
Undergraduate vs Postgraduate Medicine in Australia
What’s the difference—and which is right for you?
What’s the Difference?
| Feature | Undergraduate Medicine | Postgraduate Medicine |
| Entry Point | Right after Year 12 or during a gap year | After completing a bachelors degree |
| Degree Earned | Bachelor of Medical Science/Doctor of Medicine (BMed/MD) or Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) | Doctor of Medicine (MD) |
| Duration | 5-6 years | 4 years (plus 3 years of undergraduate study) |
| Entry Requirements | ATAR, UCAT, Interview | GPA, GAMSAT, Interview |
| Age of Entry | 17-19 typically | 21+ typically |
| Cost | Longer program = higher total cost | Often higher per year, but shorter duration |
| Class Demographic | School leavers, younger cohort | Diverse backgrounds, more mature students |
| Pathway Flexibility | Locked in early | Offers more time to explore other interests |
Pros and Cons
Undergraduate Medicine
Pros:
- No need to sit the GAMSAT
- Clear and direct pathway from high school
- Start clinical training earlier
- Graduate younger (and start earning sooner)
Cons:
- Highly competitive from Year 12
- Very intense for young students
- Limited flexibility if interests change
- Pressure of UCAT performance in final school year
Postgraduate Medicine
Pros:
- Time to mature and explore academic interests
- Life experience can benefit communication and resilience
- Broader academic foundation
- Entry not dependent on Year 12 performance
Cons:
- Requires sitting the GAMSAT (challenging and time-consuming)
- More years in study = more HECS debt
- Entry just as competitive, if not more
- Must complete and perform well in an undergraduate degree first
Universities Offering Undergraduate Medicine in Australia
(As of 2025. Always check each university’s website for the most up-to-date info.)
- University of New South Wales (UNSW)
- University of Adelaide
- James Cook University (JCU)
- Bond University (private, full-fee only)
- Curtin University
- University of Newcastle / University of New England (Joint Medical Program)
- Western Sydney University / Charles Sturt University (Joint Program)
- University of Tasmania
- Monash University
Universities Offering Postgraduate Medicine in Australia
(All require GAMSAT or equivalent and an undergraduate degree)
- Australian National University (ANU)
- University of Melbourne
- University of Sydney
- University of Queensland
- Flinders University
- Deakin University
- University of Western Australia (UWA) (also has an undergrad entry pathway)
- University of Notre Dame (Fremantle and Sydney)
- Griffith University
- Macquarie University
- University of Wollongong
- University of Melbourne – La Trobe Rural Pathway
- Monash University (streamlined for Monash Undergraduate students only)
So Which Should You Choose?
It depends on:
- Your current stage (Year 12 vs uni student)
- Your confidence in pursuing medicine early
- Your financial and emotional readiness
- Your academic strengths (UCAT vs GAMSAT)
There’s no one right answer—just the right one for you.
