EuropeFRCountry Report

Psychedelic Research and Access in

France

France remains a research-only jurisdiction for classical psychedelics. LSD, psilocybin/psilocin, DMT, MDMA and mescaline are controlled under French narcotics law, and the official sources reviewed do not show routine authorised medical use for those compounds outside ANSM-authorised clinical trials.

Data updated

Key Insights

A concise view of the policy, research, access, and stakeholder details shaping psychedelic medicine inFrance.

  • 1

    France is still a high-control, evidence-first jurisdiction: the regulatory story is tightly bounded research and hospital medicine, not psychedelic liberalisation.

  • 2

    The most important access change is ANSM's 2026 ketamine CPC for severe suicidal ideation, but this is a compassionate hospital framework rather than ordinary psychiatric prescribing.

  • 3

    Spravato exists in France, yet practical access is narrower than many summaries imply because retail reimbursement is absent and use is anchored in hospital psychiatry.

  • 4

    The strongest verifiable classical-psychedelic clinical node is CHU Nimes, where Amandine Luquiens led the IReSP-funded PAD psilocybin alcohol-use-disorder pilot.

  • 5

    Paris matters most for ecosystem building: regulator, HTA, academic psychiatry, professional organisation, phase 3 participation and protocol development are concentrated there.

  • 6

    LSD is best understood as a funded French research theme at present, not a public clinical-access reality.

Research and Access Snapshot

Blossom currently tracks 27 psychedelic clinical trials connected to France, including 5 active studies.

Active trials
5

Currently active studies

Total trials
27

Linked to this country

Stakeholders
16

Linked organisations

Events
3

Linked events

Top Compounds

  • Ketamine(9)
  • Esketamine(7)
  • Psilocybin(6)
  • LSD(1)
  • Nitrous Oxide(1)

Top Study Topics

  • Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)(8)
  • Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD)(7)
  • Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)(2)
  • Suicidality(2)
  • Anxiety Disorders(1)

Medical Access

France has limited hospital-based access to psychedelic-adjacent medicines, not routine access to classical psychedelics. Psilocybin, LSD, MDMA, DMT and mescaline remain controlled and are available to patients only inside authorised research. PAD and PAPAUD are alcohol-use-disorder research programmes, not treatment access routes.

Regulatory Status

France treats classical psychedelics as controlled narcotics rather than routine therapeutic products. The French legal texts reviewed list LSD, psilocybin, psilocin, DMT, MDMA and mescaline among controlled substances, and 2005 amendments added several ayahuasca-source plants and related alkaloids to the narcotics framework. In practice, this means no general medical, ceremonial or decriminalised pathway for those substances; lawful human use sits inside approved clinical-research channels. By contrast, esketamine and racemic ketamine are already authorised medicines in other indications, and ANSM's March 2026 CPC created a specific compassionate prescribing framework for IV racemic ketamine in severe suicidal ideation in adults without turning ketamine into a broadly authorised psychiatric community medicine.

Research History in France

France has a long psychopharmacology tradition, but the current wave is a restart after decades of legal and institutional closure, not the continuation of a once-normal treatment model. The legal closure is easier to source than early clinical enthusiasm: the modern French framework is anchored in the narcotics orders consolidated around the 1990 text, which place classical psychedelics under strict control and prohibit ordinary manufacture, trade and use outside authorised exceptions. [1]

In 2005, France further tightened the position around ayahuasca-related materials by adding Banisteriopsis caapi, Psychotria viridis, Peganum harmala and related alkaloids to the narcotics list. That makes France a poor fit for any claim of a recognised ceremonial or plant-medicine carve-out in the official framework reviewed here. [2]

The contemporary restart first became visible through adjacent medicines and suicidality research rather than through routine classical psychedelic care. Spravato entered the French hospital and collectivity framework in 2020, while French investigators contributed a major randomised controlled ketamine study for acute suicidal ideation, published in 2022. France's broader policy style on controlled therapeutics favours staged pilots and tightly managed frameworks rather than open commercial access. [3] [4] [5]

By 2024-2026 the restart had become more tangible. Nimes advanced France-based psilocybin dosing and publication; Paris opened a COMP006 site and developed PSILOTRAZ; and the Paris neuropsychiatry ecosystem built a more explicit scholarly and professional infrastructure around psychedelic medicine. The 2026 ketamine CPC is therefore part of a broader pattern: France is slowly expanding controlled psychiatric innovation without opening a broad commercial market. [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]

