Ayahuasca and Addiction: Sacred Medicine Recovery Research

11 min read

Ayahuasca and addiction have become a topic of serious scientific inquiry. Research suggests that sacred ceremony may help some people find freedom from patterns of compulsive substance use. It does not appear to work by masking symptoms — it works by addressing the spiritual and emotional roots that so often lie beneath them.

This guide explores what the research actually shows. It also looks at why indigenous traditions have long understood addiction as a spiritual illness, and what this means for someone in recovery who is wondering whether sacred ceremony might be part of their path forward.

What Does the Research Show About Ayahuasca and Addictive Patterns?

The scientific literature on ayahuasca and addiction is small but growing, and it points in a consistent direction.

A 2013 pilot study by Thomas and colleagues, published in Current Drug Abuse Reviews, examined a program integrating ayahuasca ceremony within a First Nations cultural healing framework in rural British Columbia. At six-month follow-up, 12 participants showed significant reductions in self-reported alcohol use and improvements in measures of mindfulness, hopefulness, and empowerment. Small sample, observational design, no control group — the findings are suggestive, not definitive.

Brazilian research has consistently found lower rates of substance use and abuse in populations that regularly participate in ayahuasca ceremonies through religious organizations. A comprehensive review by Dos Santos and colleagues, drawing on multiple observational studies, found that regular ceremonial ayahuasca use was associated with reduced alcohol use, anxiety, and depression. But these were people who chose ceremony for themselves, not a randomly assigned group, so it is hard to know how much of the improvement came from ceremony itself.

Dr. Gabor Maté, the Hungarian-Canadian physician and addiction expert, has written and spoken extensively about ayahuasca as a tool for healing addiction's underlying causes — what he calls the "compassionate inquiry" into the pain beneath compulsive behavior. He sees sacred ceremony as addressing trauma and emotional disconnection, not the substance use itself.

For broader context on the research landscape, see our overview of ayahuasca science and what studies are finding.

How Does Sacred Ceremony Address What Often Lies Beneath Addiction?

Indigenous and ceremonial frameworks have always understood what Western addiction medicine is slowly recognizing: that compulsive substance use is rarely about the substance. It is most often about pain.

The pain beneath addiction commonly takes the form of unprocessed trauma, spiritual disconnection, grief that has found no outlet, a deep sense of meaninglessness, or isolation from community. These are the conditions in which compulsive patterns take root and grow — and they are precisely what sacred ceremony addresses.

Ayahuasca ceremony, in the Shipibo and other Amazonian traditions, is understood as a process of spiritual healing — the restoration of a person's relationship with the divine, with the natural world, and with their own spirit. For people whose addiction has severed them from these connections, ceremony can be a doorway back.

What many participants report is not a suppression of the urge to use, but a dissolution of the suffering that made use feel necessary. They describe seeing their patterns clearly — sometimes for the first time without judgment — and making contact with a deeper sense of who they are beneath the compulsion. Integration of these insights is what makes the work lasting.

See our guide on ayahuasca and trauma for a deeper look at how ceremony supports healing of the emotional wounds that often underlie addictive patterns.

Is Ceremony a “Treatment” for Addiction?

Earth Connection Community offers sacred ceremony as a spiritual practice rooted in indigenous tradition. Participants engage ayahuasca as a sacrament within a carefully held spiritual container, guided by trained facilitators through prayer, icaros, and ceremonial structure — work aimed at restoring a person’s relationship with the divine, the natural world, and their own spirit. Many find that ceremony touches something in them that other approaches have not reached.

This is different work than diagnosis or medical care, and that distinction matters — both for accuracy and for the wellbeing of people in recovery. The research finds real associations between ceremonial participation and positive changes in patterns of substance use, worth taking seriously in their own right, while stopping short of establishing ayahuasca as a proven medical treatment for any condition. Ceremony and clinical treatment are simply different practices, addressing different dimensions of a person’s life.

For people currently in evidence-based addiction treatment programs (medication-assisted treatment, residential programs, intensive outpatient, 12-step or other peer support), sacred ceremony complements that work rather than replacing it. Anyone considering ceremony is encouraged to bring their treatment providers into the conversation — genuine care for your wellbeing and for continuity of your care.

Earth Connection Community operates under RFRA (Religious Freedom Restoration Act) protections as a 501(c)(3) religious organization. For context on the legal framework governing sacred ceremony in the United States, see our guide to ayahuasca’s legal status and RFRA protections.

Serotonin Syndrome and Medication Interactions

This section is critical for people in addiction recovery, because many medications used in treatment interact dangerously with ayahuasca.

Opioid medications used in addiction treatment: Methadone and buprenorphine (Suboxone) both carry significant potential for interaction with ayahuasca's MAO-inhibiting compounds. These interactions can be serious and potentially life-threatening. Anyone on methadone or buprenorphine maintenance must disclose this during our contraindication screening and must not discontinue these medications without careful coordination with their prescribing physician. We take this seriously. Earth Connection Community does not instruct, advise, or encourage anyone to stop or change prescribed medications; any such decision is made solely between you and your own prescribing physician.

Antidepressants: SSRIs, SNRIs, and MAOIs interact directly with ayahuasca's pharmacology. People taking antidepressants commonly prescribed in recovery contexts (sertraline, escitalopram, bupropion, venlafaxine) require careful evaluation before ceremony is appropriate. See our complete guide to ayahuasca and antidepressants for specifics.

Alcohol withdrawal: Ayahuasca ceremony is not appropriate for anyone in acute alcohol withdrawal, which can be medically dangerous without proper supervision. Anyone with severe alcohol dependence should undergo medically supervised detoxification before considering ceremony.

