New Jersey

Does a New Jersey NP need a DEA license to prescribe controlled substances?

Chris Turitzin
Updated
May 8, 2026

Yes. A New Jersey NP needs DEA registration to prescribe controlled substances. In New Jersey, nurse practitioners are licensed as Advanced Practice Nurses (APNs)1, and any controlled dangerous substance prescription must include the APN’s DEA number—so prescribers must hold a valid DEA registration2.

APNs may prescribe controlled substances subject to statutory prescriptive-authority conditions, including completing at least six contact hours of continuing education in pharmacology related to controlled substances3. Ensure all other prescription and record requirements are met when issuing controlled substance prescriptions.

Citations

  1. N.J. Statutes §45:11-46 (c)
  2. N.J. Administrative Code §13:37-7.9 (d)(9-10)
  3. N.J. Statutes §45:11-49 (b)(1-7)
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.
Looking to be a collaborating physician?

Receive NP/PA matches in 5 minutes.

Sign up to see connected nurse practitioners and physician assistants who are ready to collaborate in your state.
Get Started
Single Aim's network of vetted collaborating physicians are ready to take on your job.

Find a Collaborating Physician Today

Find Your Collaborator Now