Pursuing medicine or dentistry in Hong Kong is one of the most competitive and rewarding academic journeys a DSE student can undertake. With only two universities offering JUPAS-accessible medical and dental degrees — the University of Hong Kong (HKU) and the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) — and fewer than 400 places available each year across all three programmes, the path demands exceptional academic results, strong interpersonal skills, and a genuine commitment to the healthcare profession.
This guide covers everything DSE students need to know: subject requirements, JUPAS admission benchmarks, interview preparation, programme structures, and the long-term career pathway from medical school to licensed practice in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong offers three undergraduate healthcare programmes accessible through JUPAS:
| Programme | University | Degree | Duration | JUPAS Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine | HKU | MBBS | 6 years | JS6960 |
| Medicine | CUHK | MBChB | 6 years | JS4450 |
| Dentistry | HKU | BDS | 6 years | JS6940 |
No other Hong Kong university offers JUPAS-route medicine or dentistry at the undergraduate level. This concentration means competition is intense, and every decision — from subject choices in Form 4 to your JUPAS band allocation — carries significant weight.
All three programmes require students to meet minimum thresholds in the four DSE core subjects:
Both Biology and Chemistry are required electives for all three programmes. Students who did not take either subject are automatically ineligible, regardless of how strong their other results are.
Physics is not formally required but is commonly seen among successful applicants. Combined Science (Biology + Chemistry) is accepted at some bands, but taking the full separate subjects is strongly recommended for serious applicants.
JUPAS uses a Best-6 score for ranking purposes, incorporating the four core subjects plus two electives (typically Biology and Chemistry for medical applicants). The aggregate calculation weights subjects differently depending on the programme:
HKU Medicine and Dentistry use a weighted formula that gives additional weight to English Language and the relevant science subjects. Chemistry and Biology together typically account for a substantial portion of the academic score.
CUHK Medicine applies its own weighting formula, with English and science subjects also receiving higher coefficients.
For a competitive application in 2025–2026, aim for a Best-6 aggregate of 36 or above out of a theoretical maximum of 42 (7 points per subject × 6 subjects, with Level 5** = 7 points). The most successful applicants typically present:
Scoring below Level 4 in either Biology or Chemistry makes a competitive application extremely difficult, even if other subjects are strong.
To understand the scale of competition, consider these approximate figures for recent cohorts:
HKU Medicine (JS6960)
CUHK Medicine (JS4450)
HKU Dentistry (JS6940)
These figures make medicine one of the top two or three most selective JUPAS programmes every year, alongside Law at HKU and a handful of other elite courses. Dentistry, while marginally less competitive, still requires results in the top 1–2% of all DSE candidates.
| Feature | HKU MBBS | CUHK MBChB |
|---|---|---|
| Degree awarded | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) | MBChB (Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery) |
| Duration | 6 years | 6 years |
| Curriculum model | Integrated, early clinical exposure from Year 1 | Systems-based, early clinical exposure from Year 1 |
| Teaching hospital | Queen Mary Hospital (Pok Fu Lam) | Prince of Wales Hospital (Sha Tin) |
| Clinical training sites | HKU-affiliated hospitals across HK | CUHK-affiliated hospitals in New Territories East |
| Medium of instruction | English | English (with some Cantonese in clinical settings) |
| Preclinical years | Years 1–2 (foundational sciences) | Years 1–2 (foundational sciences) |
| Clinical years | Years 3–6 (rotations across specialties) | Years 3–6 (rotations across specialties) |
| Elective period | Offered in later years | Offered in later years |
| Global exchanges | Extensive, including UK and US partners | Extensive, including Chinese mainland institutions |
| Graduate entry pathway | Available (4-year programme for degree holders) | Available (4-year programme for degree holders) |
| Research opportunities | Strong, tied to HKU research excellence | Strong, tied to CUHK medical research output |
Both degrees are internationally recognised and lead to the same registration pathways in Hong Kong and many overseas jurisdictions. The choice between HKU and CUHK often comes down to geographic preference (Hong Kong Island vs New Territories), specific faculty culture, and which teaching hospital environment appeals more to the student.
HKU’s Bachelor of Dental Surgery (BDS) is the only JUPAS dental programme in Hong Kong. The six-year curriculum is structured to produce graduates competent in the full scope of general dentistry, with clinical training beginning in Year 3.
Key features of the HKU BDS programme:
The dentistry programme attracts students who are drawn to a healthcare career with greater lifestyle predictability than hospital medicine, combined with a strong hands-on and patient-facing clinical environment from an early stage.
Academic results alone are not enough for medical and dental admission. All three programmes conduct the Multiple Mini Interview (MMI), a structured admissions assessment that has largely replaced traditional panel interviews at both HKU and CUHK.
The MMI consists of a circuit of short, independent interview stations — typically 8 to 12 stations, each lasting 5 to 10 minutes. At each station, candidates encounter a different scenario, question, or task, assessed by a different examiner. Stations are separated by brief preparation periods.
The MMI is designed to assess a broader range of competencies than a single panel interview, and to reduce the influence of individual examiner bias.
