Compound Access
Country Access Report
Medical Access in New Zealand
New Zealand keeps classical psychedelics tightly controlled. Esketamine is approved but not routinely publicly funded, ketamine depression care is off-label, and psilocybin, MDMA and LSD access is limited to regulated research or narrow exception routes.
- Access Level
- Approved Esketamine Unfunded + Trials Only
- Compounds Covered
- 10
- Active Trials
- 5
How To Use This Guide
Read the access level as a starting point, then check the compound notes below. The practical question is whether a patient can move through a real pathway today, or whether access still depends on a trial, exception route, private-care model, or future reimbursement decision.
Available Today
Look for approved use, named specialist settings, eligibility rules, and whether care is routine or exceptional.
Research Or Exception
Separate clinical trials, special access, compassionate use, and unlicensed-medicine routes from routine medical availability.
Payment And Delivery
Check who pays, where care can happen, and whether trained teams, product supply, and site governance are in place.
Access By Compound
These notes separate what is available today from research, exceptional-access, private-care, and payment routes. When the guide has not verified a pathway, the compound stays marked as incomplete rather than treated as unavailable.
Compound Access
MDMA
Compound Access
Esketamine
Compound Access
Ketamine
Compound Access
DMT
DMT-related substances should be treated as controlled with no routine medical access route identified in New Zealand. No comparable local clinical-trial pathway was identified for DMT treatment. [1]
Compound Access
5-MeO-DMT
Compound Access
Ibogaine
Compound Access
Ayahuasca
Compound Access
Mescaline
Mescaline is covered by New Zealand's Class A controlled-drug framework. No routine medical access or public reimbursement route was identified. [1]
Compound Access
2C-X
2C-family compounds should be treated as controlled or unauthorised for medical access purposes. No approved treatment or reimbursement pathway was identified. [1]
Sources and Review
Last updated 13 May 2026. Source links come from the medical access guide.