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Last verified: 2026-04-09. Reviewed by Angelica Bottaro.

Known For: Owned by Dr. Justin Beatty as an integrative practice combining NeuroStar TMS with ketamine therapy for treatment-resistant mood disorders; one of New Mexico’s NeuroStar provider locations and offering both interventional treatments under one roof.

LocationAlbuquerque, New Mexico
Address2616 Mesilla St NE, Suite 3, Albuquerque, NM 87110
Phone505-503-6300
Websitechrysalispsychiatry.com
TreatmentsTMS therapy (transcranial magnetic stimulation) — BrainsWay Deep TMS
ProtocolsDeep TMS
Conditions TreatedTreatment-resistant depression (TRD) · OCD · Anxious depression · Adolescent MDD (ages 15–21) · Smoking cessation
InsuranceMost major commercial plans, Medicare Part B, and Tricare typically cover TMS for treatment-resistant depression after prior authorization — verify with this clinic.
Cost$300–500/session cash; $0–250/session typical insurance copay
Course36 sessions over 6–9 weeks (standard rTMS)

HealingMaps Take: BrainsWay Deep TMS opens up OCD treatment on-label — a meaningful advantage over standard NeuroStar-only clinics, since only the H7 coil holds the FDA OCD clearance. Patients pursuing TMS for OCD or anxious depression should confirm the H7 coil specifically (vs the H1 coil used for MDD).

Market Position: One of the TMS providers in the Albuquerque, NM metro offering Deep TMS — relevant for OCD seekers (only Deep TMS H7 holds the standalone FDA OCD clearance) and patients who want non-focal deeper coil penetration.

Is Chrysalis Psychiatry Right for You?

✓ Choose Chrysalis Psychiatry if:

  • You’re seeking FDA-cleared TMS for OCD — only BrainsWay Deep TMS (used here) holds the standalone FDA OCD clearance via the H7 coil
  • You’re treating major depressive disorder with co-occurring anxiety — this clinic treats anxious depression on-label
  • You’re seeking TMS for smoking cessation — BrainsWay H4 holds an FDA short-term smoking cessation clearance

✗ Look elsewhere if:

  • You need accelerated SAINT-style TMS (5-day course) — ask the clinic to confirm whether they’re Magnus-credentialed
  • You want the 3-minute iTBS protocol specifically — this clinic may run only standard rTMS
  • You need rapid relief within days — TMS takes 2–4 weeks to start working. Consider ketamine or Spravato for acute stabilization

Chrysalis Psychiatry Ketamine Cost Calculator

How Much Will Ketamine Therapy Cost?

Estimate your out-of-pocket range based on patient-reported pricing and HealingMaps proprietary clinic data.
Estimated per session
$525–$900
Range: $450–$1,500/session
Estimated total program
$3,150–$5,400
Range: $2,700–$9,000/6-session series
Your estimate vs. national patient-reported median Based on national tracking, adjusted for Manhattan, NY market
Select a treatment type to see pricing context.

TMS protocols at this clinic

The TMS device a clinic operates determines which conditions can be treated on-label. The protocols offered here:

ProtocolSession lengthFDA-cleared for
Standard rTMS (10 Hz)19–37 minTRD, anxious depression, adolescent MDD (15–21)
Deep TMS (H-coil)~20 minTRD, OCD (H7), anxious depression, smoking cessation (H4)

For a full breakdown of TMS devices (NeuroStar, BrainsWay, MagVenture, Magstim, Nexstim) and how protocols differ, see our complete guide to TMS therapy.

