Ayahuasca Church: Understanding RFRA-Protected Sacred Ceremony in the United States
If you’re searching for an ayahuasca church, you’ve likely heard that ayahuasca can be used legally in the United States within a religious context—and you’re wondering what that actually means. You may be asking: What is an ayahuasca church? How is this legal? How do I know if a church is legitimate? And is this the right path for my spiritual journey?
You’re asking the right questions. The landscape of ayahuasca in the United States is evolving. Understanding the difference between a genuine religious community and organizations using “church” as legal cover is critical. Your safety, spiritual wellbeing, and legal protection depend on it.
This guide explains what an ayahuasca church in the USA actually is. It covers how the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) protects sincere religious use of this sacred medicine. And it shows you how to identify legitimate churches versus questionable operators. As a 501(c)(3) religious organization operating under RFRA protections, Earth Connection Community offers this perspective from within the tradition—not as outside observers, but as practitioners and stewards of this sacred path.
What Is an Ayahuasca Church?
An ayahuasca church is a religious organization that uses ayahuasca as a sacrament. It operates within an established theological framework and spiritual practice. Like communion wine in Christian traditions or peyote in Native American Church ceremonies, ayahuasca serves as a sacred medicine. It facilitates direct communion with the divine.
Ayahuasca churches in the United States typically draw from Amazonian indigenous traditions. These include Shipibo, Quechua, and other lineages. The churches adapt these practices within an organizational structure that meets U.S. legal and religious standards. The sacrament is consumed during ceremonial gatherings. Trained facilitators lead these ceremonies. They include prayer, sacred music (often Shipibo icaros or hymns), and spiritual guidance.
Crucially, an authentic ayahuasca church is not a business offering “experiences” or “treatments.” It is a religious community. It offers ongoing spiritual development, ministerial support, integration guidance, and a path of deepening relationship with the sacred.
The Origins: Santo Daime and União do Vegetal
The church model for ayahuasca use in the United States has its roots in two Brazilian religious traditions:
União do Vegetal (UDV): José Gabriel da Costa founded this tradition in 1961. The UDV is a Christian-influenced tradition. It refers to ayahuasca as hoasca and uses it as a sacrament during organized rituals. The UDV won a major legal victory at the U.S. Supreme Court in 2006. The case is called Gonzales v. O Centro Espírita Beneficente União do Vegetal. This landmark case established legal recognition for ayahuasca churches in America.
Santo Daime: Raimundo Irineu Serra founded this tradition in the 1930s. Santo Daime combines Amazonian shamanic traditions with Christianity. Members consume ayahuasca (called Daime) during structured ceremonies. The ceremonies feature hymns, dance, and prayer. Santo Daime churches have also received RFRA protections in the United States.
These precedents established an important principle. Sincere religious use of ayahuasca can be protected under the First Amendment and RFRA. But it must be within a structured religious framework.
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA): Legal Foundation for Ayahuasca Churches
For anyone researching an ayahuasca church in the USA, understanding RFRA is essential. It’s the legal foundation that makes ayahuasca church ceremonies possible in the United States.
What Is RFRA?
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) passed in 1993. Congress created this law to protect people’s right to practice their religion freely. It says the federal government cannot place a heavy burden on someone’s religious practice.
If the government wants to restrict a religious practice, it must prove two things:
There is a compelling reason to restrict that practice, and
There is no other way to achieve that goal that would be less restrictive
This is an exceptionally high legal standard. RFRA was designed to provide strong protection for religious practices. This protection applies even when those practices conflict with general laws.
Gonzales v. O Centro (2006): The Supreme Court Ruling
In 2006, the U.S. Supreme Court made a unanimous ruling. The case was Gonzales v. O Centro Espírita Beneficente União do Vegetal. The Court ruled that the UDV’s religious use of ayahuasca was protected under RFRA.
Ayahuasca contains DMT. DMT is a Schedule I controlled substance. This means it’s federally illegal in most contexts. But the Court said that RFRA protects sincere religious use.
The Court found that: - The UDV’s use of ayahuasca was sincere and central to their religious practice - The government did not prove a compelling reason to prohibit this religious use - The government did not show that allowing religious use would harm public health - The government did not show that the medicine would be diverted to non-religious uses
This decision established legal precedent. Sincere religious use of ayahuasca within an organized religious framework can be protected under RFRA. This protection exists even though ayahuasca contains a federally controlled substance.
