Ohio

PMHNP Practice Requirements in Ohio: Scope, Prescribing & Collaboration

If you are a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner (PMHNP) planning to practice in Ohio, here is a plain-language overview of the state’s practice-authority category, the collaboration most NPs need, and how those rules shape your billing and credentialing. General information, not legal advice.

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Please Read First

Informational only, not legal advice. Requirements change, so verify with the Ohio Board of Nursing and the AANP State Practice Environment map. Last reviewed: July 2026. This page focuses on PMHNPs but reflects general nurse practitioner rules in Ohio, which change over time, so confirm your specific situation with the board.

Practice Authority

Ohio Practice-Authority Category (Reduced Practice)

The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) currently classifies Ohio as a reduced practice state. In practice, an Ohio PMHNP works under a required collaborative relationship with a physician for at least some elements of practice, most commonly documented as a standard care arrangement. Because these designations can change, confirm the current category directly with the Ohio Board of Nursing and the AANP map before you rely on it.

Collaboration

Is a Collaborative or Supervisory Agreement Required?

Ohio generally requires a nurse practitioner to have a standard care arrangement with a collaborating physician before providing care. What the agreement must contain, how it is documented, and how often it is reviewed are set by state rule and can change, so confirm the current requirements and forms with the Ohio Board of Nursing.

Prescriptive Authority

Prescriptive Authority and Controlled Substances

Ohio nurse practitioners who meet the state’s requirements may be granted prescriptive authority, which in general can extend to controlled substances when the appropriate conditions are met. Controlled-substance prescribing also requires a separate federal DEA registration, and some substances carry additional conditions. Because the specific scope and documentation are governed by state law and board rule, verify current details with the Ohio Board of Nursing and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration before prescribing.

Billing and Credentialing

What This Means for Your Billing and Credentialing

Your practice-authority category in Ohio affects how you enroll with payers, how your claims are attributed, and what documentation a health plan asks for during credentialing. Because Ohio is a reduced practice environment, payers and facilities usually expect to see a documented collaborating-physician relationship. Getting this right up front prevents denied claims and delayed enrollments later.

Payer Enrollment

We help PMHNPs enroll with Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial plans, aligning enrollment with how Ohio treats your scope so claims are attributed correctly.

Credentialing and CAQH

Our PMHNP credentialing support keeps your CAQH profile, licensure, and DEA documents consistent, which is what payers check before they approve you.

Practice Setup

Building something new? Our guide on how to start a PMHNP practice and a readiness review help you sequence licensure, collaboration, and enrollment.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Ohio a full practice authority state for PMHNPs?

No. AANP currently classifies Ohio as a reduced practice state, meaning Ohio NPs work under a required collaborative relationship (commonly a standard care arrangement) for at least some functions. Confirm the current category with the Ohio Board of Nursing and the AANP map.

Do I need a collaborating or supervising physician in Ohio?

Generally yes. Ohio typically requires a standard care arrangement with a collaborating physician. Verify current requirements with the Ohio Board of Nursing.

Can a PMHNP prescribe controlled substances in Ohio?

NPs who meet state requirements may be granted prescriptive authority that can include controlled substances, but a separate DEA registration is required and conditions apply. Verify with the Ohio Board of Nursing and the DEA.

Keep Reading

Related PMHNP Resources

Scope by State

Compare requirements on our PMHNP scope of practice by state overview.

Start a Practice

See the full sequence in how to start a PMHNP practice.

Credentialing

See what we handle on our PMHNP credentialing page, or the PMHNP hub.

Next Step

Get Your Ohio PMHNP Practice Set Up Correctly

Requirements in Ohio change, and the details matter for your license, your collaboration, and your revenue. A readiness review helps you line up licensure, any required collaboration, and payer enrollment before your first patient.

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