Health · Republic of Ireland

How the Drugs Payment Scheme works

An eligible household pays no more than the current monthly threshold for approved prescribed medicines, appliances and aids.

Published by Around.ie EditorialAs of 2026-07-11Last reviewed 2026-07-11Review due 2026-08-11

The direct answer

The Drugs Payment Scheme limits what an eligible person or family pays in a calendar month for approved items. There is no means test, but residency and household rules apply. Check the current threshold and register through the HSE before relying on it. [1]

Who can use the scheme

The HSE defines who counts as a family and the residency conditions. A family can include a dependent child up to the scheme’s age limit, with additional rules for a dependent in full-time education or with a disability. Use the HSE’s current wording for your circumstances. [1]

What the limit covers

The monthly limit applies to approved prescribed medicines, aids and appliances supplied through participating pharmacies. It is a household monthly ceiling, not a promise that every product is covered. Ask the pharmacist whether an item is included. [2]

Apply and use it

Apply online or with the official form. Once registered, give the pharmacy the relevant details and try to use one pharmacy in a month so spending can be tracked. Keep receipts and contact the HSE if household details change. [3]

What to do now

  1. Check current eligibility and threshold on HSE.ie.
  2. Apply with PPS numbers and household details.
  3. Confirm that each prescribed item is covered.
  4. Keep the household record up to date.

Primary sources

Claims and service details were checked against these official sources on 2026-07-11. Follow the source for the latest operational detail.

  1. Health Service Executive: Drugs Payment Scheme Accessed 2026-07-11
  2. Citizens Information: Drugs Payment Scheme Accessed 2026-07-11
  3. Department of Health: Community drug schemes Accessed 2026-07-11

Keep reading

Editorial note

Publisher: Around.ie Editorial. This page provides general information, not individual professional advice. Material changes trigger an earlier review. Corrections create a new reviewed version.