP/ACPE, community college) ~$3,700 average SC technical college programs; full-time ~4 months; part-time ~6–8 months
Training program (PTCB-recognized online) $300 – $1,200 Self-paced; must still accumulate 1,000 hrs supervised experience separately for state-certified
PTCE exam (PTCB) $129 Required for state-certified upgrade; not required for basic registration
ExCPT exam (NHA) $105 – $115 Accepted alternative to PTCE for state-certified upgrade
Annual CE (10 hours, after exemption period) $0 – $50/year ACPE-approved CE; many free and low-cost options; exempt for first renewal (and for program enrollees)
PTCB CPhT renewal (every 2 years) $40 Separate from SC state renewal; 20 hrs CE required by PTCB
Minimum total (Tier 1 only, no training program) ~$56 Registration fee only; employer provides on-the-job training; no exam required
Typical total (online training + PTCE + state-certified upgrade) ~$490 – $1,345 Online program + PTCE exam + registration fee; 1,000 hrs accumulated on the job
Typical total (technical college + PTCE + state-certified) ~$3,885 – $3,885 Technical college tuition avg. + PTCE exam + registration fee

Pharmacy Technician Salary in South Carolina (2026)

South Carolina pharmacy technicians earn a statewide average of approximately $19.71 per hour ($40,992/yr) based on analysis of nearly 3,000 recent job postings. The wage gap between Registered and State-Certified technicians is meaningful: ZipRecruiter data shows Registered-only technicians averaging $36,315/yr ($17.46/hr), while Certified technicians average $39,567/yr ($19.02/hr) — a difference of roughly $3,250/yr that grows further in hospital and specialty settings. Charleston is the highest-paying city in the state for certified technicians.

Salary by City

Average Pharmacy Technician Salary by South Carolina City (2026)
City / Metro Avg. Hourly Avg. Annual Notes
Charleston / Mount Pleasant ~$20.00 – $21.00+ ~$41,600 – $43,274 (CPhT) Highest in state; MUSC Health, Roper St. Francis, Trident Health; top 10% earners reach $46,615/yr
Columbia ~$19.00 – $20.00 ~$39,520 – $41,600 Prisma Health, Lexington Medical Center, VA Columbia; state capital pharmacy workforce
Greenville / Spartanburg ~$19.58 ~$40,736 Prisma Health Upstate, Bon Secours St. Francis, Spartanburg Regional; top earners reach $54,152/yr
Florence ~$18.50 – $19.00 ~$38,480 – $39,520 McLeod Regional Medical Center; above statewide average for market size
Myrtle Beach / Coastal ~$18.00 – $19.00 ~$37,440 – $39,520 Grand Strand Medical Center, Tidelands Health; strong retail base serving tourist economy
Augusta, GA cross-border (North Augusta, SC) ~$18.50 – $20.00 ~$38,480 – $41,600 Benefits from AU Health / Doctors Hospital of Augusta cross-border market
Rural / small markets (Upstate and Lowcountry) ~$16.50 – $18.00 ~$34,320 – $37,440 Lower wages offset by significantly lower cost of living in rural SC counties

Salary by Experience and Registration Level

South Carolina Pharmacy Technician Salary by Level and Setting (2026)
Level / Setting Avg. Annual Range
Entry-level / Registered only (0–1 year) $28,000 – $33,000
Registered (1–3 years) $33,000 – $36,315
State-Certified CPhT (1–4 years) $38,000 – $42,000
Experienced State-Certified CPhT (5+ years) $41,000 – $52,000+
Retail pharmacy (CVS, Walgreens, Publix, Walmart) $32,000 – $40,000
Inpatient / hospital pharmacy $40,000 – $52,000
Specialty / infusion pharmacy $46,000 – $60,000+
Supervisor / lead technician $44,000 – $67,000

South Carolina’s major pharmacy employers include MUSC Health (Charleston), Prisma Health (Greenville and Columbia), Bon Secours St. Francis (Greenville), Roper St. Francis Healthcare (Charleston), McLeod Regional Medical Center (Florence), Trident Health (Charleston), Lexington Medical Center (Columbia), CVS Health, Walgreens, Publix, Harris Teeter, Walmart, and Food Lion. The inpatient specialization averages $21.30/hr statewide — roughly $1.60/hr above the overall average. See national salary context in our pharmacy technician salary overview.

How Long Does It Take to Become a Pharmacy Technician in South Carolina?

South Carolina Pharmacy Technician Timeline
Step Registered Path State-Certified Path (from scratch)
High school diploma / GED Not required for Tier 1 Required before state-certified upgrade
Submit registration application + pay $56 1–3 days (application); processing varies Same — start here first
Board issues registration; begin working Processing varies; do not work until issued Same starting point
Complete ASHP/PTCB-recognized training program Not required for Tier 1 4–12 months (concurrent with accumulating hours)
Accumulate 1,000 hours of supervised practice Not required for Tier 1 ~6–12 months full-time; 12–18 months part-time
Pass PTCE or ExCPT Not required for Tier 1 4–8 weeks exam prep after training
Submit state-certified upgrade documentation N/A 1–2 days to compile; Board processing varies
Total: Registered Days to weeks N/A
Total: State-Certified (from scratch) N/A ~10 to 20 months

The registered path is among the fastest in the series — apply, pay $56, wait for the Board to issue your registration, and begin working. The state-certified path takes longer due to the 1,000-hour experience requirement, but candidates accumulate those hours on the job while drawing a paycheck, making it an efficient earn-while-you-qualify progression.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to pass the PTCB exam to work as a pharmacy technician in South Carolina?

