Objective: Perioperative opioid medications are implicated as contributors to the opioid crisis and associated with significant negative side effects that complicate recovery, leading to increased hospitalization and healthcare costs. Implementation of opioid-free anesthesia (OFA) hospital protocols may be an effective strategy to familiarize healthcare providers with non-opioid strategies for treating perioperative pain. Methods: An exploratory, descriptive pilot study was conducted at 2 Southeastern US Hospitals with a preexisting OFA policy. An electronic survey was developed and distributed to the anesthesia departments with an OFA protocol for bariatric surgical procedures. The responses (n=14) were analyzed, and the qualitative data thematically categorized. Results: Two major and one minor theme emerged. Theme 1: utilizing an OFA protocol led to increased familiarity and a desire to utilize OFA in other surgical populations. Theme 2: implementation of regional anesthesia into a multimodal OFA plan improves pain management and perioperative team support. Minor Theme: opioid sparing may be preferable to OFA techniques among a minority of anesthesia providers. Conclusion: OFA protocol promoted familiarity and favorable attitude towards OFA techniques. Participants reported an increased willingness to utilize OFA beyond protocol requirements. Therefore, hospital protocol may be a useful tool to drive evidence-based anesthesia and pain management practice change.