Pharmaceutical
Technician
Also posted as Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Technician, Production Technician, Process Operator.
Canonical Role ID · UNMUDL-TECH-125
What is a pharmaceutical technician?
A pharmaceutical technician operates and documents the equipment that manufactures medicines — mixing, filling, and packaging products under strict quality and safety rules known as cGMP (current Good Manufacturing Practice). It's a hands-on job in a clean, regulated factory, and most people start with a certificate or short training program, not a four-year degree.
Below: what it pays, what you'd do, the skills you need, and how to become one.
The spec sheet
A quick, standardized profile — the same details employers use to write job postings and colleges use to build training.
How much does it pay?
Pharmaceutical technicians earn a median of $45,000–$70,000 a year. Here's how pay typically grows with experience.
What does a pharmaceutical technician do?
You make and document medicines in a clean, tightly regulated factory — where getting it right and recording every step matters as much as how much you produce.
Run batch production
Set up, operate, and monitor equipment that mixes, fills, and packages product to exact specifications.
Follow cGMP & SOPs
Work to current Good Manufacturing Practice and standard operating procedures that keep product safe and compliant.
Document everything
Record batch records, in-process checks, and deviations so every product is fully traceable for quality and audits.
Maintain sterile conditions
Gown up, manage contamination controls, and keep cleanroom and aseptic environments within tolerance.
What skills do you need?
Three core skills sit at the heart of this role. You can learn all of them through short, hands-on training.
Batch Processing
Operating production equipment to manufacture consistent, spec-accurate batches of product.
cGMP Compliance
Working within current Good Manufacturing Practice, the regulatory backbone of safe drug manufacturing.
Documentation
Accurate, audit-ready records of batch records, deviations, and in-process quality checks.
Related roles.
Technician careers,
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