Skip to calculator
Dispensing Free · No login

Days Supply Calculator

Days supply from quantity dispensed, dose per administration and dosing frequency. Free pharmacy calculator for days supply. TGA and FDA references.

💊
🎯

PBS prescription in hand, the patient is 5 minutes from closing and asks if this will last until their next appointment in 28 days. You need the answer in seconds.

Days Supply Calculator
Dispensing
Total tablets, mL, patches etc.
e.g. 1 tablet, 5 mL
OD=1 · BD=2 · TDS=3 · QID=4
Days supply = (Qty ÷ Dose per admin) ÷ Doses per day Example: 60 tablets, 1 tablet BD → (60÷1)÷2 = 30 days
Liquid: 200 mL, 5 mL TDS → (200÷5)÷3 = 13.3 days
💡 Accurate days supply is required for PBS claims and continuity-of-care records.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates days supply from the quantity dispensed, the dose per administration, and the dosing frequency. Works for tablets, liquids, patches, inhalers and all standard dosage forms. Also reverse-calculates the quantity needed to fill a prescribed number of days.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Days supply = Quantity dispensed ÷ (Dose per admin × Doses per day) | Quantity needed = Doses per day × Dose per admin × Days

Days supply is fundamental to dispensing accuracy, PBS compliance, adherence monitoring and Medicines Reconciliation. Incorrect days supply causes early refill requests, adherence gaps and potential regulatory issues with controlled drugs. The calculation must account for the actual number of doses per day, not just frequency abbreviations.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Simple daily tablet
Given: Qty: 30 tablets · Dose: 1 tablet · Frequency: Once daily (1/day)
Working: 30 ÷ (1 × 1)
Answer: 30 days supply
💡 Standard PBS maximum supply. Matches 28-day month with 2 tablets spare.
Standard
TDS liquid antibiotic
Given: Qty: 150 mL · Dose: 5 mL · Frequency: TDS (3/day)
Working: 150 ÷ (5 × 3) = 150 ÷ 15
Answer: 10 days supply
💡 Standard antibiotic course. Check: 5 mL × 3 × 10 = 150 mL. ✓
Advanced
BD inhaler — dose count
Given: Qty: 1 inhaler × 120 doses · Dose: 2 puffs · Frequency: BD (2/day)
Working: 120 puffs ÷ (2 puffs × 2 times/day) = 120 ÷ 4
Answer: 30 days supply
💡 Confirm inhaler dose counter — some inhalers have extra 'tail-off' doses that shouldn't be counted.

4 Sanity check

PBS maximum supply
Usually 30 days (authority items may differ)
Check PBS schedule for specific item maximum quantity. Some items have 5-day or 4-day maximum.
Controlled drug supply
Often restricted to 28 days maximum
Schedule 8 items: check state-specific maximum supply quantities.
Days supply vs quantity check
Qty = Doses/day × Dose × Days
Cross-multiply to verify: if Days supply = 30, dose = 1 tab, BD → Qty must = 60 tablets.
Liquid rounding
Round down for critical medications
For antibiotics and antivirals, do not round up — partial days are incomplete courses.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using frequency abbreviation without confirming doses/day QID assumed as 4/day, but may mean 'four times during waking hours' (3× if patient sleeps 8 hrs) Days supply off by ~25% for QID medications Clarify with prescriber if QID means true every-6-hour dosing or 4 times during waking hours
Not accounting for dose changes Previous dispensing record used Days supply based on old dose Always base the calculation on the CURRENT prescription dose, not dispensing history
Confusing units for liquids Entering mL when mg required or vice versa Completely wrong result For liquids: quantity in mL, dose in mL. For tablets: quantity in tablets, dose in tablets.
Counting inhaler priming doses Some inhalers require 3–4 priming puffs when new Days supply overestimated by 1–2 days Subtract priming doses from total dose count before calculating days supply