Skip to content
Homepage
Clinic directory

6 Best Ozone Therapy Clinics in Tempe, Arizona

Every listing is checked against federal records, reviewed for evidence, and confirmed still operating. No pay-to-play. No guesswork.

  • No results found.
  • No results found.

Tempe, AZ

Ozone Therapy clinics in Tempe

Ozone Therapy in Tempe, AZ

intro

Tempe sits in the East Valley next to Arizona State University, and its ozone therapy market runs narrower than nearby Scottsdale, clinics locally advertise the service, often tied to athletic recovery, student-focused wellness, or peak-performance longevity clinics along Mill Avenue and Kyrene Road. Banner Desert Medical Center and Tempe St. Lukes provide the conventional referral infrastructure.

Arizona licenses naturopathic physicians with prescriptive authority, which is the main reason the East Valley has unusually deep ozone availability for its size. Local providers offer major autohemotherapy, minor autohemotherapy, prolozone joint injections, insufflation, ozonated saline, and 10-pass protocols. Demand spans athletic recovery for ASU and club-level athletes, chronic Lyme and mold patients, and longevity-branded wellness packages. Patients should understand that ozone therapy is not FDA-approved for any medical use. The FDA 1976 declaration calling ozone a toxic gas with no known useful medical application remains current policy. Before booking, patients should review credentials, specific delivery-method rationale, and informed consent language that does not overstate evidence quality.

6 Clinics

A.W. Health Institute

Tempe, AZ

A.W. Health Institute, a functional and integrative-medicine clinic in Tempe, specializes in IV nutrient therapy, NAD+ infusions, and hormone optimization alongside regenerative-medicine approaches i…

  • NAD IV Therapy
  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • IV Therapy
  • Ketamine Therapy
MD on staff

AZ Good Health Center

Tempe, AZ

AZ Good Health Center, a functional and integrative-medicine clinic in Tempe, offers IV therapy including vitamin infusions, ozone therapy, and chelation therapy alongside acupuncture and massage. Th…

  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • IV Therapy
  • Chelation Therapy
  • Lyme Disease Treatment

Medical Plaza

Tempe, AZ

Medical Plaza, a gut-health clinic in Tempe, Arizona, specializes in colon hydrotherapy for cleansing and symptom relief in the large intestine, alongside IV therapy and Ozone Therapy. The clinic off…

  • Colon Hydrotherapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • IV Therapy
MD on staff

Pure Body Health

Tempe, AZ

Dr. Sarah Stone, a naturopathic doctor in Tempe, Arizona, offers integrated functional and naturopathic care with a focus on hormone optimization, adrenal support, and regenerative therapies. The pra…

  • PRP Therapy
  • Shockwave Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • IV Therapy
  • Laser Therapy (LLLT)

SIRRI AZ - Brain Performance Center

Tempe, AZ

SIRRI AZ — Brain Performance Center, a neuromodulation and brain-health clinic in Tempe, offers EEG-based neurofeedback training alongside 10-pass ozone therapy and intermittent hypoxic training to s…

  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • Neurofeedback Therapy
MD on staff

Pure Body Health

Tempe, AZ

Pure Body Health, a functional and integrative medicine clinic in Tempe, offers regenerative therapies including platelet-rich plasma, prolotherapy, and prolozone injections for musculoskeletal and j…

  • PRP Therapy
  • Shockwave Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • IV Therapy
  • Laser Therapy (LLLT)
15 30 50 results per page

Regulatory context

A note on Arizona's ozone therapy rules.

The "other" category is a catchall for regenerative wellness modalities with inconsistent federal oversight. Red light therapy devices (photobiomodulation) have narrow FDA 510(k) clearances for acne, muscle pain, and wound healing, not systemic regeneration. Whole-body cryotherapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical indication and received an FDA safety communication in July 2016 warning of asphyxiation, frostbite, and burn risks. Ozone therapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical use and the FDA has stated ozone is a toxic gas with no known useful medical application. Condition-specific regenerative offerings (hair restoration with minoxidil or finasteride, ED care beyond PDE5 inhibitors and shockwave) have varying approval depending on route and drug source.

  • Arizona Medical Practice Act (A.R.S. Title 32, Ch. 13)
    Defines practice of allopathic medicine and rules for delegation to medical assistants, nurses, and APRNs in wellness settings.
  • Arizona Homeopathic and Integrated Medicine Board (A.R.S. Title 32, Ch. 29)
    Arizona is one of few states licensing homeopathic physicians who may legally use alternative modalities including ozone and chelation.
  • Arizona Naturopathic Physicians Medical Board (A.R.S. Title 32, Ch. 14)
    Licenses naturopathic doctors with prescribing authority and broad scope including IV and ozone therapies.

Arizona has a uniquely permissive framework due to its homeopathic and naturopathic licensure boards. Ozone, chelation, and off-label regenerative therapies are more commonly offered here than in most states. Enforcement focuses on unlicensed practice, misleading advertising, and patient harm. The Attorney General pursues deceptive health claims under the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act. The Medical Board and Naturopathic Board each take complaints against licensees for scope violations or fraudulent marketing.

Ozone Therapy in Tempe, answered.

No. Ozone therapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical use. The FDA issued a 1976 declaration stating ozone is a toxic gas with no known useful medical application, and that position has not changed. Clinics that offer ozone do so under physician clinical judgement, not under an approved indication. Many marketing claims for ozone are unsupported by high-quality clinical evidence, so any informed decision about booking a session should start with that clear disclosure.

Pricing in Tempe typically runs $125 to $250 per session for standard major autohemotherapy (MAH), with prolozone joint injections, insufflation, and MinorAH often priced similarly or slightly lower. Higher-dose 10-pass ozone is considerably more expensive, usually $400 to $650 per session, with packages priced lower than in premium metros. Package pricing can lower the per-session rate but raises total spend. Remember that ozone is NOT FDA-approved, is not covered by insurance, and out-of-pocket cost is the norm.

Integrative practitioners commonly claim benefits for immune support, chronic infections such as Lyme disease and herpes, systemic inflammation, chronic fatigue, autoimmune conditions, and musculoskeletal pain using prolozone for joints and discs. The quality of clinical evidence supporting these claims is low, studies are often small or uncontrolled, and ozone therapy is NOT FDA-approved for any of these indications. Treat strong claims with caution.

In Arizona, naturopathic doctors (NDs) are licensed and operate under a broader scope than in most states, and many ozone providers are NDs working alongside MDs and DOs. Chiropractors generally cannot administer intravenous ozone, and scope varies by state medical and naturopathic board positions. Regardless of license type, verify active state licensure before any appointment, and remember that ozone therapy is NOT FDA-approved and is offered under physician clinical judgement rather than any approved indication.

Verify that the lead clinician holds an active state license, ask for written informed consent that clearly states ozone is NOT FDA-approved, and look for realistic evidence framing rather than cure claims. Avoid clinics that promise to cure cancer, autoimmune disease, or chronic infection. Membership in groups such as the AAOT is a peer-community signal, not an FDA credential, and should never substitute for verifying licensure and reading consent forms.

Filters

Rating

Treatments

Advanced Therapies 1
Chronic, Immune & Hormonal
Digestive & Respiratory
IV & Infusion
Pain & Musculoskeletal
Skin & Aesthetics
Mental Health & Neurology