Skip to main content
Directory · Texas SAMHSA-verified · Updated July 2026

Rehab Centers in Texas

733 SAMHSA-verified addiction treatment facilities across 8+ cities in the South region. Houston alone lists 57 centers. Filter by insurance carrier, level of care, or substance — then call the program directly or our free helpline if you want help narrowing down.

(833) 567-5838
Free · Confidential · 24/7 Avg. 2-min response · no email capture
On This Page
Q

Quick answer — rehab in Texas

Texas has 733 licensed addiction treatment centers sourced from the SAMHSA federal registry. Medicaid is not expanded here, but traditional Medicaid and state-funded programs still cover treatment. Top treatment hubs: Houston (57 centers), Fort Worth (49 centers), Austin (43 centers), Dallas (42 centers). Filter by insurance carrier, level of care, or substance, or call (833) 567-5838 for a free placement consultation.

Top cities for treatment in Texas

Three to eight metros concentrate most Texas addiction treatment capacity. Pick a city to see its full facility list with insurance filters.

Texas treatment centers

All 934 verified Texas listings. Showing 1–24 below; use the button on the right to filter by insurance, level of care, or substance.

Filter all 934 →
Mind Body Optimization Southlake — Southlake, TX
Verified

Mind Body Optimization Southlake

Southlake, TX · JCAHO

Mind Body Optimization Southlake is a treatment provider in Southlake, TX, delivering co-occurring mental health and out…

All TX → View details →
P
Verified

Permian Basin Communitys for MH/MR

Fort Stockton, TX
Outpatient

Located in Fort Stockton, TX, Permian Basin Communitys for MH/MR offers outpatient care for people seeking help with sub…

All TX → View details →
C
Verified

CAN Behavioral Health

Baytown, TX · JCAHO
Outpatient IOP

CAN Behavioral Health provides co-occurring mental health and outpatient care in Baytown, TX, supporting individuals and…

All TX → View details →
Austin Oaks Hospital — Austin, TX
Verified

Austin Oaks Hospital

Austin, TX · Est. 2013

Austin Oaks Hospital is a treatment provider in Austin, TX, delivering co-occurring mental health and detox care with an…

All TX → View details →
A
Verified

ACCESS Palestine

Palestine, TX
Outpatient

Located in Palestine, TX, ACCESS Palestine offers outpatient care for people seeking help with substance use and related…

All TX → View details →
The Brave Fight — Fort Worth, TX
Verified

The Brave Fight

Fort Worth, TX · Est. 2022

Located in Fort Worth, TX, The Brave Fight offers addiction and behavioral health care for people seeking help with subs…

All TX → View details →
M
Verified

MH/MR Authority of Brazos Valley - Madison County

Madisonville, TX
Outpatient

Located in Madisonville, TX, MH/MR Authority of Brazos Valley - Madison County offers co-occurring mental health and out…

All TX → View details →
Tranquilo Wellness — Uvalde, TX
Verified

Tranquilo Wellness

Uvalde, TX · Est. 2024

Located in Uvalde, TX, Tranquilo Wellness offers detox care for people seeking help with substance use and related chall…

All TX → View details →
Elysian Treatment — Houston, TX
Verified

Elysian Treatment

Houston, TX

Elysian Treatment provides co-occurring mental health and outpatient care in Houston, TX, supporting individuals and fam…

All TX → View details →
Eleanor Health San Antonio — San Antonio, TX
Verified

Eleanor Health San Antonio

San Antonio, TX
Outpatient MAT

Eleanor Health San Antonio provides outpatient care in San Antonio, TX, supporting individuals and families working towa…

All TX → View details →
The Haven Texas — Dallas, TX
Verified

The Haven Texas

Dallas, TX
Inpatient Outpatient

The Haven Texas provides detox care in Dallas, TX, supporting individuals and families working toward lasting recovery. …

All TX → View details →
Bayes Achievement Center — South Huntsville, TX
Verified

Bayes Achievement Center

South Huntsville, TX · Est. 1993
Residential

Bayes Achievement Center provides residential rehab care in South Huntsville, TX, supporting individuals and families wo…

All TX → View details →
Serenity Foundation of Texas Serenity House — Abilene, TX
Verified

Serenity Foundation of Texas Serenity House

Abilene, TX · Est. 1984
Residential

Serenity Foundation of Texas Serenity House is a treatment provider in Abilene, TX, delivering residential rehab and det…

All TX → View details →
Care Star Recovery and Wellness — Carrollton, TX
Verified

Care Star Recovery and Wellness

Carrollton, TX · Est. 2024
Outpatient PHP

Located in Carrollton, TX, Care Star Recovery and Wellness offers co-occurring mental health and outpatient care for peo…

All TX → View details →
S
Verified

Serving Children and Adults in Need (SCAN) Men's Home

Laredo, TX · JCAHO
Outpatient MAT

Located in Laredo, TX, Serving Children and Adults in Need (SCAN) Men's Home offers residential rehab and co-occurring m…

All TX → View details →
C
Verified

Center for Healthcare Services NAS

San Antonio, TX
Residential

Located in San Antonio, TX, Center for Healthcare Services NAS offers residential rehab and sober living care for people…