Recent RFRA Exemptions
Since the UDV decision, several other religious organizations have sought RFRA-based protections. Some have received them:
Church of Eagle and Condor received a settlement with the DEA in 2024. This settlement allows religious ceremonies with ayahuasca.
Church of Gaia reportedly became the first to receive a religious exemption from the DEA without litigation.
Soul Quest Ayahuasca Church of Mother Earth operated for years claiming RFRA protections. However, it faced significant legal challenges. These included a $15 million wrongful death verdict in May 2024. Soul Quest subsequently filed for bankruptcy in July 2024. The bankruptcy motion was rejected by the court in late July. Soul Quest ceased operations in August 2024.
The legal landscape continues to evolve. RFRA protection is not automatic. It depends on demonstrating sincere religious practice. It requires established theology, ministerial oversight, and organizational legitimacy.
Important Legal Clarifications
While RFRA provides protections for religious use of ayahuasca, several important clarifications apply:
Federal vs. State Law: RFRA is a federal law. State laws vary. Some states have their own religious freedom acts. The legal protections for ayahuasca use are most clearly established at the federal level.
Not a Blanket Exemption: RFRA does not make ayahuasca legal for everyone. It protects sincere religious use within an organized religious community. Personal use, recreational use, or non-religious use remains prohibited under federal law.
Evolving Landscape: Legal protections for ayahuasca churches continue to develop. New cases, DEA settlements, and organizational precedents shape this landscape. Churches operate within a framework of legal care and consultation.
How to Identify a Legitimate Ayahuasca Church
As interest in ayahuasca has grown, so has the number of organizations calling themselves “churches.” Some are genuine religious communities. They have sincere spiritual practice, established theology, and proper legal standing. Others may be using religious language as legal cover. They operate more like retreat businesses.
Your safety, spiritual wellbeing, and legal protection depend on choosing wisely. Here are the hallmarks of a legitimate ayahuasca church:
1. 501(c)(3) Tax-Exempt Status
Legitimate religious organizations in the United States apply for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status from the IRS. They receive this designation. This indicates: - The organization has an established religious purpose - It operates for charitable and educational purposes, not private profit - It maintains proper governance, financial transparency, and organizational structure - It meets IRS standards for what constitutes a “church”
Ask any ayahuasca church about their 501(c)(3) status. Legitimate churches will be transparent about this.
2. Established Theology and Spiritual Framework
A genuine ayahuasca church operates within a coherent theological and spiritual framework. It’s not simply a provider of “psychedelic experiences.” Look for:
Written theology or statement of beliefs: What is the church’s understanding of the divine? How does the sacrament fit within that understanding?
Lineage and tradition: Does the church honor the indigenous Amazonian origins of ayahuasca? Do they work with trained facilitators from those traditions?
Ongoing spiritual development: Does the church offer more than one-time ceremonies? Is there a path of deepening practice, study, and community involvement?
Sacred language: Does the organization speak of ayahuasca as a sacrament? Do they call gatherings ceremonies or sacred ritual? Or do they talk about products and therapeutic services?
3. Membership Process
Legitimate churches have a membership process, not just a booking system. RFRA protections apply to members of a religious community exercising their sincere religious beliefs. They don’t apply to customers purchasing services.
Look for: - An application or inquiry process - Education about the church’s beliefs and practices - Time to discern whether this spiritual path aligns with your own seeking - Membership that extends beyond a single ceremony weekend
4. Ministerial Screening and Pastoral Care
Authentic ayahuasca churches conduct ministerial screening before someone participates in ceremony. This is not “medical clearance.” It is spiritual counsel to determine:
Whether you are being called to this practice for sincere spiritual reasons
Whether you understand the sacred nature of the work
Whether there are physical or psychological considerations that should be discussed
Whether this particular spiritual path is appropriate for where you are in your journey
Churches typically encourage consultation with healthcare providers. Legitimate churches may decline to serve someone if facilitators discern this is not the right path or timing. This is pastoral care, not gatekeeping.
