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Pricing & Economics

How Much Does Iboga Treatment Cost?

I publish my pricing on the site — Asia from $3,500, USA and Europe from $5,000, Gabon from €5,000. The exact number depends on scope, and you'll get a clear figure on our first call. But the question behind the question deserves a real answer — not because I owe you a breakdown, but because how you think about the cost tells you something important about how you're approaching this work.

The range.

Iboga treatment pricing across the industry ranges from roughly $3,000 to $15,000 or more, depending on the setting, the provider, the location, and what's included. That's a wide range. The differences aren't random — they reflect fundamentally different levels of care.

At the low end, you're typically looking at group ceremonies in countries where labor and real estate are cheap, with minimal medical screening, shared facilitator attention, and little to no integration support. At the high end, you're looking at clinical settings with full medical teams, cardiac monitoring, private rooms, and extended aftercare programs. One-on-one facilitation with proper screening, travel logistics, and 90-day integration falls somewhere in the upper range of that spectrum.

What the cost actually covers.

Most people hear a number and think they're paying for a single night. They're not. Here's what's behind it:

Pre-ceremony screening

Medical history review, EKG coordination, medication assessment, health questionnaire review, and the time spent evaluating whether someone is safe to proceed. Sometimes that evaluation takes weeks. Sometimes it ends with a no — and that no costs me the booking.

Preparation period

The days before ceremony aren't filler. Diet guidance, psychological preparation, travel coordination, location scouting and securing, and meals during the preparation period.

The ceremony itself

24–36 hours of continuous, dedicated presence. I don't sleep while you're in ceremony. I don't leave the room. This is physically demanding work that requires years of training and experience to do safely.

Location and logistics

Private accommodation, food, transportation, supplies. When I meet you in Thailand or Vietnam or Oregon, the overhead of making that space safe and private for your ceremony is built into the cost.

90-day integration

Regular check-ins for three months after ceremony. This is where the investment pays off — and it's the part most providers skip because it doesn't generate new revenue.

Why cheap iboga is dangerous.

This is not a market where bargain hunting is smart. The corners that get cut when someone offers iboga at a low price are the corners that kill people.

Screening gets abbreviated or skipped. Cardiac monitoring doesn't happen. The facilitator is managing multiple people simultaneously. The medicine itself may be of questionable quality or dosing. Integration support doesn't exist. The "facilitator" has six months of experience and a weekend certification.

The fatality rate for ibogaine is estimated at 1 in 300 to 1 in 1,000 across all reported administrations. The majority of those deaths occurred in settings with inadequate screening and supervision. When you're comparing prices, you're comparing risk profiles. The cheapest option is the one most likely to cut the things that keep you alive.

For more on safety: Is iboga safe? and What screening involves.

How to think about it.

People spend $50,000 on a year of therapy without blinking. They spend $30,000 on rehab that has a 10–20% success rate for opioid addiction. They spend $100,000 on an MBA that might change their career trajectory.

Iboga, done properly, is a single intervention that addresses the root structure of whatever you're carrying. The cost is real. The question isn't whether you can afford it — it's whether you can afford to keep living with what's driving you to look for it.

I don't say that to pressure anyone. If the timing isn't right financially, it's not right. This work will be here when you're ready. But comparing the cost of iboga to other things you've spent money on that didn't work puts the number in a different frame.

What I won't do.

I won't negotiate on safety. The screening costs what it costs. The preparation time is what it is. The integration support doesn't get shorter because someone wants a lower number.

I won't offer a group rate. One person, one ceremony. The economics of one person, one ceremony don't scale, and that's by design.

I won't take your money if I don't think you're ready. If the first conversation suggests this isn't the right time, I'll tell you. I'd rather lose the booking than take money for something that won't serve you.

The first call is where we talk numbers honestly. No surprises.

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