All TX → View details →
P
Verified

PermiaCare Johnson Center

Midland, TX
Outpatient

Located in Midland, TX, PermiaCare Johnson Center offers co-occurring mental health and outpatient care for people seeki…

All TX → View details →
OPI Houston — Needville, TX
Verified

OPI Houston

Needville, TX · Est. 2004

Located in Needville, TX, OPI Houston offers residential rehab care for people seeking help with substance use and relat…

All TX → View details →
Hensley House — Austin, TX
Verified

Hensley House

Austin, TX · Est. 2017
Outpatient

Located in Austin, TX, Hensley House offers sober living care for people seeking help with substance use and related cha…

All TX → View details →
B
Verified

Baylor Scott and White Alcohol and Drug Dependence Treatment Program

Temple, TX
PHP

Located in Temple, TX, Baylor Scott and White Alcohol and Drug Dependence Treatment Program offers outpatient care for p…

All TX → View details →
LifeStance Health Cedar Park — Cedar Park, TX
Verified

LifeStance Health Cedar Park

Cedar Park, TX · JCAHO
Outpatient

Serving the Cedar Park, TX area, LifeStance Health Cedar Park offers addiction and behavioral health care designed aroun…

All TX → View details →
LifeStance Health Irving — Irving, TX
Verified

LifeStance Health Irving

Irving, TX
Outpatient

LifeStance Health Irving provides addiction and behavioral health care in Irving, TX, supporting individuals and familie…

All TX → View details →
Nova Recovery Center Austin — Austin, TX
Verified

Nova Recovery Center Austin

Austin, TX · Est. 2011
Outpatient

Nova Recovery Center Austin is a treatment provider in Austin, TX, delivering outpatient care with an individualized, ev…

All TX → View details →
G
Verified

Gateway to Sobriety

Houston, TX
Outpatient

Serving the Houston, TX area, Gateway to Sobriety offers residential rehab and co-occurring mental health care designed …

All TX → View details →
MHPAEA parity insurance coverage
Under MHPAEA, most commercial plans in Texas cover addiction treatment at parity with medical care.

Insurance coverage in Texas

⚠ Medicaid Not Expanded

Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), commercial insurers in Texas must cover addiction treatment at parity with medical care. Texas has not expanded Medicaid, but traditional Medicaid still covers eligible residents and federal block grants fund free state programs.

Filter centers by specific carrier to see in-network options:

Typical costs without insurance

Five self-pay ranges map to the ASAM care levels — from $1,000/month outpatient to $80,000/month luxury residential. Texas programs cluster toward the upper end in major metros and the lower end in rural areas. Sliding-scale options are available in roughly 15% of listings.

Level of care Typical range
Outpatient$1,000–$3,000/month
IOP / PHP$3,500–$10,000/month
30-day residential$5,000–$20,000
90-day inpatient$12,000–$60,000
Luxury residential$30,000–$80,000/mo

Texas policy & overdose data

Four public-health indicators that directly affect treatment access and overdose risk in Texas: overdose rate, substance use prevalence, naloxone availability, and Good Samaritan legal protection. Data updated July 2026.

Overdose rate
17.1 /100K

Rank #47 of 50. 4,350 opioid deaths in 2022.

SUD prevalence
5.1%

Adults with substance use disorder (NSDUH 2023).

Naloxone access
standing order

Free from pharmacies, health departments, and harm-reduction orgs.

Good Samaritan Law
✓ Yes

Legal protection when calling 911 during overdose.

In crisis? Help is immediate.

Immediate danger: call 911. Suicide or mental-health emergency: dial or text 988. Free SAMHSA treatment referrals 24/7: 1-800-662-HELP (4357). Placement help: (833) 567-5838.

How to get started in Texas

Three steps separate "I need help" from "I’m in a program." Most placements finish step three within 24–72 hours — faster with our helpline.

1

Identify the right level of care

Two questions sort it: can you stop safely for 24 hours without medical help (if no, start with medical detox), and is home stable (if no, residential; if yes, outpatient or IOP).

2

Verify your insurance coverage

Under MHPAEA, commercial plans cover addiction care at parity with medical. Use the form below for a 5-minute confidential benefits check, or call us directly.

3

Contact a center & admit

Pick a facility from the listing above or let a placement specialist narrow down 733 options by your insurance, location, and preferred level of care — free, confidential.

Free insurance benefits check

A licensed placement specialist will verify in-network options in Texas, typical out-of-pocket costs, and level-of-care eligibility. Results in under 10 minutes.

No email collected. Your answers help the specialist shortlist centers faster — they’re not stored or shared.

Finding treatment in Texas

All 733 facilities listed above are pulled from the federal SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator, which every licensed addiction and mental-health program must report to. We sync the roster monthly, cross-check contact numbers quarterly, and drop facilities that close, disconnect, or leave the SAMHSA registry within a single sync cycle. Each listing carries the same three baseline checks: the center is active in SAMHSA, its phone number answered on our last call, and its level-of-care and insurance tags mirror what the facility self-reports federally.

