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Certified Bioresonance Wellness Consultant

Bioresonance training and certification

Reviewed byHans K., CBWC · Harmonika FacultyLast updated

Bioresonance at Harmonika Institute is taught as a wellness-information practice. You'll learn the conceptual frameworks behind bioresonance, work with introductory equipment, and develop the consulting skills to translate readings into a sensible wellness conversation. The program is explicit about scope: graduates do not diagnose or treat medical conditions; they offer reflective wellness consultations grounded in lifestyle, stress, and self-care recommendations.

Bioresonance training in person at Harmonika Institute

Program at a glance

Credential
CBWC
Tuition
$2,200
In-person training
6 days · 48h
Live cohort calls
1 day · 4h
Supervised practice
50h
Portfolio + jury
30h
Total
132h · ~16 day-eq.
Cohort size
10 students
Format
In person + live cohort calls
Download detailed program (PDF)

PDF — modules, hours, faculty notes, and a typical week's schedule.

Bioresonance training in the U.S.

Looking for a bioresonance therapy course or training in bioresonance wellness consultation? Harmonika Institute's Certified Bioresonance Wellness Consultant (CBWC) program is a 15-day in-person training across ten U.S. cities, designed for adults who want to work with bioresonance frameworks within a clear non-medical wellness scope. The program teaches the conceptual frameworks behind bioresonance, hands-on use of introductory equipment, and the consulting skills to translate readings into a sensible wellness conversation — never into medical diagnosis or treatment. Whether you want to add bioresonance to a naturopathy or coaching practice, or build a standalone wellness-information practice, our bioresonance course prepares you to consult ethically and effectively on graduation.

The modality

What is bioresonance?

Bioresonance is a wellness-information modality that uses electronic equipment to measure subtle electromagnetic patterns associated with the human body and to translate those patterns into wellness recommendations. The conceptual framework draws on the broader bioenergetic field — the idea that biological systems carry coherent energetic signatures that can be sensed, mapped, and supported.

What a bioresonance practitioner actually does in practice: the client sits comfortably while small sensors are placed on their skin (typically wrists, ankles, or specific reflex points). The bioresonance device runs a measurement cycle of a few minutes, then produces a readout — typically a graph or set of indicators that the practitioner interprets in conversation with the client. The conversation that follows pairs the readings with lifestyle and self-care recommendations: sleep, food, hydration, movement, stress management.

Bioresonance is a contested category in the United States. The scientific evidence for the specific claims of various bioresonance device manufacturers is generally weak, and the FDA has issued warnings against specific device claims in the medical context. Harmonika Institute teaches bioresonance explicitly within a non-medical wellness scope: we do not teach diagnosis, we do not teach medical treatment, and we are explicit with students that the modality's claims are debated.

What graduates can do legally and ethically is offer reflective wellness consultations — a structured conversation that uses bioresonance readings as one of several inputs into a broader lifestyle and wellness recommendation. Many of our graduates combine bioresonance with naturopathy, herbalism, or coaching credentials, where the bioresonance reading serves as a conversation-opener for a deeper wellness consultation.

History & lineage

Where this work comes from.

Bioresonance as a specific category emerged in Germany in the late 1970s, primarily through the work of Franz Morell and Erich Rasche (who developed the MORA device). From there the modality spread through the European wellness market — particularly Germany, Austria, France, and Italy — and developed a substantial practitioner community over the following decades. In the United States, bioresonance remains a much smaller market: the FDA's regulatory stance restricts medical claims, and most U.S. bioresonance practitioners operate explicitly within non-medical wellness scope. Harmonika Institute's program is taught by faculty who have trained in the European tradition with explicit adaptation to the U.S. regulatory and cultural context.

Why structured training matters

Beyond books and weekend workshops.

Most U.S. bioresonance training happens through device manufacturers — short courses tied to specific equipment, usually focused on operating the device and reading the outputs, with little attention to the broader consulting craft, scope of practice, or ethical framework. The reason a structured 15-day training matters is that bioresonance as a U.S. wellness practice is only credible when paired with strong consulting skills, clear scope, and a sensible non-medical framing. Our program teaches all of that, with the device work as one component of a broader curriculum.

What you'll learn

Skills you'll leave with.

The 132 hours of this program are built around the following competencies. Most are practiced rather than lectured.

  • Conceptual frameworks of bioresonance and the broader bioenergetic field
  • Working with introductory bioresonance equipment
  • Reading and translating outputs for client conversation
  • Pairing readings with lifestyle and self-care recommendations
  • Holding a clear non-medical scope with clients
  • Building a wellness-consulting practice
Curriculum

Module by module.

Module 1 — Foundations

History, frameworks, and the wellness-information frame.