What to expect at your first appointment

  1. Insurance pre-authorization (1–3 weeks). Before treatment begins, the clinic submits a prior-authorization request to your insurer. The request typically requires: a confirmed DSM-5 major depressive disorder diagnosis from a psychiatrist, documented failure of 2 to 4 adequate antidepressant trials (most carriers require at least 6 weeks at therapeutic dose for each), a baseline depression rating scale (PHQ-9, HAM-D, or BDI), and evidence of inadequate response to or contraindication for psychotherapy. About 30–50% of initial requests are denied; the highest-yield appeal is a peer-to-peer review between the clinic’s psychiatrist and the insurer’s medical reviewer (success rate exceeds 60% with full prior-trial documentation).
  2. Motor threshold mapping (first session, 30–60 minutes added). The clinician delivers single magnetic pulses to the motor cortex and finds the minimum stimulation intensity that elicits a thumb or finger twitch. This motor threshold value sets dosing for every subsequent session — typically 110 to 120 percent of motor threshold. Re-mapping is non-routine.
  3. Daily treatment sessions (5x/week, 19–37 min each for standard rTMS or 3 min for iTBS). You sit in a recliner with hearing protection (the magnetic pulses are loud). The coil is positioned against the scalp; you feel a tapping sensation during stimulation. There is no medication, no IV, no need to fast. Patients commonly read, listen to music, or scroll their phone during the session.
  4. Drive home, return to work. No anesthesia means you drive yourself to and from each session. You return to work, school, or your normal day immediately afterward — no chaperone, no recovery period, no integration block. Many patients schedule sessions during a lunch break.

Questions to ask on your consult call

  • Which TMS device do you operate? This clinic uses BrainsWay Deep TMS. For OCD, only BrainsWay Deep TMS H7 has standalone FDA clearance. For adolescents (15–21), only NeuroStar (since 2024) and BrainsWay (since 2025) hold the relevant clearances.
  • Which protocols are available? Standard 10 Hz rTMS is universal. Ask about iTBS (3-minute sessions, FDA-cleared 2018), Deep TMS (BrainsWay H-coil, FDA-cleared 2013–2025 across multiple indications), and accelerated TMS — particularly SAINT (Magnus-credentialed Stanford protocol, 50 sessions in 5 days, $19,703 CMS hospital reimbursement effective July 2025).
  • Do you handle prior authorization in-house? Ask about the clinic’s peer-to-peer review process and what their success rate is when the initial PA is denied.
  • Are you in-network with my insurer? Verify network status with BCBS, Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, Humana, Medicare Part B, or Tricare — and ask about cash-pay package discounts (typically 10–25% off rack rate).
  • What does maintenance look like after the acute course? Ask about tapering boosters (weekly × 3 → biweekly × 3 → monthly), PRN booster sessions for early symptom return, and whether they recommend continued antidepressant maintenance during and after TMS.

Frequently asked questions

How much does TMS cost at this clinic?

Cash-pay TMS sessions in Albuquerque, NM typically run $300 to $500 per session, with the full 36-session course costing $7,200 to $15,000. Premium-metro clinics (NYC, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston) charge 30 to 50 percent more. With insurance, copays typically run $0 to $250 per session depending on your deductible status; most patients with employer-sponsored PPO plans pay $500 to $3,000 out-of-pocket for a full course. Many independent clinics offer 10 to 25 percent package discounts for cash-pay patients. TMS is HSA- and FSA-eligible. Contact this clinic directly for their specific cash-pay rates and in-network status with your insurer.

Does insurance cover TMS at this clinic?

Most major commercial insurance plans (BCBS, Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, Humana), Medicare Part B, and Tricare cover TMS for treatment-resistant major depressive disorder. UnitedHealthcare typically requires 3 failed antidepressant trials; most other carriers require 2. Pre-authorization is mandatory across all major carriers. Coverage for off-label conditions (PTSD, fibromyalgia, bipolar depression, migraine) is rarely approved. Contact this clinic to verify in-network status with your specific insurer and to learn about their prior-authorization handling.

What is the “TMS dip” and will I experience it at this clinic?

The “TMS dip” is a patient-coined term for temporary worsening of mood or symptom intensification that some patients experience roughly mid-course (commonly between sessions 10 and 20) before clinical improvement begins. It’s not a sign that TMS is failing — it usually resolves with continued treatment. If you experience the dip, tell your clinician immediately. They may adjust intensity, frequency, or coil position. Importantly, dropping out before session 20 substantially reduces overall response rate. Patients who push through the mid-course dip generally have better outcomes than those who quit early.