The right level of care depends on two clinical variables placement specialists assess first: withdrawal severity and home-environment stability. If alcohol, benzodiazepines, or opioids have been used daily in the past month, medical detox is usually required before any other step — withdrawal from those three classes can be dangerous without supervision. If the home environment is supportive, outpatient or IOP usually covers it. If home is chaotic or actively triggering, residential makes the rest of treatment possible by removing the immediate access problem.

How Texas Medicaid handles rehab

Texas did not expand Medicaid under the ACA, which means the eligibility threshold is lower and some working adults fall into the coverage gap. Traditional Medicaid still covers eligible residents, and federal block grants fund state-run treatment programs for the uninsured. Filter the directory by Medicaid to see centers in the Texas provider network, or call (833) 567-5838 for a free, zero-commitment benefits check.

What to check on any Texas facility

Three questions separate legitimate programs from pay-to-play marketers. First, is the center accredited by JCAHO or CARF? Both are national bodies that audit clinical protocols, medication handling, and patient outcomes — accreditation is not required by law but is the strongest non-government quality signal. Second, does the center employ licensed clinicians (LCSW, LMFT, LPC, LADC, MD) rather than only "recovery coaches"? Third, does the center disclose outcomes data — completion rates, 30/90/365-day sobriety rates, readmission rates? For independent benchmarks by treatment type, review NIDA’s research-based principles.

Sources & methodology

  1. SAMHSA — Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator. findtreatment.gov. Primary source for facility records (accessed July 2026).
  2. SAMHSA — 2023 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). Overdose rates, SUD prevalence.
  3. CDC — WONDER database. Opioid death counts.
  4. Kaiser Family Foundation — Medicaid expansion tracker, state-by-state policy data.
  5. Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) — 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-26. U.S. Department of Labor summary.

Last verified July 2026. Directory sync: monthly. This page is informational and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always call 911 in an emergency.

Share this guide

FAQ — rehab in Texas

How many rehab centers are in Texas?
Texas has 733 licensed treatment facilities serving a population of 30,503,000. That is approximately 2.4 facilities per 100,000 residents. Every listing is sourced monthly from the SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator and re-verified quarterly.
Does Texas Medicaid cover rehab?
Texas has not expanded Medicaid under the ACA, but traditional Medicaid still covers addiction treatment for eligible residents. Filter by Medicaid in our directory to find in-network centers, or call (833) 567-5838 for a free benefits check.
What is the overdose rate in Texas?
Texas has an overdose rate of 17.1 deaths per 100,000 residents, ranking #47 of 50 states. In 2022, the state reported 4,350 opioid-related deaths. Substance use disorder prevalence among adults is 5.1% (NSDUH 2023). Fentanyl now accounts for the majority of opioid deaths nationwide. Carry naloxone — it is available in most pharmacies without prescription.
What are the top cities for rehab in Texas?
The top cities for addiction treatment in Texas by facility count are Houston (57 centers), Fort Worth (49 centers), Austin (43 centers), Dallas (42 centers). Each city page includes the full facility listing with insurance filters and level-of-care options. Click any city above or call (833) 567-5838 for a shortlist tailored to your location.
Does Texas have a Good Samaritan Law?
Yes — Texas has enacted a Good Samaritan Law that shields bystanders from prosecution for minor drug-possession offenses when they call 911 during an overdose. Keep naloxone (Narcan) on hand if someone close is using. Call (833) 567-5838 if you need help finding treatment now.
How to find free rehab in Texas?
Free and low-cost treatment in Texas: state-funded programs, SAMHSA grant-funded centers, sliding-scale nonprofits, and tribal health programs. Call the SAMHSA National Helpline (1-800-662-HELP) for free referrals, or (833) 567-5838 for a personalized shortlist.
How much does rehab cost in Texas without insurance?
Typical self-pay in Texas: outpatient $1,000–$3,000/month, 30-day residential $5,000–$20,000, 90-day inpatient $12,000–$60,000, luxury residential $30,000–$80,000/month. Sliding-scale options are available in roughly 15% of listings. Call (833) 567-5838 for cost guidance specific to your situation.

Nearby states

Five reasons residents consider cross-border programs: wider provider networks, specialized luxury or gender-specific facilities, insurance portability via MHPAEA, out-of-state privacy, and shorter waitlists.

RehabFlow Placement Helpline

Need help narrowing down Texas options?

Free, confidential, 24/7. A licensed placement specialist will filter Texas centers by your insurance, preferred level of care, and location in under 10 minutes.

  • SAMHSA-verified directory
  • Licensed placement specialists
  • No email capture
  • Insurance check in 5 min

Call now · free · 24/7

Helpline (833) 567-5838

Avg. 2-min response · 42 CFR Part 2 privacy · we do not sell caller data.

Published by RehabFlow
SAMHSA-sourced directory · July 2026

Listings are sourced from the SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator and cross-checked against public CDC and NIDA data. This page is informational, not medical advice — see our editorial policy for how we verify and update facts.

SAMHSA-verified data
Clinically reviewed
Updated July 2026
Editorial Policy ›
21,568 SAMHSA-verified centers · updated monthly