State guide

Psychedelic Therapy in Arizona

Last reviewed · June 23, 2026

Arizona has not legalized psilocybin services, but it funds notable state-backed psilocybin research, including a first-in-nation whole-mushroom trial for veterans and first responders with PTSD. Psilocybin remains Schedule I. Legal routes are ketamine, clinical trials, or traveling to Oregon or Colorado.

Sonoran desert at dawn, saguaro silhouettes and soft light, a calm landscape evoking readiness for psilocybin therapy in Arizona.
How to access care

Your paths to care in Arizona.

1
Legal in Arizona.

Ketamine in medical settings, and esketamine (Spravato) at REMS-certified clinics. Ketamine for mental health is usually off-label.

2
State-funded research.

Arizona funds whole-mushroom psilocybin clinical trials. A Scottsdale Research Institute study treats PTSD in veterans, police officers, and firefighters.

3
Legal out of state.

Licensed psilocybin services in Oregon and regulated natural medicine in Colorado.

4
Underground or ceremonial.

These exist and carry legal risk. Arizona has not decriminalized psilocybin. We do not broker illegal activity.

Your access options

Compare the routes, side by side.

Pathway
What it looks like
Key notes
Ketamine or esketamine (in Arizona)
Medical screening, monitored sessions, integration recommended.
Available across the state. Esketamine (Spravato) is FDA-approved for treatment-resistant depression; most ketamine use is off-label.
State-funded psilocybin trials
Screened clinical study under FDA and IRB oversight, in a medically supervised setting.
Arizona's funded research includes a Scottsdale Research Institute PTSD trial for veterans, police, and firefighters. Search ClinicalTrials.gov for enrollment.
Psilocybin services (Oregon)
Licensed service centers statewide, with preparation, administration, and integration.
See our Oregon guide for how access works.
Natural Medicine services (Colorado)
Licensed healing centers and facilitators under state rules.
See our Colorado guide; verify licensing on state sites.
Underground or ceremonial
Community or private settings; laws and safety practices vary.
We do not broker or endorse illegal activity. Our concierge provides education, vetting criteria, and integration support.
Not sure which path fits you?

We help you choose clear-eyed.

Our concierge compares legal routes, explains the rules in plain language, and helps you choose a path that matches your needs, values, and safety profile.

The landscape

Psychedelic care in Arizona.

Arizona has taken a research-first path. Psilocybin is Schedule I, and there is no decriminalization or licensed access program. But in 2023 the state appropriated five million dollars for whole-mushroom psilocybin clinical trials, overseen by a Psilocybin Research Advisory Council, and in 2025 the Scottsdale Research Institute received approval for a first-in-nation state-funded trial treating PTSD in veterans, police officers, and firefighters. A bill to license psychedelic-assisted therapy centers passed the legislature but was vetoed in 2024, and a later version was narrowed to research and advisory work.

Outside those trials, most people in Arizona access care through medical ketamine and esketamine, or by traveling to licensed psilocybin services in Oregon or Colorado. Our concierge helps you compare these routes, understand the legal picture, review medical and psychological safety, and plan preparation and integration so you are matched with a vetted guide.

Costs & logistics

What to budget for.

Ketamine and esketamine: cost depends on format, the number of sessions, supervision, and integration. IV ketamine commonly runs several hundred dollars per session, with a starting course of multiple sessions. Esketamine (Spravato) is often insurance-covered for treatment-resistant depression because it is FDA-approved, while IV and IM ketamine for mental health are usually off-label and paid out of pocket.

Psilocybin services in Oregon or Colorado: licensed centers set their own session pricing, which usually includes preparation and integration. Add travel and lodging. Verify licensing on the state program sites before booking.

Our concierge fees are separate from any provider's charges. Ask about HSA or FSA eligibility where applicable; policies vary by plan and provider.

Safety & screening

Before any session, cover this.

  • Share all medications, especially SSRIs and SNRIs, MAOIs, stimulants, and blood-pressure drugs.
  • Review cardiac history, seizure risk, bipolar spectrum, psychosis risk, pregnancy, and sleep apnea.
  • Confirm monitoring, chaperone policies, and emergency planning with any provider.
  • If considering at-home or compounded ketamine, discuss supervision and current FDA alerts with your prescriber.

Learn more about our Safety and Harm Reduction principles.

Our role

What we do, and what we don’t.

What we do

  • Education, safety screening guidance, and integration support
  • Compare legal options and verify licensed programs
  • Share the vetting questions we ask any facilitator

What we do not do

  • Sell, supply, or store controlled substances
  • Instruct on obtaining substances or connect to distributors
  • Provide medical or legal advice
Cultural & legal context

A closer look at Arizona.

Research first

Arizona has invested in studying psilocybin rather than opening public access. State-funded clinical trials are the centerpiece of that approach.

A first-in-nation trial

The Scottsdale Research Institute leads a state-funded whole-mushroom psilocybin study for veterans, police, and firefighters with PTSD, an unusual model nationally.

Service centers stalled

A bill to license psychedelic-assisted therapy centers was vetoed in 2024. Later legislation kept only research and advisory provisions. Public access is not available.

Care today: what people actually do

Most seekers pursue ketamine or esketamine with screening, look into a trial, or travel to Oregon or Colorado. We do not broker illegal activity.

Arizona FAQ

Questions, answered plainly.

Is psychedelic therapy legal in Arizona?+
Psilocybin, no. Ketamine, yes.

Psilocybin is Schedule I in Arizona, with no decriminalization or licensed access program. Ketamine and esketamine are legal in medical settings. The state funds psilocybin research, but that is clinical study, not public access.

Can I join the Arizona psilocybin trial?+
If you qualify.

Arizona funds a Scottsdale Research Institute trial treating PTSD in veterans, police officers, and firefighters. Eligibility is limited. Search ClinicalTrials.gov for current enrollment and criteria.

Did Arizona legalize psilocybin therapy centers?+
No.

A bill to license psychedelic-assisted therapy centers passed the legislature but was vetoed in 2024. A later version was narrowed to research and an advisory board. There is no licensed public access.

What legal options are in Arizona today?+
Ketamine, trials, or travel.

Medical ketamine and esketamine are widely available. State-funded and other clinical trials enroll eligible participants. For psilocybin, many people travel to Oregon or Colorado, where supervised services are licensed.

How much does ketamine therapy cost in Arizona?+
It varies.

IV ketamine commonly runs several hundred dollars per session, with a starting course of multiple sessions. Esketamine (Spravato) is often insurance-covered. See our pricing page for our concierge fees, which are separate.

Are there medical or medication contraindications?+
Yes, several.

Share all medications, especially SSRIs and SNRIs, MAOIs, stimulants, and blood-pressure drugs, and review cardiac history, seizure risk, bipolar spectrum, psychosis risk, and pregnancy with a qualified provider. This is general information, not medical advice.

Next steps

Need help choosing? Let’s talk.

Our concierge can walk you through the legal options in your area, with no pressure and no sales pitch.

← Explore another state or city