Apothecary Jobs
Apothecary jobs are open across retail pharmacy, compounding pharmacies, herbal medicine, and specialty healthcare settings, from entry-level technician support roles to senior compounding and clinical consultation positions, with common specializations in herbal formulation, sterile compounding, and patient counseling. See the openings below and apply to the ones that match your experience.
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HELLO! PART TIME potential for FULL TIME PHARMACIST POSITION IN A NON CORPORATE WORK SETTING- The Apothecary Shoppe in Montrose, CO. Please email your resume and introduction.
We have an amazing staff of two Pharmacists and five highly competent Pharmacy Technicians .We are looking to add one more pharmacist to the group.
Our ideal candidate is attentive, ambitious, and hard-working, experienced with Pioneer Software, knowledge of compounding and incredibly comfortable with counseling and delegating the work flow. However, willing to train the right candidate in compounding.
Responsibilities
We are looking for an energetic, proactive Pharmacist who truly enjoys engaging in personal patient care on a daily basis and is comfortable counseling on all OTC items and alternative options. As well as managing the work flow and delegating tasks as needed.
~Must promote positive energy on the phone and in person.
~Possess a dynamic passion for patients to obtain the healthiest lifestyle possible.
~Always accessible to patients coming through the door for questions and consultations.
~ Compounding experience desired
Locations: Montrose, CO
Job Summary:
The Pharmacist is responsible for the continuation of the goals and objectives within the dispensing pharmacy. The pharmacist provides routine and emergency comprehensive and accurate drug screening, information, processing, and dispensing services for various drug distribution systems to the centers. Management skills and accuracy are required to ensure that the appropriate drug product reaches the customer efficiently and safely.
Key Responsibilities:
- You will execute day-to-day operations in the pharmacy as they pertain to workflow, production quotas, and deadlines.
- You should ensure that the site is in compliance with all local, state, federal, third party, and contract rules and regulations regarding the practice of pharmacy. Assist in ensuring that the pharmacy meets compliance expectations for DEA policies and procedures as set forth by Veatch Pharmacy Solutions LLC or the regulatory agency, whichever is stricter.
- Supervise the pharmacy production staff to ensure proper order entry, work flow, security of the pharmacy area, and adherence to delivery schedules.
- Check for completeness and accuracy of all new and refill orders. You will ensure accuracy and content of all drug packaging and labeling is correct.
- Supervision of all compounded drug products or solutions.
- Assist in the proper ordering, handling, receiving, documentation, and storage of all controlled substances; assist in maintaining a perpetual inventory for schedule II drugs.
- Workflow grid is cleared daily
- Follow all applicable government regulations including HIPAA.
- Other duties as assigned; Job duties may vary.
Required Qualifications:
- Current license to practice pharmacy in the state of Colorado
Physical Demands:
May sit, stand, stoop, bend and walk intermittently during the day. May sit or stand seven (7) to ten (10) hours per day. May be necessary to work extended hours as needed. Finger dexterity to operate office equipment required. May need to lift up to twenty-five (25) pounds on occasion. Visual acuity to see and read fine prints. Specific vision abilities required by this role include close vision, color vision and the ability to adjust focus. Must be able to hear normal voice sounds. The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this role.
Required Education:
- Bachelor’s Degree in Pharmacy
Qualifications
We are looking forward to receiving your application. Thank you.
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Who's Hiring


Top Industries Hiring
- Healthcare & Medical Services
What Employers Look For
The qualifications that appear most often in apothecary jobs.
- State pharmacy technician license or pharmacist licensure depending on role level
- Experience with USP 795 and 797 compounding standards and documentation
- Proficiency with pharmacy management software and dispensing systems
- Knowledge of herbal, homeopathic, or naturopathic formulation methods for specialty roles
- Strong patient counseling and medication therapy management communication skills
- High school diploma or associate degree minimum, with bachelor's preferred for senior roles
Tips for Your Apothecary Job Search
Tailor your resume to compounding credentials
Highlight any state Board of Pharmacy certifications, compounding experience, and specific drug classes you've handled. Employers distinguish candidates who list USP 795 and 797 compliance familiarity from those who use vague pharmacy experience language.
Filter openings by practice setting
Retail pharmacy, hospital compounding, and herbal apothecary shops each expect different core competencies. Target listings that match your actual work environment so your resume speaks directly to what the hiring manager needs.
Apply early to roles that fit
Migrate Mate lists apothecary openings from across the United States in one place, so you can find roles that match and apply directly to each listing.
Document every formulation protocol you've followed
Interviewers often ask about specific compounding scenarios, including how you handle beyond-use dating or hazardous drug handling. Prepare concrete examples from your work history that show you follow documented, reproducible protocols.
Research the employer's dispensing philosophy before interviewing
Apothecary employers range from strictly evidence-based compounding labs to integrative medicine practices blending herbal and pharmaceutical products. Knowing which approach an employer emphasizes lets you speak their language and ask sharper questions.
Negotiate scope of practice in your offer review
Before accepting, clarify whether the role includes patient consultations, formula development, or only dispensing. Scope creep is common in smaller apothecary settings, so getting responsibilities in writing protects your professional boundaries and workload.
Apothecary Jobs: Frequently Asked Questions
Which companies are hiring the most apothecarys?
The most active employers for apothecarys right now are Thomas Jefferson University & Jefferson Health, The Apothecary Shoppe, and Shepherd Center, and the most openings are in Pennsylvania, Colorado, and Alabama, based on current listings on Migrate Mate as of July 2026. Demand tends to be strongest in states with active compounding pharmacy regulations and integrative health markets.
How many apothecary jobs are remote?
About 0% of apothecary openings are fully remote or hybrid as of July 2026, which reflects that most compounding and dispensing work requires a physical lab or retail setting. Roles with a remote component tend to be in telepharmacy consultation, herbal product formulation consulting, or pharmacy education and training positions.
How do you become a apothecary?
Start by earning a pharmacy technician certification through your state board or a nationally recognized credentialing program. Gain hands-on compounding experience in a retail or hospital pharmacy setting, then pursue additional training in herbal formulation or sterile compounding if you want to specialize. Some apothecary roles, particularly those involving patient consultations and prescription oversight, require a Doctor of Pharmacy degree and full licensure.
What can I do to get hired as an apothecary with little experience?
Focus on entry-level pharmacy technician roles at compounding pharmacies, where you can learn formulation workflows on the job while working toward your technician certification. Volunteering or interning at an herbal apothecary or integrative health clinic builds practical product knowledge that formal pharmacy programs rarely cover. Employers in this field value demonstrated curiosity about plant medicine and a detail-oriented approach to documentation even at the entry level.
What does the apothecary interview process look like?
Most apothecary interviews begin with a phone screen focused on your licensing status and compounding background, followed by an in-person or video interview where you walk through specific formulation scenarios or patient interaction examples. Compounding-heavy roles often include a practical skills assessment covering weighing, measuring, and documentation procedures. Smaller independent apothecaries typically move faster than hospital systems, often reaching an offer within two or three weeks of the first interview.
Where can I find and apply to apothecary jobs?
You can find and apply to apothecary jobs on Migrate Mate, which lists current openings from across the United States. Search for roles that match your specialization, whether that is sterile compounding, herbal formulation, or patient counseling, and apply directly to each listing that fits your background and preferred practice setting.
See All 9 Apothecary Jobs
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