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3 Best Ketamine Therapy Clinics in Roswell, Georgia

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

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Roswell, GA

Ketamine Therapy clinics in Roswell

Ketamine therapy in Roswell is delivered through psychiatry-led clinics, anesthesia-run infusion centers, and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy practices, with hospital referrals often tied to Northside Hospital Atlanta and WellStar North Fulton. Demand reflects an affluent north Fulton family base and an active local market for treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, and chronic pain.

The strongest evidence supports intranasal esketamine (Spravato, FDA-approved for treatment-resistant depression) and intravenous racemic ketamine (off-label, substantial supporting evidence). Clinics in Roswell, Georgia also offer intramuscular, sublingual, and at-home oral lozenge protocols, with weaker evidence and variable safety oversight. Georgia medical board rules on delegation and medical spa oversight shapes which clinics can operate as cash-pay versus insurance-eligible.

With ketamine clinics on Regenerated.com in Roswell, patients can compare whether the clinic offers psychiatric evaluation, anesthesia monitoring during infusion, and structured preparation and integration.

3 Clinics

Luna Mindful Infusions - Ketamine Clinic

Roswell, GA

Luna Mindful Infusions, a ketamine-therapy clinic in Roswell, specializes in ketamine infusion for treatment-resistant depression, anxiety, PTSD, and chronic pain. The clinic offers intravenous ketam…

  • NAD IV Therapy
  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • IV Hydration
  • Oxygen Therapy
  • Ketamine Therapy
MD on staff

Psych Atlanta - Roswell - Hightop Health Clinic

Roswell, GA

Psych Atlanta - Roswell, a mental-health clinic in Roswell, Georgia, specializes in ketamine therapy and esketamine (Spravato) infusions for treatment-resistant depression and related psychiatric con…

  • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)
  • Neurofeedback Therapy
  • Ketamine Therapy

Rise Therapy Center

Roswell, GA

Rise Therapy Center, a mental health clinic in Roswell, specializes in Ketamine Therapy alongside traditional counseling and psychotherapy. The practice offers Ketamine Therapy as a treatment option …

  • Ketamine Therapy
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Regulatory context

A note on Georgia's ketamine therapy rules.

Ketamine is a DEA Schedule III controlled substance, FDA-approved as a dissociative anesthetic and used off-label for treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, and chronic pain. The FDA approved esketamine (Spravato) in 2019 for treatment-resistant depression under a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) program that requires in-office administration at certified sites. MDMA-assisted therapy remains Schedule I; the FDA issued a Complete Response Letter in August 2024 to Lykos Therapeutics on its MDMA new drug application. Psilocybin is Schedule I and holds FDA Breakthrough Therapy designation through sponsors such as Compass Pathways and Usona, but has not received FDA approval. Oregon Measure 109 (passed 2020, operational 2023) created a state psilocybin service center framework, and Colorado Proposition 122 (2022) authorized regulated healing centers.

  • Georgia Controlled Substances Act (O.C.G.A. 16-13)
    Mirrors federal scheduling; no therapeutic access framework for psilocybin or MDMA.

Georgia enforces federal scheduling. The Georgia Composite Medical Board investigates prescriber conduct, including ketamine prescribing and office-based anesthesia. DEA enforcement on ketamine clinics focuses on diversion, compounding sources, and Ryan Haight Act telehealth compliance. Georgia's PDMP requires controlled substance reporting.

Ketamine Therapy in Roswell, answered.

In Roswell, a single IV ketamine infusion typically runs 500 to 900 dollars, with a full 6 session induction protocol at 3,000 to 5,400. Premium clinics on the higher end, more affordable providers on the lower end. Intramuscular ketamine often costs less, around 250 to 500 per session. Compounded ketamine lozenges via telehealth run 250 to 500 per month. Spravato (esketamine) is frequently covered by insurance for treatment resistant depression; out of pocket list price is roughly 600 to 900 per treatment session, with most patients paying a copay.

Ketamine is a Schedule III controlled substance and has been FDA approved as an anesthetic since 1970. Spravato (esketamine), a derivative nasal spray, is FDA approved for treatment resistant depression under a REMS program requiring in clinic administration and post dose monitoring. IV, intramuscular, and compounded oral ketamine for depression, PTSD, and chronic pain are used off label with Emerging to Strong evidence depending on indication. Off label prescribing is legal for DEA registered providers but must follow state and federal controlled substance rules.

Roswell ketamine is delivered by MDs and DOs (typically psychiatrists, anesthesiologists, emergency medicine, or pain specialists) holding a DEA registration and Georgia controlled substance authority. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants may prescribe or administer depending on Georgia scope of practice and supervisory rules. Spravato requires a REMS certified clinic and certified prescriber. Verify the provider's DEA registration, board certification, and whether a monitoring clinician is present during infusions.

Yes, with caveats. Mindbloom, Joyous, Innerwell, and similar platforms prescribe compounded ketamine lozenges to Georgia residents through telehealth, subject to the Ryan Haight Act and DEA special registration rules currently in effect. These programs pair at home dosing with virtual integration support and cost roughly 250 to 500 per month. In clinic IV and intramuscular ketamine remain the standard for treatment resistant depression and PTSD and cannot be delivered via telehealth. Spravato always requires in clinic REMS administration.

Verify DEA registration on the DEA Office of Diversion Control registrant lookup and Georgia medical board license status. Confirm board certification in psychiatry, anesthesiology, emergency medicine, or pain medicine. Ask about the monitoring protocol during infusion (vitals, continuous clinician presence), integration therapy options, and the clinic's crisis and safety plan. Check whether the clinic is Spravato REMS certified if that is your treatment path. Be cautious of providers who skip screening, push large prepaid packages, or offer take home IV ketamine.

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