Stimulants and other substances: Full and honest disclosure during our contraindication screening is essential. Our process is designed not to gatekeep but to keep you safe. There is no judgment — only care.

Our comprehensive guide to ayahuasca safety covers contraindications broadly. For any questions specific to your situation, our screening coordinators are available to have a confidential conversation.

Is Taking Ayahuasca "Being Sober"?

This is the question at the back of many people's minds in recovery, and it deserves an honest answer.

From a 12-step perspective, the concept of sobriety traditionally means abstinence from mood-altering substances. How ceremonial ayahuasca fits within that framework is a question individuals work out with their sponsors, communities, and their own conscience. We have been in conversation with people in long-term recovery who have sat in ceremony and found it compatible with their sobriety, and others who have not.

What is distinct about sacred ceremony within a religious context is intention, container, and purpose. Ceremony is not recreational use. It does not involve the compulsive, consequence-driven pattern that defines addictive use. It takes place within a sacred framework that honors the medicine as a sacrament, not a substance of abuse. Many people in recovery find this distinction meaningful; others do not.

We do not tell people in recovery how to think about their sobriety. We do invite honest reflection and conversation with your support network. If you are in a 12-step program, discussing ceremony with your sponsor and other trusted members before attending is wise — not because we require it, but because your recovery community's support matters.

What Is the Indigenous Understanding of Addiction?

The Shipibo, ayahuasca's traditional custodians, do not have a clinical category for addiction. What they do have is a profound understanding of spiritual imbalance — states of disconnection, spiritual contamination, and the loss of one's relationship with the natural and spiritual world.

In the Shipibo curanderismo tradition, what Western medicine calls addiction is often understood as a spiritual illness — a wound in the person's connection to their purpose, their community, their ancestors, and the living world. The medicine, in ceremony, works to restore those connections. The healing songs — icaros — are understood as direct transmissions of healing energy aimed at the spiritual roots of suffering.

This framework does not contradict Western understanding of addiction neuroscience. It addresses a dimension of human experience that neuroscience is not equipped to reach. Both frameworks have something true to say. The most complete account of recovery honors both.

To understand the history and spiritual context of ayahuasca's traditions, see our guide on the history of ayahuasca.

Integration Practices That Support Recovery After Ceremony

Ceremony is a beginning, not an endpoint. The insights, grief, and newfound clarity that ceremony brings need to be integrated into daily life to become lasting change.

For people in recovery, integration work has some specific dimensions:

  • Community: Recovery is not a solo endeavor. Returning to your recovery community after ceremony — 12-step meetings, SMART Recovery, sober friends — grounds the experience in a relational context that sustains change. Sacred ceremony and recovery communities are not in competition; they can reinforce each other.

  • Journaling: Write within 24 hours of ceremony. Don't filter. Capture images, feelings, and insights before they fade. Return to these notes over the following weeks as they reveal layers of meaning you couldn't see immediately.

  • Prayer and spiritual practice: Whatever your spiritual tradition, ceremony often deepens and rekindles it. Regular practice — prayer, meditation, time in nature — maintains the connection ceremony opened.

  • Working with a therapist or counselor: For people with significant trauma underlying their addictive patterns, ceremony can open material that benefits from skilled therapeutic support. We encourage having therapeutic support available in the weeks following ceremony.

  • Ongoing ceremonial participation: Many people find that a single ceremony initiates a process rather than completing it. If you are called to return, doing so within an established relationship with a trusted ceremonial community provides continuity of guidance.

See our comprehensive guide to ayahuasca integration for a fuller picture of the integration process.

Frequently Asked Questions About Ayahuasca and Addiction

Can ayahuasca cure addiction?

Ayahuasca is ECC's central sacrament, received in ceremony as an act of sincere religious practice. Many participants carry real suffering into ceremony, including the weight of addiction, and describe ceremony as a place where they met — within a sacred space held by trained facilitators — the grief, trauma, or disconnection so often underneath compulsive patterns. Icaros, presence, and prayer support that spiritual work: restoring a person's relationship with the divine, the natural world, and their own spirit. What happens after ceremony belongs to each person's own path — their spiritual practice, their community, and their own care team.

Is ayahuasca safe if I'm on methadone or Suboxone?

This requires careful evaluation. Both methadone and buprenorphine have potential interactions with the MAO-inhibiting compounds in ayahuasca that may be serious. Anyone on these medications must disclose this during contraindication screening and consult their prescribing physician before considering ceremony. We do not accept participants on opioid replacement therapy without explicit medical evaluation. Your safety is the priority.

Will ceremony interfere with my recovery program?

This depends entirely on your specific recovery approach, your community's understanding, and your own values. Many people in long-term recovery find that ceremony deepens their commitment to sobriety and spiritual growth. Others find it creates tension with their program's guidelines. We encourage honest conversation with your sponsor or treatment team before attending ceremony — not because we require it, but because your support network's involvement matters.

What if I relapse before ceremony?

Please disclose any recent substance use during your contraindication screening. Certain substances have interaction risks with ayahuasca (particularly alcohol, opioids, and stimulants). Beyond safety considerations, the screening conversation is a place to speak honestly about where you are — it is not a judgment process. We meet people where they are.

How do I know if ceremony is right for me?

The right starting point is a candid conversation during our contraindication screening process. Our screening coordinators can discuss your specific situation, medications, and history to determine whether ceremony is appropriate for you at this time. There is no pressure and no judgment — only genuine assessment of fit and safety.

If you or someone you love is in crisis with addiction: The SAMHSA National Helpline is available 24/7 at 1-800-662-4357. It is free, confidential, and provides treatment referrals and information. Sacred ceremony is not an emergency intervention — please seek appropriate medical support first.

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