5. Integration and Ongoing Support
Genuine religious communities offer spiritual integration support. This is guidance for understanding and embodying insights from ceremony. Look for:
Pre-ceremony preparation guidance
Post-ceremony integration circles, calls, or spiritual counsel
Community gatherings beyond ceremony weekends
Educational offerings about the tradition, indigenous cultures, and spiritual practice
6. Cultural Respect and Indigenous Partnership
Ayahuasca originates from indigenous Amazonian traditions. Legitimate churches honor this lineage through:
Acknowledgment of and gratitude toward Shipibo, Quechua, and other indigenous stewards
Partnership with or training from indigenous facilitators
Financial support for indigenous communities
Avoiding appropriation—clearly distinguishing between honoring tradition and claiming false indigenous identity
Red Flags to Watch For
Be cautious of organizations that:
Charge commercial rates (thousands of dollars) per ceremony while claiming religious exemption
Offer no real membership process—just online booking
Make medical or therapeutic claims (“cures depression,” “treats PTSD,” “heals trauma”)
Have no established theology beyond generic “plant medicine” language
Formed recently with no history or track record
Operate with minimal transparency about leadership, finances, or legal status
Use high-pressure marketing or fear-based language (“limited spots,” “transformational breakthrough now”)
Show no connection to or respect for indigenous lineages
What to Expect at an Ayahuasca Church Ceremony
If you’re considering attending an ayahuasca church ceremony, understanding what to expect can help you prepare. You can prepare spiritually, mentally, and practically.
Before the Ceremony: Preparation and Screening
Legitimate churches require a preparation period:
Ministerial Conversations: You’ll speak with facilitators. You’ll discuss your spiritual intentions, your life circumstances, and your reasons for seeking this path.
Dietary Guidelines: Most churches request participants follow a simple diet. This happens in the days or weeks before ceremony. You’ll avoid certain foods, substances, and activities. These may interfere with the sacrament’s effects or safety. This is called the dieta in Amazonian traditions.
Medical Considerations: You’ll be asked about medications, health conditions, and mental health history. The church will encourage you to consult with your healthcare provider. Certain medications can have dangerous interactions with ayahuasca. This especially includes SSRIs, MAOIs, and some other psychiatric medications.
Spiritual Preparation: Many churches offer readings, guided meditations, or teachings. These help you prepare your heart and mind for sacred ceremony.
During the Ceremony: What Happens
While each church’s ceremonies vary based on their specific tradition, most include these elements:
Sacred Space: Ceremonies typically occur in a dedicated space. It’s often candlelit, with altars, sacred objects, and a sense of reverence. Participants sit or lie on mats with blankets, pillows, and buckets. Purging is a common and sacred part of the ayahuasca experience.
Opening Prayers and Intentions: The ceremony begins with prayers, invocations, or blessings. Participants may be invited to set their intentions silently.
Serving the Sacrament: Facilitators serve the ayahuasca sacrament. They often pray or offer blessings over each cup. Participants drink a small amount—typically a few ounces.
Sacred Music: Most ceremonies feature music. This might be Shipibo icaros (healing songs), hymns (in Santo Daime tradition), live instrumental music, or recorded sacred music. The music is not entertainment. It’s considered a guiding and healing force.
The Journey: Effects typically begin 20-60 minutes after drinking. Experiences vary widely. You may have visual imagery, profound emotions, physical purging (vomiting or diarrhea), insights, encounters with spiritual presences, deep silence, or overwhelming beauty. Facilitators hold space. They offer songs and provide support as needed.
Duration: Ceremonies typically last 4-6 hours. Many churches offer two or more ceremonies over a weekend retreat.
Closing: The ceremony closes with prayers, gratitude, and often silence or gentle music. Participants rest and integrate.
After the Ceremony: Integration
The work doesn’t end when the ceremony closes. Many participants report that the real work begins in the days, weeks, and months afterward. You integrate insights into daily life.
Legitimate churches offer: - Post-ceremony sharing circles - Spiritual counsel or integration calls - Educational resources - Community gatherings - Encouragement to journal, pray, and practice new insights
The Role of Community
One of the most significant differences between an ayahuasca church and a one-time retreat is community. A church offers ongoing relationship. Fellow members are on the path. Facilitators know your journey. You have a sense of spiritual home.
Many participants find that this communal dimension is as important as the sacrament itself.
Ayahuasca Church vs. Ayahuasca Retreat: Understanding the Difference
As you research options, you’ll encounter both “ayahuasca churches” and “ayahuasca retreats.” While there’s overlap, understanding the distinction is important:
Ayahuasca Churches
Legal Framework: Operate under RFRA protections as religious organizations (501(c)(3) status)
Structure: Membership-based religious community
Focus: Spiritual growth, ongoing relationship with the divine, integration into a spiritual practice
Duration: Long-term involvement—you join a community, not book a weekend
Language: Sacrament, ceremony, spiritual healing, ministerial guidance
Location: Typically US-based (due to RFRA being federal law)
Ayahuasca Retreats
Legal Framework: Often operate outside the US (Peru, Costa Rica, Colombia, Mexico) where ayahuasca legality varies. Some claim religious exemptions in the US.