No. South Carolina’s basic Registered Pharmacy Technician registration requires no national exam. You register with the SC Board of Pharmacy by submitting an application, paying the $56 fee, providing a lawful presence affidavit and copies of your photo ID and Social Security card, and waiting for the Board to issue your registration. However, if you want to upgrade to State-Certified status — which unlocks additional duties like verbal orders, prescription transfers, and vaccine administration — you must pass either the PTCE (PTCB) or ExCPT (NHA), among other requirements.

What is the difference between a Registered and a State-Certified Pharmacy Technician in South Carolina?

South Carolina has two distinct tiers. A Registered Pharmacy Technician can perform standard dispensing support duties under pharmacist supervision, with no exam, diploma, or training program required for registration. A State-Certified Pharmacy Technician has completed a full upgrade path — national CPhT credential (PTCB or NHA), ASHP-accredited or PTCB-recognized training program, high school diploma or GED, and 1,000 documented hours of supervised practice — and may perform additional duties including receiving verbal orders, making one-time prescription transfers, and administering vaccines. Importantly, “state-certified” in SC is a specific Board designation — it is not automatic upon earning a PTCB or NHA national certification.

Is there a minimum age to register as a pharmacy technician in South Carolina?

No. The SC Board of Pharmacy does not specify a minimum age for pharmacy technician registration, and no high school diploma is required for the basic registered tier. High school students interested in healthcare careers can register and begin gaining supervised pharmacy experience. Note that the PTCB requires candidates to be at least 18 for the PTCE exam, so pursuing national certification and state-certified status typically requires being 18 or older — but working as a registered technician can begin at any age the employer deems appropriate.

How do I become a State-Certified Pharmacy Technician in South Carolina?

Start by registering as a basic pharmacy technician. Then, while working to accumulate 1,000 hours of supervised practice, complete an ASHP-accredited or PTCB-recognized training program and earn your high school diploma or GED. Once you have your national CPhT credential (from PTCB or NHA) and your Affidavit of Experience documenting 1,000 practice hours, mail copies of all required documents to the SC Board of Pharmacy (110 Centerview Drive, Columbia, SC 29210). There is no additional fee — the Board upgrades your registration record upon verification. Out-of-state experience hours are accepted if documented via pharmacist letter on company letterhead.

What are South Carolina’s continuing education requirements for pharmacy technicians?

South Carolina pharmacy technicians are exempt from CE for the first renewal period after initial registration, and also exempt while enrolled in a training program and during the first renewal following program completion. After those exemptions: 10 hours of ACPE-accredited or CME Category I CE annually, due before the June 30 renewal deadline. Excess CE hours can be carried forward one year only. South Carolina uses the NABP CPE Monitor system — set up your NABP e-Profile ID at nabp.pharmacy so CE providers can report your credits directly. This 10-hour annual requirement is separate from PTCB’s 20-hour biennial CPhT recertification requirement.

Can I transfer my out-of-state pharmacy technician registration to South Carolina?

South Carolina does not have a formal reciprocity program. All applicants must apply through the standard SC LLR registration process regardless of other-state licensure. If you hold an active national CPhT credential from PTCB or NHA and have accumulated 1,000 hours of supervised practice (verifiable by your out-of-state pharmacist via letter on company letterhead), you can register at the basic level first and immediately apply for the state-certified upgrade. Technicians relocating from North Carolina, Georgia, or Virginia with active CPhT credentials and documented experience can typically transition to State-Certified status quickly.

What is the average pharmacy technician salary in South Carolina?

Statewide average: approximately $19.71/hr ($40,992/yr) based on early 2026 job posting data. Registered-only technicians average $36,315/yr ($17.46/hr); state-certified technicians average $39,567/yr ($19.02/hr). Charleston is the highest-paying market, with certified technicians averaging approximately $43,274/yr — about 9% above the statewide CPhT average. Greenville averages $40,736/yr; Columbia is similar. The inpatient/hospital specialization averages $21.30/hr statewide. Top earners in specialty and hospital roles in Greenville and Charleston reach $52,000–$60,000+.

Ready to Start Your Pharmacy Technician Career in South Carolina?

Here is your action plan:

  1. Apply for your Registered Pharmacy Technician registration at llr.sc.gov/bop — $56, lawful presence affidavit, photo ID, and Social Security card. Download forms before starting the online application.
  2. Wait for the Board to issue your registration before performing any technician duties
  3. Begin working and accumulating experience hours — you need 1,000 hours for state-certified status; track every shift
  4. Enroll in an ASHP-accredited or PTCB-recognized training program concurrently — technical college or online
  5. Earn your high school diploma or GED if you do not already have one (required for state-certified upgrade)
  6. Pass the PTCE ($129) or ExCPT ($105–$115) to earn your national CPhT credential
  7. Submit your state-certified upgrade documentation to the Board (no additional fee)
  8. Renew annually by June 30 — CE exemption applies for your first renewal; 10 ACPE/CME-I hours required each subsequent year

Explore more: Pharmacy Technician Career Guide · North Carolina · Georgia · Virginia · Tennessee · All Careers