The DEA regulates ketamine as a Schedule III controlled substance, not specifically as a hallucinogen. The scheduling classification does not categorize ketamine by its pharmacological mechanism or its subjective effects; it categorizes it by its abuse potential, medical utility, and safety profile relative to other scheduled substances.
Ketamine produces dissociative effects that are distinct from the classic hallucinogenic effects produced by Schedule I substances such as LSD or psilocybin. Dissociation involves a detachment from sensory experience and a sense of disconnection from one’s body and surroundings, rather than the perceptual distortions and hallucinations associated with classic psychedelics. The DEA’s regulatory treatment of ketamine reflects its Schedule III classification rather than any specific characterization as a hallucinogen.
Ketamine’s Pharmacological Classification
Pharmacologically, ketamine is an NMDA receptor antagonist with anesthetic, analgesic, and dissociative properties. It was developed as an anesthetic agent and first approved by the FDA for that indication. Its dissociative properties at sub-anesthetic doses, which have both therapeutic applications in mental health treatment and abuse potential in recreational settings, are a consequence of its mechanism of action rather than a regulatory classification.
The DEA’s scheduling of controlled substances is based on the factors enumerated in the Controlled Substances Act, including the substance’s actual or relative potential for abuse, its scientific evidence of pharmacological effects, the state of current scientific knowledge regarding the drug, its history and current pattern of abuse, the scope, duration, and significance of its abuse, its risk to public health, its psychic or physiological dependence liability, and whether the substance is an immediate precursor of a substance already controlled. None of these factors categorizes ketamine specifically as a hallucinogen.
The Regulatory Implications of the Classification
For practical regulatory purposes, the DEA treats ketamine as it treats other Schedule III substances: the prescribing of ketamine requires DEA registration, the prescriptions must meet the Schedule III prescription requirements, and the diversion of ketamine from legitimate medical channels is subject to investigation and prosecution under the same legal framework applicable to other controlled substance diversion.
Need Help With Your Case?
Don't face criminal charges alone. Our experienced defense attorneys are ready to fight for your rights and freedom.
- 100% Confidential
- Response Within 1 Hour
- No Obligation Consultation
Or call us directly:
(212) 300-5196The absence of a specific hallucinogen classification for ketamine does not affect the legal standard for evaluating whether a ketamine prescription was issued within the usual course of professional practice. That standard applies uniformly to all controlled substance prescriptions regardless of their pharmacological classification, and the investigation of ketamine diversion applies the same evidentiary framework as the investigation of opioid diversion.
Esketamine and Its Distinct Regulatory Status
Esketamine, the S-enantiomer of ketamine, was approved by the FDA in 2019 under the brand name Spravato for treatment-resistant depression and, subsequently, for the management of depressive symptoms in adults with major depressive disorder with acute suicidal ideation or behavior. Esketamine is administered as a nasal spray under clinical supervision in a certified healthcare setting and is subject to a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy that requires administration in a certified setting with patient monitoring for at least two hours post-administration.
The FDA approval of esketamine as a distinct pharmaceutical product is not equivalent to a DEA rescheduling of ketamine; ketamine itself remains Schedule III regardless of esketamine’s approved status. The REMS requirements for esketamine establish specific clinical protocols that practitioners who administer it must follow, and those requirements create compliance obligations that go beyond the standard DEA prescription requirements for Schedule III substances.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
The DEA does not regulate ketamine as a hallucinogen. It regulates ketamine as a Schedule III controlled substance, subject to the same basic legal framework as other controlled substances in that schedule. The clinical and regulatory complexity of ketamine practice arises not from a specific hallucinogen classification but from the intersection of the standard controlled substance framework with the evolving clinical applications, the off-label prescribing questions, and the ketamine clinic business model that has developed around the drug’s expanded use.

Federal agents execute a search warrant at your medical practice, seizing patient records and prescription logs.
Can they take patient records without patient consent?
A valid federal search warrant overrides HIPAA privacy protections. However, the warrant must be properly scoped. An attorney can challenge overly broad warrants and move to suppress improperly seized evidence.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
The Diversion Pattern the DEA Monitors
The DEA monitors ketamine diversion in the context of its recognized abuse patterns: theft from veterinary and clinical settings, where ketamine is maintained in controlled substance inventories; internet-based sales of ketamine diverted from clinical sources; and the diversion of ketamine prescribed in clinical settings for use as a recreational drug. The investigative framework for detecting and prosecuting ketamine diversion applies the same basic tools as opioid diversion investigation: PDMP data analysis, controlled substance inventory auditing, and the assessment of prescribing patterns against legitimate clinical use.