Structure: Typically one-time or occasional experiences booked as individual events
Focus: Healing journey, personal growth, often therapeutic framing
Duration: Usually a single retreat (weekend to 2 weeks)
Language: May use medical/therapeutic language—“healing,” “treatment,” “patients,” “sessions”
Location: International retreats or US-based centers (legal status varies)
Neither model is inherently better. They serve different needs. If you’re seeking a one-time intensive healing journey with experienced facilitators, an international retreat may be appropriate. If you’re seeking ongoing spiritual community, religious practice, and a path of long-term development, a church may be the right fit.
At Earth Connection Community, we believe the sacred medicine is most powerful within the context of ongoing spiritual relationship and community support.
Earth Connection Community: Our Approach to Sacred Ceremony
As a 501(c)(3) religious organization operating under RFRA protections, Earth Connection Community offers a home for sincere seekers called to the ayahuasca path.
Our Theology
We understand ayahuasca as a sacred sacrament. It facilitates direct communion with the divine intelligence that animates all life. Our theology honors:
The divine immanence in nature: We recognize the sacred in the natural world. We understand plant medicines as conscious allies in spiritual development.
Personal revelation and direct experience: We believe each person can encounter the divine directly. The sacrament serves this sacred purpose.
Indigenous wisdom traditions: We honor the Shipibo, Quechua, and other Amazonian peoples. They have been stewards of this medicine for millennia.
Compassion and healing: We understand spiritual healing as the restoration of one’s relationship with the divine, the earth, and one’s true self.
Our Facilitators
Our ceremonies are led by trained facilitators. They have years of experience in ceremonial space. Many have trained with indigenous teachers in the Shipibo and Quechua traditions. All have completed extensive apprenticeships, dietas, and ongoing spiritual practice.
Our facilitators don’t just serve the sacrament. They hold sacred space, offer spiritual counsel, sing icaros, and provide pastoral care throughout your journey with our church.
Our Membership Process
Becoming a member of ECC involves:
Initial inquiry: Reach out through our website to express interest
Ministerial conversation: Speak with one of our facilitators about your spiritual journey and intentions
Orientation: Learn about our theology, practices, and community guidelines
Membership commitment: Join as a member of the church community
Ceremony preparation: Receive guidance for your first ceremony, including dietary guidelines and spiritual practices
Our Ceremonies
We offer ceremonies throughout the year at our sanctuary space. Each ceremony is:
Led by experienced facilitators
Conducted with sacred intention, opening and closing prayers, and spiritual guidance
Accompanied by Shipibo icaros and sacred music
Limited in size to ensure intimate, held space
Followed by integration circles and ongoing spiritual support
Integration and Community
We offer regular integration circles, spiritual study groups, community gatherings, and one-on-one ministerial counsel. We believe the medicine is a teacher. The real transformation happens as you embody insights in your daily life.
Common Questions About Ayahuasca Churches
Is ayahuasca legal in the United States?
Ayahuasca contains DMT. DMT is a Schedule I controlled substance. This makes it federally illegal in the United States for most purposes. However, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) protects sincere religious use of ayahuasca. This protection applies within legitimate religious organizations. The 2006 Supreme Court ruling in Gonzales v. O Centro established this protection. Personal, recreational, or non-religious use remains illegal.
How much does it cost to attend an ayahuasca church ceremony?
Legitimate churches operate as non-profit religious organizations, not businesses. Rather than charging fees, they typically request donations. These cover the costs of the sacrament, facility, and ministerial support. Suggested donation amounts vary widely—anywhere from $200 to $800 per ceremony weekend. No one should be turned away due to inability to contribute financially. Be cautious of organizations charging commercial rates (several thousand dollars) while claiming religious status.
Do I need to be religious to attend an ayahuasca church?
You don’t need to identify with any particular religious tradition. But you do need to approach the sacrament with sincere spiritual intention. Ayahuasca churches welcome seekers from all backgrounds. This includes Christian, Buddhist, secular, spiritual-but-not-religious—as long as you’re genuinely seeking spiritual growth and connection with the divine (however you understand it).
How often can I participate in ceremonies?
