Compare this role's AI exposure, automation potential, relative income vulnerability, relative health risk, pay, and growth outlook using WeCovr's UK occupation dataset.
Digital AI Exposure
4/10
Lower
Automation Potential
3/10
Lower
Relative Income Vulnerability
6/10
Moderate
Relative Health Risk
8/10
Higher
Median Pay
£31,543
median pay
UK Jobs
38,615
estimated employment
Growth Outlook
Faster than average
positive
Education
A-level
typical route
What The Data Suggests
Pharmaceutical Technicians is one of the 400+ UK occupations tracked in the WeCovr Job Market Visualiser. In our current dataset, this role shows lower digital AI exposure, lower automation potential, moderate relative income vulnerability, and higher relative health risk.
The role currently shows a median pay of £31,543 with an outlook of Faster than average. These indicators are designed to help users compare jobs in a practical way rather than predict a single outcome for any one worker.
For WeCovr, the important question is not just whether technology may reshape a role over time, but whether a worker in this occupation could face meaningful disruption from illness, injury, delayed treatment, or interrupted earnings in the meantime.
These scores are directional comparisons across the dataset. They are designed to be useful for ranking occupations, not to act as precise forecasts for any one person.
Practical Takeaways For Pharmaceutical Technicians
This role appears less exposed to AI-led disruption than many desk-based occupations.
The work appears to rely more heavily on human judgment, physical presence, or interpersonal context.
Relative health risk is elevated, suggesting absence, fatigue, strain, or treatment delays could have a bigger real-world effect.
Why These Scores Look Like They Do
Why this AI exposure score: 4/10
The core of this occupation remains people-facing and care-led, depending on hands-on work, in-person service, or real-world conditions that AI cannot directly replace. AI may help at the edges with planning or paperwork, but the main work remains low-exposure.
Why this relative income score: 6/10
This role looks relatively less income-vulnerable because median pay is around £31,543 and the occupation tends to have stronger continuity or stability than more precarious work. Financial disruption is still possible, but the baseline resilience is better than average.
Why this relative health score: 8/10
This occupation carries elevated health risk because it combines physical strain, manual handling and emotional demand. Injury, musculoskeletal problems, or sustained stress are more plausible here than in office-heavy work.
How Pharmaceutical Technicians Compares Within Associate Professional And Technical
This occupation sits inside the Associate Professional And Technical group, where we currently track 68 roles with an average pay of £38,324.
Pharmaceutical Technicians looks lower than the average Associate Professional And Technical role on AI exposure.
Pharmaceutical Technicians looks lower than the average Associate Professional And Technical role on automation potential.
Pharmaceutical Technicians sits close to the sector average for relative income vulnerability.
Pharmaceutical Technicians looks more exposed than the average Associate Professional And Technical role on relative health risk.
Pharmaceutical Technicians currently pays below the sector average in the current dataset.
Data Sources
This page draws on the same WeCovr UK job-market dataset used in the main visualiser, including occupation-level information linked to the National Careers Service, ONS-aligned labour-market data, and WeCovr's comparative scoring for AI exposure, automation potential, income vulnerability, and health risk.
Why WeCovr Built This
AI gets the headlines, but sudden illness or injury can also create significant pressure on income. We built this dataset so UK workers can compare both technology-related change and protection-relevant pressures in one place.
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Related Occupations
Roles in the same part of the labour market with a broadly similar mix of AI, automation, income, and health exposure.
Nearby Comparisons
Lower combined risk at a similar pay level
Registered Mental Health Nurses with moderate AI exposure and lower relative income vulnerability.
Veterinary Nurses with moderate AI exposure and lower relative income vulnerability.
Prison Service Officers (Below Principal Officer) with lower AI exposure and lower relative income vulnerability.
Tool Makers, Tool Fitters And Markers-Out with lower AI exposure and lower relative income vulnerability.
Higher combined risk at a similar pay level
Medical Secretaries with higher automation potential and moderate relative health risk.
Telephone Salespersons with higher automation potential and moderate relative health risk.
School Secretaries with higher automation potential and moderate relative health risk.
Collector Salespersons And Credit Agents with higher automation potential and lower relative health risk.
FAQs
Does this page mean AI will definitely replace pharmaceutical technicians?
No. The scores are comparative indicators, not a prediction that any individual worker will lose their role. They are calibrated to show relative positioning across UK occupations rather than absolute certainty.
Why does WeCovr show income and health risk for pharmaceutical technicians?
Because the biggest near-term disruption for many workers is not necessarily AI. Illness, injury, treatment delays, or time away from work can have a faster and more immediate financial impact.
What should pharmaceutical technicians do after reading this page?
Use the main visualiser to compare this role against other occupations, then calculate your Protection Score if you want to explore whether your current arrangements may leave gaps.