Can I drive myself to and from sessions? Can I work the same day?

Yes. TMS requires no anesthesia, no sedation, and no IV access. Patients drive themselves to sessions, return to work, school, or normal activities immediately afterward, and need no chaperone or recovery period. This is the single largest patient-experience advantage TMS holds over ketamine therapy and ECT. Many patients schedule sessions on lunch breaks. The only post-session sensation is mild scalp tenderness for the first few sessions, which decreases substantially as scalp nerves desensitize.

Which TMS device does this clinic use, and why does it matter?

This clinic operates BrainsWay Deep TMS. The device determines what conditions can be treated on-label. For OCD, only BrainsWay Deep TMS H7 has a standalone FDA clearance. For adolescents 15–21, only NeuroStar (since March 2024) and BrainsWay (since November 2025) hold the relevant indications. Ask the clinic which device they operate before booking.

Does this clinic treat OCD with TMS?

Possibly — but only BrainsWay Deep TMS using the H7 coil holds a standalone FDA clearance for OCD (granted via the De Novo pathway in 2018). MagVenture’s Cool D-B80 has an OCD adjunct clearance. Standard NeuroStar (figure-8 coil) is not FDA-cleared for OCD. This clinic appears to use BrainsWay Deep TMS, which is the FDA-cleared device for OCD. The full OCD course is 29 sessions over 6 weeks with symptom-provocation protocols.

Do you treat adolescents (ages 15–21) with TMS?

The FDA has cleared TMS for adolescents 15 to 21 with major depressive disorder. NeuroStar received the first adolescent clearance in March 2024; BrainsWay Deep TMS followed in November 2025. There is no current FDA clearance for ages 12 through 14. Real-world evidence from NeuroStar’s clearance documentation cited 78 percent of treated adolescents achieving clinically meaningful improvement. Contact this clinic to confirm whether their device holds the adolescent indication and whether they treat patients in this age range.

✓ Last verified: March 21, 2026 — Edited & verified by Angelica Bottaro for HealingMaps Editorial Staff

Chrysalis Psychiatry in Albuquerque, New Mexico logo

Market Position: Chrysalis Psychiatry treats both depression and PTSD — the two most common ketamine therapy indications, accounting for 34% of HealingMaps patient inquiries.

Is Chrysalis Psychiatry Right for You?

✓ Choose Chrysalis Psychiatry if:

  • You’re seeking verified ketamine therapy in the Albuquerque metro

✗ Look elsewhere if:

  • You want ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP) with integrated talk therapy
  • You’re seeking ketamine for chronic pain (this clinic focuses on mental health)

⚠ FDA-cleared indications for TMS therapy: treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (MDD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD, Deep TMS only), anxious depression, short-term smoking cessation, and adolescent MDD (ages 15–21). Use of TMS for other conditions including PTSD, bipolar depression, fibromyalgia, and other indications is off-label — not currently FDA-cleared for those specific indications. Discuss your condition with the clinic to understand insurance coverage and clinical evidence.

What to Expect at Your First Chrysalis Psychiatry Appointment

  1. Initial intake call — Medical history review and clinical eligibility check.
  2. Medical evaluation — in-person or telehealth psychiatric assessment, vitals check, and review of current medications with the Chrysalis Psychiatry clinical team.
  3. First treatment session — supervised ketamine therapy session in a private treatment room, lasting approximately 60–90 minutes. You’ll have a comfortable chair or recliner, dim lighting, and direct medical monitoring throughout.
  4. Recovery and follow-up — observation period after dosing, mood check-in with the clinical team, and scheduling your next session. Arrange for a ride home; do not drive for 24 hours after your ketamine session.

What to Ask on Your Chrysalis Psychiatry Consult Call

  • How long has the Chrysalis Psychiatry clinical team been delivering ketamine therapy, and what specialty training do your providers hold?
  • What’s a typical 6-session total cost at Chrysalis Psychiatry, and do you offer payment plans, HSA/FSA-eligible billing, or sliding-scale pricing?
  • What does Chrysalis Psychiatry recommend for patients who don’t respond to the standard 6-session acute series?