This varies by church and by individual. Some members participate monthly. Others participate a few times per year. Many churches recommend spacing ceremonies to allow time for integration. The medicine is not a quick fix. It’s a relationship that unfolds over time. Your facilitators can help guide you in discerning appropriate frequency.
What is the ministerial screening process?
Ministerial screening is a spiritual conversation. It’s not medical clearance. Facilitators discuss your intentions, life circumstances, and readiness for ceremony. They’ll ask about medications, health conditions, and mental health. They don’t diagnose or treat. They ask to ensure your safety. They determine if this spiritual path is appropriate for you at this time. Churches encourage all prospective participants to consult their healthcare providers before ceremony.
Are there people who shouldn’t participate in ayahuasca ceremonies?
Yes. The sacrament is not appropriate for everyone. Reasons someone shouldn’t participate include:
Medications: Certain psychiatric medications can have dangerous interactions with ayahuasca. This especially includes SSRIs, MAOIs, lithium, and some others.
Mental health conditions: Individuals with schizophrenia, psychosis, or certain other conditions may be at increased risk.
Heart conditions: Ayahuasca can raise heart rate and blood pressure.
Pregnancy: The sacrament is not recommended during pregnancy.
Age: Most churches require participants to be adults (18+).
This is why ministerial screening and healthcare consultation are essential.
How do I find an ayahuasca church near me?
Search terms like “ayahuasca church near me,” “ayahuasca church [your state],” or “RFRA ayahuasca” can help you locate options. Look for churches with:
501(c)(3) status
Clear theology and established practice
Transparency about leadership and legal standing
Ministerial screening processes
Integration support
If you’re in Arizona or anywhere you can travel to Arizona, Earth Connection Community welcomes your inquiry.
What’s the difference between an ayahuasca church and working with a shaman?
Both can be legitimate paths. Ayahuasca churches offer organized religious community, established theology, legal protections under RFRA, and ongoing spiritual support. Working with a traditional shaman (particularly in South America) offers direct connection to indigenous lineages. It often provides more intensive ceremonial settings. Some churches work with indigenous shamans as facilitators. Neither is inherently superior. It depends on your calling, circumstances, and what you’re seeking.
Is an Ayahuasca Church Right for Your Spiritual Journey?
Choosing to drink ayahuasca is not a casual decision. It’s a commitment to profound spiritual work. It means facing what arises with courage. It means integrating insights into transformed living.
Choosing to join an ayahuasca church is an even deeper commitment. You’re becoming part of a spiritual community. You’re entering into ongoing relationship with the sacred. You’re committing to a path of long-term development.
An ayahuasca church may be right for you if:
You’re genuinely seeking spiritual growth and connection with the divine
You value community and ongoing support over one-time experiences
You want the legal clarity and protection of RFRA-based religious practice
You’re willing to approach the sacrament with reverence, preparation, and humility
You’re committed to integration—doing the daily work of embodying insights
It may not be the right path if:
You’re primarily seeking therapeutic treatment for a specific condition (ayahuasca churches provide spiritual healing, not medical or psychological treatment)
You’re not ready to engage with the profound spiritual dimensions of the work
You’re seeking a quick fix or magical solution
You have reasons that make the sacrament unsafe for you
Taking the Next Step
If you feel called to explore whether an ayahuasca church—and specifically, Earth Connection Community—might be right for your spiritual journey, we invite you to reach out.
Your first step is simply a conversation. Speak with one of our facilitators. Share your story. Ask questions. Discern whether this path resonates with your deepest seeking.
The medicine has a way of calling those who are ready. If you’re reading this, perhaps you’re being called.
We’re here to walk beside you.
Learn More About Sacred Ayahuasca Ceremony
How to Prepare for Ayahuasca Ceremony — Comprehensive preparation guide for your first ceremony
Is Ayahuasca Safe? — Understanding risks, contraindications, and safety practices
What Is Ayahuasca? — Deep dive into the history, botany, and traditional use of the sacred medicine
About Earth Connection Community — Our story, our facilitators, and our community
Our Facilitators — Meet the spiritual guides who hold ceremony space
Ready to Begin?
Learn About Membership — Explore the process of joining our spiritual community and attending your first ceremony.
Speak With a Facilitator — Have questions? Schedule a conversation with one of our facilitators to explore whether ECC is right for your journey.
Subscribe to Our Newsletter — Receive ceremony schedules, spiritual reflections, and updates from our community.