At-home telehealth ketamine programs typically run $129–$350 per month for oral or sublingual troches, including provider visits, integration, and dosing. Prices vary widely by session cadence, membership tier, and whether integration therapy is bundled.
At-home ketamine therapy typically costs $129–$350 per month via a monthly subscription. That is the lowest-cost legal way to access medically supervised ketamine in the US.
The subscription bundles a psychiatric evaluation, oral or sublingual ketamine troches, a set number of dosing sessions, and integration coaching. Some programs add a la carte therapy for a separate fee.
Five providers dominate the at-home telehealth space in 2026. Prices below are the publicly listed subscription tiers as of mid-2026 and change frequently — verify before enrolling.
| Provider | Monthly price | Sessions / mo | Integration included | Prescriber included | States served |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Innerwell | $180–$300 | 4 | Yes (coaching + optional therapist) | Yes | 30+ states |
| Mindbloom | $200–$350 | 4–6 | Yes (guide + optional therapist) | Yes | 36+ states |
| Better U | $129–$249 | 4 | Yes (group + coaching) | Yes | 35+ states |
| Joyous | $129 | Daily (low-dose) | No | Yes | 40+ states |
| Nue Life | $1,000–$1,400 (program) | 6 (over ~4 weeks) | Yes | Yes | 25+ states |
Base subscription tiers cover the essentials. Anything beyond the standard cadence — extra therapist sessions, expedited titration, or a higher dose — is usually a la carte.
Standard inclusions: psychiatric evaluation, ongoing medical oversight, oral troches shipped to your home, four dosing sessions per month, and integration coaching (video or async).
Standard add-ons: one-on-one licensed therapist sessions ($75–$200 each), higher-dose troches, and refills outside the standard cadence.
Insurance does not cover at-home ketamine as of 2026. Off-label at-home use is classified as investigational by every major commercial insurer.
HSA and FSA funds are usually eligible when you have a letter of medical necessity and a superbill from your telehealth prescriber. All five providers above will supply both on request. See our insurance coverage guide for details.
Divide the monthly price by the number of sessions to get the per-session cost. Innerwell at $240/month for 4 sessions is $60/session. Better U at $129/month for 4 sessions is $32/session. Both are far below in-clinic IV pricing ($400–$800/session).
Session doses are usually 100–600 mg of ketamine as a sublingual troche. Providers titrate upward from a low starting dose across the first two to three sessions.
At-home dosing means you are unsupervised during the psychoactive window. That shifts responsibility for safety onto you and your support person.
Every reputable at-home program requires a sober support person for the first several sessions, a locked medication supply, and a signed safety plan. Read our at-home safety checklist before your first dose. Review our medication safety guide for interactions.
At-home telehealth is typically 4–8x cheaper than in-clinic IV per session. A full month of at-home dosing costs less than a single in-clinic IV visit at most clinics.
Compare the annual math. Twelve months of Innerwell at $240/month is $2,880. Six IV infusions plus monthly boosters at a mid-range clinic runs $6,000–$12,000 for the same year. See our full ketamine cost guide for the modality comparison.
Cost is not the only factor. In-clinic monitoring is safer for higher-risk patients, and IV has the strongest published evidence base.
At-home is inappropriate for severe depression, active suicidal ideation, uncontrolled hypertension, prior psychotic episodes, or a history of ketamine misuse. In-clinic IV is safer for these patients.
If you have any of these risk factors, ask about IV infusion or Spravato instead. See our full modality cost comparison.
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