New York

Can a New York NP prescribe controlled substances?

Chris Turitzin
Updated
March 6, 2026

Yes—A New York NP can prescribe controlled substances1. NPs with prescriptive authority may issue prescriptions for drugs2, and to prescribe controlled substances they must obtain a DEA number and New York State Official Prescription Forms or authorization to prescribe controlled substances from the New York State Department of Health, Bureau of Narcotics Administration1.

Before any NP is authorized to prescribe, they must complete instruction in New York State and federal laws and regulations relating to prescriptions and recordkeeping3 and receive a certificate indicating prescriptive authority2. Additionally, prescription forms used by NPs must include the NP’s name, NP certificate number, office address, and office telephone number4.

Citations

  1. New York State Education Department, Prescription Privileges (Last Visited July 31, 2025), https://www.op.nysed.gov/professions/nurse-practitioners/practice-issues/prescription-privileges
  2. New York Education Law §6902(3)(a)(ii)
  3. 8 NYCRR §64.4(d)
  4. 8 NYCRR §64.5(a)(7)
Chris, founded Single Aim Health in 2024 to provide clinicians, especially NPs and PAs, with essential services for launching and growing their practices. A Stanford graduate in Product Design, Chris co-founded Momentus Media, which was acquired by Facebook, and worked as a Product Manager there. He later gained expertise in digital health through leadership roles at Bicycle Health, Virta Health, and founding Wink Health. Now, he is using his experience to help clinicians through Single Aim Health.
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