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Nekawa · Quebec

Ibogaine treatment for Montreal residents: the physician-prescribed pathway through Brazil

By Charles D. Johnston · Last updated

Nekawa community · QuebecA growing community of ibogaine and iboga explorers in QuebecQuebecers who have witnessed the power of these amazing plant medicines and want to share and support others.

Residents of Montreal, Quebec who are researching ibogaine for addiction, trauma, or treatment-resistant depression are usually looking for a physician-prescribed, hospital-administered pathway — not an underground session. In the United States, ibogaine remains a Schedule I substance, so no licensed clinic in Quebec can legally provide treatment today.

Nekawa is a wellness academy on Brazil's Costa Verde that coordinates travel, preparation, and integration for U.S. and Canadian residents. Treatment itself is prescribed and delivered by independent licensed Brazilian physicians in hospital settings regulated by ANVISA. This guide explains the legal context in Quebec, what the Brazil pathway involves, and how Montreal residents typically travel to the clinic.

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A 30-minute discovery call with our team. We answer your questions, walk through the protocol, and tell you honestly whether ibogaine is the right fit.

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Why Montreal residents look outside the United States for ibogaine

Montreal sits in a region where fentanyl-contaminated supply and polysubstance use have reshaped who seeks ibogaine — often after MAT, detox, or residential programs have not held.

  • Quebec's overdose surveillance is published by the Institut national de santé publique du Québec (INSPQ); cite provincial totals, not invented city-level counts.
  • Montreal is Canada's second-largest city and a bilingual hub; ibogaine interest spans both English- and French-speaking communities.
  • Ibogaine is controlled under Canada's Controlled Drugs and Substances Act; no clinic in Quebec can legally administer treatment.

Local treatment options near Montreal

Within roughly 25 miles of Montreal, SAMHSA's treatment locator lists approximately 0 facilities offering substance-use, detox, residential, buprenorphine, or methadone services. Those programs remain the appropriate first line for many people.

Ibogaine is not among the services any Quebec facility can legally offer. Residents who have exhausted conventional options sometimes research international, physician-supervised pathways instead.

Quebec's legal and policy posture on ibogaine

Ibogaine is not approved for clinical use in Canada; treatment is not legally available in Quebec.

  • Ibogaine is controlled under Canada's Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. No Health Canada–approved therapeutic product exists, and no clinic in Quebec can legally administer ibogaine treatment.
  • On April 18, 2026, a U.S. federal Executive Order directed a coordinated effort to prioritize ibogaine research and accelerate clinical development, with a specific focus on Veterans. That order does not change Canadian law or create a regulated ibogaine treatment pathway in any Canadian province.
  • Brazil is the world's leading country for physician-prescribed, hospital-administered ibogaine. Treatment is regulated by ANVISA (Brazil's federal health agency, the equivalent of Health Canada), prescribed by licensed physicians, and delivered with full cardiac telemetry and hospital emergency infrastructure.

Traveling from Montreal to Paraty, Brazil

Most Montreal travelers fly from Montréal–Trudeau International (YUL) to São Paulo (GRU) or Rio de Janeiro (GIG), then continue by private ground transport along the Costa Verde to Paraty. Nekawa coordinates airport pickup and the drive to the campus.

  • Montréal–Trudeau International (YUL) connects to GRU via one-stop service through Toronto, New York, or Lisbon.
  • From either GRU or GIG, it is a 4-hour drive along the BR-101 coastal highway to Paraty, on Brazil's Costa Verde. Nekawa arranges private ground transport from the airport.
  • Canadian travelers need a valid passport for Brazil; verify current visa requirements before booking.

What to expect at Nekawa

Nekawa is not a medical provider. The program includes a structured preparation course before travel, hospital-administered ibogaine under Brazilian physician supervision, and a 45-day integration curriculum after you return home.

Cardiac screening (including EKG), on-site physician oversight, and emergency hospital infrastructure are part of the medical protocol in Brazil — not optional add-ons.

Book a discovery call when you are ready to discuss whether this pathway fits your situation. There is no pressure to commit on the first conversation.

What you arrive to

Where the jungle meets the sea

Nekawa sits in the Atlantic rainforest just outside the colonial port town of Paraty. Old-growth jungle, waterfalls, natural swimming pools, and a bay scattered with more than 300 forested islands. After Montreal, this is a different world.

Atlantic rainforest

Atlantic rainforest

The 7-million-acre Mata Atlântica biome wraps the 390-acre Nekawa property, with trails to hidden waterfalls.

Three hundred islands

Three hundred islands

More than 300 forested islands across the protected Paraty Bay, a short boat ride from the property.

Waterfalls and natural pools

Waterfalls and natural pools

Over a dozen cold-water waterfalls on the 390-acre property — part of the 15-day on-site integration and the 45-day at-home coursework that follows.

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Frequently asked questions

More questions? See our full FAQ.

Definitions

Plain-language definitions of the terms used on this page.

Schedule I
A US federal classification under the Controlled Substances Act for substances with no accepted medical use and high abuse potential. Ibogaine has been Schedule I since 1970, which means no clinic in the United States — public or private — can administer it.
ANVISA
Brazil's federal health agency, the Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária — the functional equivalent of the US FDA. Regulates physician-prescribed, hospital-administered ibogaine treatment in Brazil under formal medical-use authorization.
Window of Wonder
The 2- to 12-week period of elevated neuroplasticity following an ibogaine session, during which the brain is more receptive to new patterns and integration work. Nekawa's 15-day on-site integration plus 45-day at-home coursework are structured around this window.
eVisa (Brazilian)
An electronic visa required for US travelers entering Brazil since January 1, 2026. Applied at brazil.vfsevisa.com, costs US$80.90, processes in roughly 72 hours, valid 10 years with multiple entries up to 90 days per stay.
QT-interval
A measurement on an electrocardiogram (EKG) of the time between ventricular depolarization and repolarization. Ibogaine prolongs the QT interval, which is why the prescribing physicians screen every patient with EKG and a comprehensive workup before clearing them for a session.
Hospital-administered
Refers to ibogaine treatment delivered in a hospital setting under continuous cardiac telemetry, ICU-trained nursing, and an on-site physician throughout — the regulated framework Brazil's prescribing physicians operate within. Distinct from retreat-style settings in countries without a federal regulatory pathway.

If you are a Montreal resident comparing options, start with the legal facts in Quebec, then speak with our team about whether the Brazil pathway is appropriate for you.

Book a discovery call — no obligation.

The colonial port town of Paraty, Brazil
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A medical program in a setting that matters

The hospital protocol is the foundation. The setting is the second medicine. See the property, the rooms, the team, and the route in.

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No pressure — tell us a little about what you’re going through.