Stations typically test the following domains:
1. Communication Skills Candidates may be asked to explain a concept to a layperson, deliver difficult news in a role-play scenario, or discuss a medical issue with a patient actor. Assessors evaluate clarity, empathy, and active listening.
2. Ethical Reasoning A common and often challenging station type. Candidates are presented with a dilemma — such as resource allocation, patient confidentiality, or end-of-life decisions — and asked to reason through it aloud. Assessors are not looking for a single “correct” answer, but for structured thinking, awareness of competing values, and intellectual honesty.
3. Critical Thinking and Problem Solving Candidates may encounter unexpected data, a logical puzzle, or a real-world healthcare scenario requiring analysis. The goal is to assess how candidates handle ambiguity and unknown information.
4. Empathy and Compassion Role-play stations may involve a distressed patient, a worried family member, or a peer in difficulty. Candidates should demonstrate genuine sensitivity without projecting or making assumptions.
5. Self-awareness and Motivation Stations may ask why the candidate wants to study medicine, how they handle failure, or what they have done to explore the profession. Authentic, reflective answers outperform rehearsed speeches.
6. Teamwork and Leadership Some stations present scenarios involving team conflicts or leadership decisions in a clinical setting. Candidates should demonstrate collaborative instincts without being passive.
JUPAS is not the only route into Hong Kong medical and dental programmes. Both HKU and CUHK reserve a portion of places for non-JUPAS applicants:
Students holding A-Levels, IB Diplomas, SATs with AP subjects, or other international qualifications may apply through the non-JUPAS route. They are assessed on their academic results plus the MMI or other interview formats. Requirements typically mirror the DSE science requirements: Chemistry and Biology are expected at high performance levels.
Under a separate mainland quota, students with Gaokao results may apply directly to HKU and CUHK medical programmes. Competition is similarly intense. Mainland applicants typically undergo a separate selection process with academic screening and interviews.
Both HKU and CUHK offer a four-year Graduate Entry Medicine programme for holders of non-medical bachelor’s degrees, typically requiring strong academic performance and relevant healthcare experience. This pathway is competitive and attracts career changers or students who did not gain entry to medicine directly from secondary school.
Understanding the structure of a six-year medical curriculum helps prospective students set realistic expectations.
The first two years are predominantly academic and laboratory-based. Students cover:
These years are academically demanding. The volume of material is significantly greater than secondary school science, and students must develop effective study systems quickly.
Students begin full clinical rotations. At HKU, this is based primarily at Queen Mary Hospital; at CUHK, at Prince of Wales Hospital and affiliated sites. Rotations cover:
Students are assessed through OSCEs (Objective Structured Clinical Examinations), written papers, and clinical supervisor evaluations.
The final years intensify clinical training, with students taking on greater responsibility under supervision. Year 6 culminates in final professional examinations, the passing of which is required for graduation and subsequent registration.
Graduating with an MBBS or MBChB is not the endpoint — it is the beginning of a structured professional pathway.
All new graduates must complete a one-year internship at a Hospital Authority hospital before becoming eligible for full registration with the Medical Council of Hong Kong (MCHK). The internship involves supervised rotations through medicine, surgery, and elective disciplines. Performance during internship is assessed and must meet the MCHK’s standards.
Upon graduation, medical graduates receive provisional registration from the MCHK, which permits them to work as intern doctors. After successfully completing the internship year, they apply for full registration, which allows independent clinical practice in Hong Kong.
BDS graduates follow an analogous pathway through the Dental Council of Hong Kong.
After full registration, doctors typically join the Hospital Authority as House Officers (HO) or enter private practice. Most who wish to specialise enter the Resident Trainee system and work towards the examinations of a specialist college. The Hong Kong Academy of Medicine oversees 15 specialty colleges, including:
Specialist training typically takes 6–7 additional years beyond full registration, culminating in Fellowship examinations. Full specialist status (FHKAM — Fellowship of the Hong Kong Academy of Medicine) typically requires 10–12 years post-graduation in total.
For dentistry graduates, the pathway is similar but leads to either general dental practice, specialist training through the Dental Council, or academic dentistry.
Medicine and dentistry rank among the highest-earning professions in Hong Kong. Entry-level doctors in the public system earn competitive salaries, and experienced specialists — whether in public or private practice — command among the highest incomes of any profession in the city. The long training period is a real investment, but the financial and social returns are substantial by comparison with most other degree pathways.
Medicine and dentistry are extraordinary careers, but they demand an unusual combination of qualities. Before applying, ask yourself seriously:
Students who answer yes to these questions and who are performing at Level 5* or above in Biology and Chemistry are genuinely strong candidates. Those who are drawn primarily by income or social status, without authentic engagement with the work of medicine, tend to perform poorly at MMI and struggle with the demands of clinical training.
Last updated: April 2026. Admission statistics and programme structures are subject to change. Always verify the latest requirements directly with HKU Admissions (admissions.hku.hk) and CUHK Admissions (admission.cuhk.edu.hk) and the JUPAS website (jupas.edu.hk).