Biomagnet Wellness in Baltimore: Magnetic Field Therapy and Herbal Consultation
Biomagnet Wellness is a small naturopathic practice in Federal Hill offering magnetic field therapy, herbal medicine consultations, and supplement guidance to patients seeking non-pharmaceutical approaches to pain, inflammation, and chronic conditions. The practice operates independently and accepts both walk-in and appointment-based clients, positioning itself outside Baltimore's conventional medical and even mainstream naturopathic clinic model.
What Biomagnet Wellness actually is
The practice centers on biomagnetism, a treatment system that uses static magnets placed on specific body points to correct alleged electromagnetic imbalances. Founder and practitioner Mark Holley, a certified naturopath, pairs magnetic therapy with herbal supplementation and nutritional counseling. The practice is not affiliated with any hospital system or larger wellness network, operates from a ground-floor storefront, and functions as a one-person operation. Unlike larger naturopathic clinics that offer acupuncture, IV therapy, or functional lab testing, Biomagnet Wellness focuses narrowly on its core therapies.
Services and pricing
Initial consultations run 90 minutes and cost $85. During this time, Holley takes a health history, discusses specific symptoms, and performs a "magnetic assessment" to identify body points for treatment. Follow-up sessions are 45 minutes for $55 and typically occur weekly initially, then taper to bi-weekly or monthly depending on progress.
Magnetic therapy supplies (wrist bands, patches, or full-body treatment sets) are sold on-site and range from $15 for adhesive magnet patches to $120 for a complete treatment kit. Herbal consultations are bundled into appointment time and do not carry a separate fee. Holley does not stock bulk herbs; instead, he recommends purchasing from Baltimore-area suppliers or national online retailers based on his written protocols.
No insurance is accepted. Clients pay out-of-pocket, though some practitioners of complementary medicine advise checking flexible spending or health savings account eligibility before treatment.
How Biomagnet Wellness compares to other Baltimore naturopathic options
Baltimore has several established naturopathic practices: Charm City Natural Medicine (Canton) offers acupuncture, herbal medicine, and functional lab testing; Evergreen Naturopathic (Hampden) focuses on homeopathy and botanical medicine. Biomagnet Wellness is cheaper at the entry point and more specialized, but also more limited in scope. Clients seeking a broader diagnostic toolkit—thyroid panels, micronutrient testing, or ongoing nutritional coaching—would get more at Charm City or Evergreen. Those specifically interested in biomagnetism and minimal-equipment treatment will find Biomagnet Wellness more affordable and less time-intensive than a multi-service clinic.
Compared to Johns Hopkins occupational and physical therapy programs, which address chronic pain through evidence-based rehabilitation, Biomagnet Wellness offers a faster entry point ($85 initial visit, no referral needed) but lacks the clinical outcome data and insurance coverage. Patients with insurance and physician support should explore conventional pain management first; Biomagnet Wellness appeals to those already committed to magnetic field therapy or deeply skeptical of conventional approaches.
Who it suits and who it does not suit
Biomagnet Wellness suits patients with chronic pain conditions (back, joint, arthritis pain) who have already tried or rejected conventional treatment and are comfortable with an unproven modality. It also attracts people interested in experimenting with non-invasive tools and learning herbal medicine basics at a lower cost than full functional medicine consultations.
The practice does not suit patients seeking acupuncture, IV nutrients, or detailed lab-based functional medicine. It is not appropriate as a first-line treatment for acute illness, infection, or serious conditions requiring diagnosis. Patients with pacemakers or certain metal implants should not use biomagnetism.
What the first visit involves
Arrival 10 minutes early is standard; Holley collects contact information and a basic symptom questionnaire. The 90-minute appointment includes a verbal health history, a physical assessment, and a demonstration of magnet placement. Holley will ask about pain location, duration, prior treatments, diet, sleep, and stress. He then uses a small handheld device (a "biomagnet scanner," per his literature) to identify points for treatment and will place magnets on your body or recommend home application. By the end, you'll leave with a written protocol (locations, duration, frequency), a list of recommended herbs or supplements, and a printed appointment card.
Expect to discuss your skepticism openly if you have it; Holley is used to skeptical clients and does not pressure. If magnetic therapy seems unlikely to work for you, he typically suggests a trial period of two to four weeks before committing further.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Biomagnet Wellness is open Tuesday through Thursday, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. (Verify hours by phone; practitioners occasionally adjust seasonal schedules.) The Federal Hill storefront has street parking on the block and a small lot adjacent to the building with three spaces. The practice is accessible by the #11 or #15 bus line. No wheelchair accessibility is listed; call ahead if mobility is a concern.
Biomagnet Wellness fills a narrow, low-barrier niche in Baltimore's naturopathic landscape: affordable, specialized, and requiring no referral. It is best suited as an add-on to existing care or a self-directed experiment rather than a replacement for conventional medical diagnosis or urgent treatment.