Paris and Nimes Spotlight

The national centre of gravity is Paris, with Nimes as the clearest classical-psychedelic trial node, and Marseille as a smaller but visible humanities and public-discourse node. Paris matters because it combines regulator proximity, major psychiatry institutions, professional organisation, protocol development and a phase 3 industry interface. Nimes matters because it has actually dosed patients and published psilocybin results. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

In Paris, the pivotal actors are GHU Paris, the Paris Brain Institute and the wider neuropsychiatry network around Luc Mallet. Public-facing programme pages describe funded LSD work in alcohol use disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder, while the CNRS / Paris Cite ARCHE programme has become an important interdisciplinary platform for research on the social, historical and clinical worlds of psychedelics. These are ecosystem and protocol-development signals, not evidence of broad patient access. [1] [7] [8] [9]

Nimes is where the French classical-psychedelic clinical pipeline is currently most concrete. CHU Nimes has registered and run psilocybin studies in treatment-resistant depression and psychogenic non-epileptic seizures, and its PAD study has already yielded a peer-reviewed 2025 publication plus a 2026 mechanistic and qualitative follow-up. The PAD work should be read as a small hospital pilot led by Amandine Luquiens and supported by EUR 98,014 from IReSP, not as an access programme for alcohol use disorder. The work also connects into addiction-psychiatry expertise around Montpellier and the suicidality research environment associated with Philippe Courtet and colleagues. [3] [4] [10] [5] [11] [12]

Marseille is not the main clinical-access hub, but it does matter for ecosystem mapping through Aix-Marseille University and Imera discussions on the renaissance of psychedelics in psychiatry. Separately, the Universite de Picardie Jules Verne / GRAP / INSERM translational cluster in Amiens is important for alcohol-use-disorder work around psilocybin and LSD. Its PAPAUD project, coordinated by Amine Benyamina and supported by EUR 653,505 from ANR, is a larger funded research programme with clinical and preclinical arms, but it should still be labelled as research rather than routine treatment access. [6] [13] [14]

Research Focus

The publicly visible French interventional pipeline is dominated by psilocybin and ketamine/esketamine. In Nimes, the PAD study in alcohol use disorder with depressive symptoms moved beyond feasibility rhetoric into a 2025 published randomised pilot result under Prof. Amandine Luquiens at CHU Nimes. CHU Nimes states that PAD was supported by the Institut pour la Recherche en Sante Publique with EUR 98,014, enrolled 30 recently detoxified adults, and reported 12-week abstinence of 55% in the high-dose psilocybin group versus 11% in the active-placebo group. A 2026 follow-up paper then analysed integration-session material as a possible marker of three-month abstinence. The same hospital has also run CTIS-era psilocybin pilots in treatment-resistant depression and in psychogenic non-epileptic seizures. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

Paris is now the main bridge between French academic psychiatry and the international late-stage industry pipeline. GHU Paris hosted a local site in the phase 3 COMP006 psilocybin programme, and local inclusion later closed. Separately, PSILOTRAZ is a French proof-of-concept study designed to test whether trazodone can blunt psilocybin's acute psychedelic effects without cancelling antidepressant benefit. That is a scientifically distinctive question and a good example of France's tendency towards mechanism-focused, clinically conservative design. [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]

Ketamine research remains clinically important, especially around suicidality. France contributed the 2022 BMJ randomised trial in severe suicidal ideation and then a 2025 real-world observational study linking early IV-ketamine response at one week to lower suicidal-event risk at three months. This evidence base directly informs the 2026 CPC and makes France unusually relevant in the ketamine-for-suicidality literature. [12] [13] [14]

Beyond interventional trials, France has built a broader scholarly layer around psychedelic medicine. French programmes now include systematic and interdisciplinary work on set and setting, surveys of French participants after meaningful psychedelic experiences, and translational alcohol-use-disorder projects using psilocybin and LSD in preclinical and protocol-development settings. The clearest funded example is PAPAUD, an ANR-backed psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy project in alcohol use disorder coordinated by Amine Benyamina, with EUR 653,505 in ANR support and a 48-month project beginning in March 2024. France is not only running small trials; it is also producing conceptual, qualitative and translational infrastructure. [15] [16] [17] [18]

