Journey deep within through sacred medicine ceremonies, held in carefully curated safe spaces for profound healing and awakening
Kassia says, "I had a wonderful preparation call with Marcel. He knows all the ins and outs of psilocybin and how it works in the brain. By explaining he took away all the fear that I had to make the next step." See more
Lauren says, "I did my first session with Bala and Tabi near Barcelona on my late mom's birthday last year. It was my first time, and wow, it was a really profound and transformational experience." See more
Looking at available psychedelic retreat options, LSD retreats specifically aren't widely represented in the standard pricing data. Based on comparable psychedelic experiences, you might expect to pay between USD $300-700 per day for guided experiences. Private sessions with medical screening tend to cost around EUR €650 for a single-day experience in Europe, while multi-day group retreat experiences typically range from USD $250-350 per day. Most structured psychedelic programs run between 1-8 days, with longer programs generally offering a lower daily rate.
Classic psychedelics (like psilocybin mushrooms, LSD, ayahuasca, and mescaline) do not create physical dependence or addiction in the way substances like alcohol, opioids, or nicotine do. Most retreat participants find these medicines self-limiting—the profound, sometimes challenging experiences they produce naturally discourage frequent use. In traditional cultures where these plants have been used for centuries, they're typically approached with reverence and used ceremonially, not recreationally. That said, psychological attachment can form with any substance or experience that alters consciousness. At retreats, guests sometimes arrive with misconceptions about psychedelics being an easy "shortcut" to healing, only to discover these medicines often reveal what needs attention rather than instantly fixing it. The medicine itself rarely becomes problematic; the relationship with it might. What's most important isn't necessarily whether a substance can create dependency, but one's intention and the context of use. Many find these experiences so complete that they need significant integration time before feeling called to return.