Regulation Status: No ND Licensure Massage: Licensed Acupuncture: Licensed Coaching: Unregulated

Overview: Holistic Health Regulation in North Dakota

North Dakota is a central plains state with a relatively minimal regulatory footprint in the holistic health space. Massage therapy and acupuncture are licensed professions, governed respectively by the North Dakota Board of Massage and the North Dakota Board of Medicine. However, the state does not have a naturopathic doctor licensing law — there is no ND license available in North Dakota — placing it among the states that have not yet enacted ND legislation.

Health coaching, functional nutrition consulting, energy work, herbalism, and most other wellness modalities are completely unregulated. Practitioners in these fields operate freely as long as they avoid making medical diagnoses or prescribing treatment protocols, which would constitute the unauthorized practice of medicine under North Dakota Century Code.

For holistic health practitioners in North Dakota, professional credentialing from recognized national organizations takes on heightened importance precisely because government regulation is limited. In the absence of state licensing, credentials establish scope of practice, signal competency to the public, and provide the practitioner with professional liability clarity.

Regulation At a Glance

Modality Status Governing Body Exam Required
Naturopathic Medicine (ND)No License — Unlicensed StateNone (no ND law)N/A
Massage TherapyLicensedND Board of MassageMBLEx
AcupunctureLimited CertificationND Board of MedicineNCCAOM
Dietetics / Nutrition (RD)Licensed (Title Protected)ND Board of Dietetic PracticeRD Exam
Health CoachingUnregulatedNoneNo
Functional Nutrition ConsultingUnregulatedNoneNo
Yoga TherapyUnregulatedNoneNo
Herbalism / Plant MedicineUnregulatedNoneNo
Energy Work (Reiki, etc.)UnregulatedNoneNo
ChiropracticLicensedND Board of Chiropractic ExaminersNBCE

Naturopathic Medicine — No Licensure in North Dakota

North Dakota does not license naturopathic doctors. There is no ND practice act, no naturopathic board, and no mechanism by which a naturopathic doctor can obtain a government-issued North Dakota license. This places North Dakota in a group of states — primarily in the central and southeastern United States — that have not yet enacted ND legislation despite national advocacy efforts by the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians (AANP).

What this means practically for North Dakota practitioners and clients:

ND Practice Boundary in North Dakota
Calling yourself a “naturopathic doctor” or “ND” while practicing in North Dakota and advertising licensed naturopathic services to North Dakota residents could constitute unauthorized practice of medicine under North Dakota Century Code Chapter 43-17 (the Medical Practice Act). Holistic practitioners in ND who use the ND credential should make clear that it reflects their training and credentials, not a government-issued North Dakota license. Consult a licensed North Dakota attorney before structuring any ND-adjacent practice in the state.

Massage Therapy

Massage therapy is a licensed profession in North Dakota, regulated by the North Dakota Board of Massage (NDBOM). No person may practice massage therapy for compensation in North Dakota without a valid license from the NDBOM. The board was established to protect public health and safety by ensuring that massage therapists meet minimum education and competency standards.

Licensure Requirements

North Dakota Board of Massage (NDBOM)

Website
ndbom.org
Governing Law
North Dakota Century Code Chapter 43-25
Education Required
750 hours from an approved massage therapy program
Exam
MBLEx (administered by FSMTB)
Renewal
Biennial; continuing education required

North Dakota’s 750-hour requirement is above the national median, reflecting the state’s commitment to professional massage standards despite its light regulatory touch in other modalities. Licensed massage therapists in North Dakota may offer Swedish massage, deep tissue, sports massage, prenatal massage, and related bodywork within their licensed scope. They may not perform acupuncture, chiropractic adjustments, or other modalities requiring separate licensure.

Acupuncture

Acupuncture is regulated in North Dakota through the North Dakota Board of Medicine, which issues limited acupuncture certifications. North Dakota does not have a separate acupuncture board; oversight falls under the broader medical licensing authority. The NCCAOM certification is the cornerstone credential required for North Dakota acupuncture certification.