Module 2 — Equipment

Working safely with introductory bioresonance devices.

Module 3 — Consulting craft

Translating readings into client conversation; scope.

Module 4 — Practice & business

Ethics, pricing, ongoing professional development.

Program highlights

Specifics that distinguish the Bioresonance cohort.

01

Device-agnostic curriculum

We teach the broader bioenergetic framework, not a single manufacturer's protocol. Graduates can adapt to multiple device platforms (MORA, BICOM, Q-Energy, NLS-based systems) without being locked into a vendor relationship.

02

Clear non-medical scope training

An entire weekend on FDA-compliant language, scope of practice, and clear referral pathways. Bioresonance carries unusual regulatory risk in the U.S. wellness market; this module closes the gap that gets adjacent practitioners into legal trouble.

03

Consulting craft as primary skill

Most bioresonance training focuses on the device. We focus on the conversation that follows — the consulting craft that turns a reading into a useful wellness recommendation a client can actually act on.

04

Combined-practice integration

We map the integration with naturopathy, herbalism, aromatherapy, and coaching. Most U.S. graduates run combined practices because the pure-play bioresonance economics are challenging.

05

Honest evidence framing

We are explicit with students about what bioresonance can and cannot reliably do. Intellectual honesty is itself a marketing advantage with sophisticated clients who reward credibility over over-claiming.

06

European-tradition faculty access

Our bioresonance faculty trained in Germany or Austria with active practitioners, then adapted for U.S. wellness scope. This lineage matters in a field where most U.S. training comes from device manufacturers selling product.

Why this program

What makes our Bioresonance training different.

Device-agnostic curriculum

We teach the broader concepts and the consulting craft, not just one manufacturer's protocol. Graduates can adapt to multiple bioresonance device platforms.

Strong scope-of-practice training

Bioresonance carries unusual regulatory and ethical risk in the U.S. We give explicit attention to scope of practice, FDA-compliant language, and clear referral pathways.

Consulting craft as primary skill

Most bioresonance training focuses on the device. We focus on the conversation that follows the device — the consulting skill that turns a reading into a useful wellness recommendation.

Combinable with adjacent modalities

The curriculum is designed to integrate with naturopathy, herbalism, aromatherapy, and coaching. Most of our graduates run combined practices.

Honest about evidence

We are explicit with students about what bioresonance can and cannot reliably do, and where the evidence base is weak. Intellectual honesty is itself a marketing advantage.

A day in the practice

What working as a CBWC actually looks like.

A working bioresonance practitioner two years out: most graduates run combined practices, so the day looks like a hybrid. Morning admin, 30 minutes. First client at 10am, 90 minutes, $200 — a returning client coming in for a quarterly bioresonance reading paired with a longer wellness consultation, looking at sleep and digestive patterns. You take 20 minutes for notes and write up a follow-up action plan. Lunch break. Afternoon: a 75-minute new-client first session, $250, which is heavier on conversation and intake than on the device reading. By 5pm you have grossed $450 for two clients. The lower volume is balanced by higher per-session pricing. Most weeks: eight to twelve clients, grossing $2,500–$3,800. Bioresonance is a niche modality in the U.S. — practices grow more slowly than EFT or breathwork practices, but pricing is higher and clients tend to be loyal.

Career outcomes

After graduation.

  • Offer wellness consultations as a CBWC
  • Add bioresonance to a naturopathy or coaching practice
  • Specialize in stress, sleep, or lifestyle wellness
  • Continue toward advanced bioresonance and bioenergetic study
  • Mentor other wellness-information practitioners
Career path

Trajectory and income for Bioresonance practitioners.

Bioresonance graduates almost always build combined practices: bioresonance plus naturopathy, herbalism, or coaching credentials. The pure-play bioresonance practice is less common in the U.S. than in Germany or France. Most U.S. graduates pair bioresonance with our Naturopathy program (15-day program) or Phytotherapy program (105-hour standard tier) for a combined wellness consultation practice. Pricing tends to be higher than for adjacent modalities — $200–$400 for a 75–90 minute combined session in major U.S. cities — because the device work signals technical depth. Annual gross income for full-time practitioners ranges from $60,000 to $130,000 within three to five years.

How it compares

Bioresonance compared to adjacent modalities.

Bioresonance vs. Naturopathy

Naturopathy is a broad consultation framework; bioresonance is a specific device-based readout that can be used within a naturopathy session. Many practitioners do both, with bioresonance as the technical component within a broader naturopathic conversation.

Bioresonance vs. Kinesiology

Both use feedback-based assessment (electronic sensors vs. manual muscle testing), but kinesiology is fully manual and table-based, while bioresonance is electronic and seated. Kinesiology has a longer U.S. track record and broader market acceptance.