Patient Questions about Chrysalis Psychiatry

This 4-question summary covers the most common patient questions for ketamine clinics in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Editorial responses are HealingMaps-authored, grounded in our 2026 Ketamine Clinic Intelligence Report.

What ketamine treatments does Chrysalis Psychiatry offer?

Chrysalis Psychiatry offers verified ketamine therapy services in Albuquerque. Specific protocols can include IV ketamine infusion, IM ketamine injection, oral troches, ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP), or Spravato (FDA-approved esketamine) — verify the specific protocol mix with the clinic during your consult call. Multi-protocol practices typically offer more flexibility for matching the modality to your diagnosis and insurance coverage.

Is Chrysalis Psychiatry suited for treatment-resistant depression?

Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) — typically defined as failure on two or more antidepressant trials — is the most common qualifier for ketamine therapy and the FDA-approved indication for Spravato. Patients meeting that bar are typical candidates at ketamine clinics like Chrysalis Psychiatry. If insurance coverage matters, ask whether they offer Spravato (insurance-covered for TRD) versus IV ketamine (typically self-pay).

Does Chrysalis Psychiatry treat PTSD, anxiety, or chronic pain?

Most ketamine clinics treat PTSD and anxiety alongside depression — these three conditions account for ~46% of HealingMaps patient inquiries. Some clinics also treat chronic pain (CRPS, fibromyalgia, neuropathic pain), though pain protocols differ from mental-health protocols (longer infusion times, higher doses). Ask Chrysalis Psychiatry which specific conditions they treat most often and how their protocols differ by indication.

How does Chrysalis Psychiatry compare to other ketamine clinics in Albuquerque, New Mexico?

Compare ketamine clinics in Albuquerque, New Mexico on three axes: (1) protocol mix — multi-protocol clinics offer flexibility; (2) clinical lead — psychiatrist-led clinics typically include KAP integration, anesthesiologist-led clinics typically focus on infusion; (3) insurance posture — Spravato-certified providers can run insurance coverage; cash-only IV clinics cannot. Chrysalis Psychiatry’s positioning on these axes determines whether it’s the right fit for your specific diagnosis and budget.

Albuquerque Ketamine Market Snapshot

Sources: CDC PLACES 2023 (Bernalillo County, NM, crude prevalence) · U.S. Census ACS 5 Year · HealingMaps proprietary patient inquiry data.

  • Adult depression in Bernalillo County, NM: 24.6%
  • Frequent mental distress (14+ days per month): 16.5%
  • Adults lacking health insurance: 14.0%
  • Bernalillo County population: 674,692 · median household income $62,220
  • Recent Albuquerque-area inquiries to HealingMaps: A growing stream of New Mexico residents have recently contacted us seeking ketamine care

Behind this data: HealingMaps has analyzed 23,496 patient inquiries (Oct 2022 – Mar 2026), mapped 1,473 verified clinics across 3,142 counties, scraped 132 clinic pricing pages, and collected 658 practitioner survey responses. This snapshot reflects our multi-source methodology.

From the 2026 Ketamine Industry Report

The standard acute ketamine protocol for depression is six sessions over two to three weeks — a cadence widely adopted across the verified clinic cohort, giving patients a baseline expectation for the acute phase. Source: HealingMaps 2026 Ketamine Clinic Intelligence Report — drawn from 23,496 patient inquiries and 132 clinic website analyses.

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Angelica Bottaro

Angelica Bottaro

View all posts by Angelica Bottaro

Angelica Bottaro is a medical writer and researcher with a rich background in psychology and journalism. She holds a bachelor's degree in Psychology from Trent University and an Advanced Diploma in Journalism from Centennial College. Angelica has been a freelance writer since 2014, amassing bylines in various platforms like Very Well Health, The Good Men Project, MakeWell, and LymeTime among others. Although primarily a freelance writer, her educational background and career trajectory have positioned her as a voice in mental health discourse, highlighting systemic issues in mental health care through her writing.

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