Key Milestones

1990
France consolidates the narcotics list that anchors current controlled-substance classification.
2005
Ayahuasca-source plants and related alkaloids are added to the French narcotics framework.
Oct 2020
Spravato enters the French hospital and collectivity framework, creating a restricted authorised esketamine route but not a normal community-pharmacy reimbursement model.
Feb 2022
French-led randomised controlled trial evidence for ketamine in acute severe suicidal ideation is published in BMJ.
May 2024
France authorises the Nimes psilocybin pilot in treatment-resistant depression under CTIS-era processes.
May 2024
France authorises the Nimes psilocybin pilot in psychogenic non-epileptic seizures.
Aug 2024
GHU Paris launches the local COMP006 phase 3 psilocybin site for treatment-resistant depression.
Jul 2025
PAD results are published from CHU Nimes; the IReSP-funded pilot led by Amandine Luquiens reports feasibility, acceptability and safety of psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy in recently detoxified patients with alcohol use disorder and depressive symptoms.
Sep 2025
Local inclusion closes at the Paris COMP006 site.
Mar 2026
ANSM establishes a CPC for IV racemic ketamine for severe suicidal ideation in adults.

What To Watch

Over the next 12-24 months, the most likely French changes are evidentiary rather than legislative. Expect more readouts from existing psilocybin work in Nimes, clearer movement on PSILOTRAZ in Paris, and continued discussion of how classical-psychedelic protocols should be staffed, standardised and ethically governed in hospital psychiatry. This will probably strengthen the research base without creating broad routine access. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

On regulation and payer policy, any classical-psychedelic move in France would still require several sequential steps: mature clinical evidence, European authorisation where relevant, French HTA and payer positioning, care-pathway design, and workforce preparation. Even where global sponsor momentum exists, French patient access would not follow automatically. This is already visible in esketamine, where authorisation and restricted institutional funding have not translated into a simple ambulatory reimbursement story. [7] [8] [9] [10]

The likeliest near-term access change is therefore on the ketamine side: operational uptake, pharmacovigilance and possible refinement of the new CPC in hospital psychiatry. Classical psychedelics are more likely to expand through carefully controlled trials and academic networks than through fast clinical commercialisation. [11] [12] [13]

Sources and Review

Last updated 8 Jun 2026. Source links come from the country report.

  1. 1ANR PAPAUD project page
  2. 2ANR PSILOTRAZ project page
  3. 3ANSM ketamine CPC decision
  4. 4ANSM ketamine CPC protocol
  5. 5ANSM reminder on proper ketamine use
  6. 6BMJ ketamine severe suicidal ideation trial
  7. 7CHU Nimes PAD psilocybin alcohol use disorder results
  8. 8ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05711940 COMP006
  9. 9ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06235411 PAD study
  10. 10CNRS / Paris Cite ARCHE team page
  11. 11Compass Pathways COMP006 top-line announcement
  12. 12CTIS psilocybin psychogenic non-epileptic seizures pilot
  13. 13CTIS PSILOTRAZ trial record
  14. 14Early response to ketamine for suicidal crisis study
  15. 15French public medicines database Spravato entry
  16. 16GHU Paris COMP006 update
  17. 17GRAP Amiens recruitment and research page
  18. 18HAS Spravato transparency committee opinion 17 July 2024
  19. 19HAS Spravato transparency committee opinion 22 September 2021
  20. 20Iméra Marseille psychedelic psychiatry event
  21. 21Legifrance narcotics list order of 22 February 1990
  22. 22Legifrance order of 20 April 2005 on ayahuasca-related plants and alkaloids
  23. 23Lucie Berkovitch research profile
  24. 24PAD integration-session follow-up analysis
  25. 25PAD psilocybin alcohol use disorder pilot publication
  26. 26Sante.fr psilocybin treatment-resistant depression pilot

Country Details

Region
Europe
Last updated
8 Jun 2026

Country Report

Medical Only (Limited)

Medical Access

France has limited hospital-based access to psychedelic-adjacent medicines, not routine access to classical psychedelics. Psilocybin, LSD, MDMA, DMT and mescaline remain controlled and are available to patients only inside authorised research. PAD and PAPAUD are alcohol-use-disorder research...

Open access guide →

Pro Scorecard

Country Scorecard

Compare evidence, access, payment, delivery, local ecosystem, and review confidence for France.

Open scorecard →

Research Events in France

Conferences, trainings, and research gatherings connected to the country report.

View all events →