Bioresonance vs. functional medicine lab work

Functional medicine uses conventional clinical lab tests within a holistic framework; bioresonance uses bioenergetic measurement outside the conventional clinical-lab category. Functional medicine is more research-supported and clinically credible; bioresonance is more accessible and can be a valuable conversation-opener.

Evidence & research

What the research says about Bioresonance.

We teach with intellectual honesty. Where the evidence is strong, we say so. Where it is weak, we say that too. Our credibility — and our graduates' — depends on it.

The scientific evidence for bioresonance devices' specific claims is generally weak. Multiple peer-reviewed studies have failed to find evidence that bioresonance devices reliably detect what manufacturers claim they detect. The U.S. FDA has issued warning letters to bioresonance device manufacturers making unsupported medical claims. At the same time, the broader bioenergetic-research literature documents real biophysical phenomena (the body emits low-level electromagnetic fields, those fields can be measured, some fields correlate with physiological states). Whether current bioresonance devices reliably exploit those phenomena for clinical insight remains contested. We teach bioresonance at Harmonika Institute with full intellectual honesty about this. The CBWC scope is explicitly non-medical: graduates use bioresonance as a structured anchor for wellness conversation, not as a diagnostic tool. The wellness conversations practitioners have around bioresonance readings — about lifestyle, sleep, stress, food — are themselves valuable independent of whether the readings are scientifically validated. Graduates leave able to operate ethically within this nuanced landscape.

Common misconceptions

What people get wrong about Bioresonance.

Myth

Bioresonance can detect diseases.

Reality

It cannot. The scientific evidence does not support diagnostic claims, and the FDA prohibits them. We teach bioresonance explicitly within a non-medical wellness scope.

Myth

All bioresonance devices are the same.

Reality

There is a wide range of bioresonance devices, from $1,500 introductory units to $30,000+ professional systems. We teach a device-agnostic curriculum so graduates can adapt to multiple platforms.

Myth

Bioresonance is European medicine that the U.S. just hasn't accepted yet.

Reality

Bioresonance is widely practiced in Europe but is not part of the licensed medical system there either — most European bioresonance practice operates within wellness scope, similar to U.S. practice.

Myth

Practitioners with expensive devices are better.

Reality

Equipment is one input. Practitioner skill — consultation craft, clear scope, ethical framing — matters more for client outcomes than the price of the device.

Can I learn this on my own?

Self-study vs. structured Bioresonance training.

A question we get from many applicants. Here is the honest answer.

Can you learn bioresonance on your own? Self-study options are limited. Most of the bioresonance training market in the U.S. is tied to specific device manufacturers — short courses that teach you to operate a particular device but rarely cover the broader consulting craft, scope of practice, or clear regulatory framing. There are some independent books and articles, but the field has very limited general literature in English. Our 15-day program is one of the few device-agnostic, training-not-tied-to-a-manufacturer options in the U.S. We teach the broader concepts (bioenergetic frameworks, the European clinical tradition, the U.S. regulatory landscape), the consulting craft that turns a device readout into a useful wellness conversation, and the explicit non-medical scope that keeps your practice legally clean. Self-study can give you fragments; structured training gives you a coherent practitioner identity. Graduates leave able to integrate any commercial device platform into a broader holistic practice — many pair bioresonance with our Naturopathy or Phytotherapy programs for comprehensive client work.

What graduates carry forward

Beyond the certification.

Graduates of our Bioresonance Wellness Consultant program occupy a particular niche in U.S. wellness markets: the practitioner whose work is unusually structured and technical-feeling within a clear non-medical scope. The combination is uncommon in U.S. wellness; most modalities here are more relational than technical, more ritual than instrument-based. CBWCs occupy the structured-and-technical niche credibly, and the clients who are drawn to that combination tend to be loyal. The career builds slowly but stably.

Key concepts & people

The Bioresonance vocabulary you'll learn.

These are the lineages, named teachers, frameworks, and technical terms our curriculum draws on. By graduation, you'll know each of them in depth.

Lineage

Franz Morell
German practitioner; co-developed MORA bioresonance device, 1977.
Erich Rasche
Co-developer of the MORA device with Morell.

Concepts

Bioenergetic field
Theoretical electromagnetic field of biological systems.
Biophoton emission
Documented low-level light emission from biological tissue.

U.S. regulatory context

FDA medical device classification
Bioresonance devices not approved as diagnostic medical devices.
DSHEA (1994)
Sets the regulatory framework within which non-medical wellness practitioners operate.
Books & further reading

Recommended reading on Bioresonance.

These are the books our faculty actually recommend to enrolled students — not a comprehensive bibliography, but a practical starting point.

