Course overview
Those with the insights to guide research, industry, care and commercial enterprise are in high demand across the medical sector. If you want a lucrative and meaningful future, the UTS Bachelor of Medical Science Bachelor of Laws is your ideal choice. This program will see you establish a comprehensive and career-ready education in Australian law alongside experience in the Medical Science major of your choice. Your choice of electives means you can even curate your learning to better meet your ideal career outcomes. Whether you dream of working in medical law, research, policy, practice or want to carve out your own unique path, this dual program is your key to unlocking the future of your dreams.
Course record
CRICOS
00099F
Studies in Australia
Source: Studies in Australia course page. Course page URL: https://www.studiesinaustralia.com/courses-in-australia/university-of-technology-sydney/courses/bachelor-of-medical-science-bachelor-of-laws.
Entry requirements
Review the captured standard entry requirements, English requirements and additional notes for this course.
Standard entry
- Applicants must have completed an Australian Year 12 qualification, Australian Qualifications Framework Diploma, or equivalent Australian or overseas qualification at the required level. Eligibility for admission does not guarantee offer of a place. English language requirements IELTS Academic: overall 6.5, writing 6.0 TOEFL iBT: overall 79, writing 21 UTS College AE5: Pass Pearson PTE: overall 58, writing 50 Cambridge C1A/C2P: overall 176, writing 169
If the student's current English result is below the direct-entry requirement, consider the university's recognised English language pathway or ELICOS package. When the student successfully completes the approved pathway at the required level, the university may accept that pathway for English entry without requiring a new IELTS, TOEFL or PTE result. Always confirm exclusions for professional registration courses and the offer conditions.
View English requirementPast offer reference
Current-course cases first, supplemented by same-institution scored cases.