Acupuncture Certification Requirements

North Dakota Board of Medicine — Acupuncture Certification

Website
ndbom.org/acupuncture
Oversight Body
North Dakota Board of Medicine
Primary Credential Required
NCCAOM Certification
License Type
Limited Acupuncture Certification
Renewal
Periodic; NCCAOM maintenance and CE required

Acupuncturists certified in North Dakota may perform acupuncture, acupressure, moxibustion, and related traditional East Asian medicine practices within the scope of their certification. They may not perform procedures that fall within the practice of medicine as defined under North Dakota Century Code Chapter 43-17 without additional licensure.

Dietetics & Nutrition

North Dakota licenses dietitians through the North Dakota Board of Dietetic Practice. The titles “Registered Dietitian,” “Licensed Dietitian,” and “RD” are restricted to those holding the appropriate licensure. Practicing as a dietitian without a license violates North Dakota law.

However, general wellness nutrition coaching — advising clients on healthy eating patterns, lifestyle nutrition, and wellness without providing individualized medical nutrition therapy for diagnosed conditions — is not restricted to licensed dietitians in North Dakota. Holistic nutrition coaches and wellness consultants may legally offer nutrition-adjacent services as long as they:

This creates a clear and accessible space for functional nutrition coaches, integrative nutrition consultants, and wellness practitioners to operate in North Dakota without government licensure.

Health Coaching & Wellness Consulting

Health coaching and wellness consulting are completely unregulated in North Dakota. No state license, government certification, or mandatory training is required. Any person may legally offer health coaching services in North Dakota for compensation.

The legal boundary — as in all states — lies in scope of practice. North Dakota’s Medical Practice Act (Century Code Chapter 43-17) prohibits any person from practicing medicine without a license. Health coaches who remain within behavioral coaching, motivational support, wellness education, and lifestyle guidance operate clearly within legal boundaries. Coaches who make medical diagnoses, prescribe treatment protocols, or hold themselves out as treating disease risk unauthorized practice of medicine violations.

Professional Credentialing in an Unregulated Space
In North Dakota’s unregulated coaching and wellness environment, credentials from recognized professional bodies — such as ICONIC Board, NBHWC, ACE, or NASM — serve as the primary signal of practitioner quality. They define a professional scope of practice, establish continuing education standards, and provide clients with a meaningful way to evaluate practitioner qualifications in the absence of state oversight.

Scope of Practice Notes for North Dakota Practitioners

North Dakota’s regulatory landscape divides holistic health modalities into two tiers:

  1. Regulated modalities (massage therapy, acupuncture, dietetics, chiropractic, medicine): Require government licensure or certification. Practicing without a license subjects the practitioner to misdemeanor or felony penalties and civil liability under North Dakota Century Code.
  2. Unregulated modalities (health coaching, life coaching, yoga therapy, energy work, functional nutrition consulting, herbalism): No government license required. Practitioners must still avoid medical scope violations and may not use protected professional titles without appropriate licensure.

Because naturopathic medicine is unlicensed in North Dakota, practitioners trained as NDs who wish to work with North Dakota clients in any clinical-adjacent capacity should consult with a licensed North Dakota attorney to determine the appropriate scope of their practice under the state’s medical practice and professional licensing laws.

Remote Practice Considerations

North Dakota’s geographic position in the central plains, combined with the absence of ND licensure, has created a notable pattern: NDs licensed in neighboring licensed states such as Minnesota sometimes provide telehealth or distance wellness consultations to North Dakota clients. This is a legally nuanced area:

How ICONIC Board Credentialing Fits in North Dakota

ICONIC Board credentials are recognized nationally and function as professional practice standards independent of state government licensure. In North Dakota’s landscape — where ND licensure is absent and most wellness modalities are unregulated — ICONIC Board credentialing plays a central role:

Official State Resources

Last verified: April 10, 2026. Information on this page reflects publicly available statutes and regulatory board publications as of that date. Regulation changes frequently — always verify with the relevant board before making practice decisions. This page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.
IB
ICONIC Board — Standards & Credentialing Division
Professional Standards Body for Holistic Health Practitioners
Published by the ICONIC Board Standards & Credentialing Division. ICONIC Board is an independent professional standards body for holistic health practitioners, establishing ethics, conduct, and practice standards across all modalities.