Bioresonance and Multiresonance Therapy (BRT/MRT)

Hans Brügemann

Foundational European bioresonance text. Translated from German.

Vibrational Medicine

Richard Gerber

Broader bioenergetic framework that contextualizes bioresonance within the wider holistic landscape.

Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis

James Oschman

The closest thing to a research-rigorous framing of bioenergetic practice. Read with intellectual honesty about what is and isn't supported.

The right student

Is this program for you?

Practitioners and consultants who want a quantitative-feeling complement to their wellness work, taught with clear scope.

Prerequisites

What we expect on day one.

None.

Tuition & financing

$2,200 for the full 16-day program.

Tuition covers 6 days of in-person teaching, 1 live cohort intervisions, 50h of supervised practice, portfolio review and a final jury evaluation, and one year of post-graduation support. Interest-free monthly installments. A 25% deposit confirms your cohort spot.

$2,200

132h total · 6 in-person days · cohort of 10

People also ask

Common questions about Bioresonance training.

Is bioresonance scientifically validated?

The specific claims of various bioresonance devices are debated, and the U.S. FDA has issued warnings against medical claims for specific devices. Harmonika Institute teaches bioresonance explicitly within a non-medical wellness scope, with intellectual honesty about what the modality can and cannot reliably deliver.

How long does the bioresonance training take?

15 days from start to graduation, in person, in your city.

What credential do I receive?

Certified Bioresonance Wellness Consultant (CBWC) — a private Harmonika Institute credential issued explicitly within a non-medical wellness scope.

More questions

Do I need to buy a bioresonance device?+

Yes, eventually. Devices range from $1,500 to $30,000+ depending on the platform. We teach a device-agnostic curriculum and help students choose appropriate equipment for their practice.

How much does the bioresonance training cost?+

Tuition is $4,500 (separate from device costs).

Can I make medical claims about bioresonance?+

No. As a CBWC your scope is explicitly non-medical. We teach FDA-compliant language and clear scope-of-practice boundaries.

Can I combine bioresonance with naturopathy?+

Yes — and most of our graduates do exactly that. Bioresonance pairs particularly well with the Holistic Naturopathy program (15-day program).

Is the course online or in person?+

Fully in person. The device work and the consulting craft both require hands-on supervised practice.

Where it's taught

Bioresonance is offered in 32 cities.

Northeast

New York

New York

Bioresonance in New York

West

Los Angeles

California

Bioresonance in Los Angeles

Midwest

Chicago

Illinois

Bioresonance in Chicago

South

Miami

Florida

Bioresonance in Miami

South

Houston

Texas

Bioresonance in Houston

Northeast

Boston

Massachusetts

Bioresonance in Boston

South

Atlanta

Georgia

Bioresonance in Atlanta

Pacific Northwest

Seattle

Washington

Bioresonance in Seattle

Mountain West

Denver

Colorado

Bioresonance in Denver

South

Austin

Texas

Bioresonance in Austin

Mid-Atlantic

Philadelphia

Pennsylvania

Bioresonance in Philadelphia

Mid-Atlantic

Washington

District of Columbia

Bioresonance in Washington

Southwest

Phoenix

Arizona

Bioresonance in Phoenix

Midwest

Detroit

Michigan

Bioresonance in Detroit

West

San Francisco

California

Bioresonance in San Francisco

West

San Diego

California

Bioresonance in San Diego

Midwest

Minneapolis

Minnesota

Bioresonance in Minneapolis

South

Tampa

Florida

Bioresonance in Tampa

Southwest

Las Vegas

Nevada

Bioresonance in Las Vegas

Mid-Atlantic

Baltimore

Maryland

Bioresonance in Baltimore

Midwest

St. Louis

Missouri

Bioresonance in St. Louis

Pacific Northwest

Portland

Oregon

Bioresonance in Portland

South

San Antonio

Texas

Bioresonance in San Antonio

West

Sacramento

California

Bioresonance in Sacramento

South

Orlando

Florida

Bioresonance in Orlando

West

San Jose

California

Bioresonance in San Jose

Midwest

Indianapolis

Indiana

Bioresonance in Indianapolis

Northeast

Pittsburgh

Pennsylvania

Bioresonance in Pittsburgh

Midwest

Cincinnati

Ohio

Bioresonance in Cincinnati

Southeast

Charlotte

North Carolina

Bioresonance in Charlotte

Southeast

Nashville

Tennessee

Bioresonance in Nashville

South

Dallas

Texas

Bioresonance in Dallas

Next step

Become a Certified Bioresonance Wellness Consultant.

Talk with our admissions team about the next Bioresonance cohort starting in your city.