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Treatment · 7 programs compared ASAM continuum · Updated May 2026

Addiction Treatment Programs

Seven evidence-based program types — side-by-side on cost, duration, insurance, and success rates. Find the right fit in under 10 minutes with a free clinical assessment.

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Q

Quick answer — which treatment type is right?

Seven ASAM levels cover the clinical spectrum: medical detox (5–10 days), residential (30–90 days), IOP/PHP (9–20 hrs/week), standard outpatient, MAT, dual-diagnosis, and sober living. Picking the right one depends on withdrawal severity + home stability + co-occurring conditions. Free 10-minute clinical assessment: call (833) 567-5838.

All seven treatment types on this page are evidence-based, covered at parity under the Mental Health Parity Act (MHPAEA), and represented across our 21,568 SAMHSA-verified facilities. They follow the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) continuum of care — the clinical framework used by admitting clinicians, insurers, and state Medicaid offices to match treatment intensity to individual need.

Three clinical variables drive placement. First, withdrawal severity: daily use of alcohol, benzodiazepines, or opioids usually requires medical detox first — unsupervised withdrawal from those three classes can be dangerous. Second, home-environment stability: stable home = outpatient or IOP; triggering home = residential. Third, co-occurring mental health: untreated depression, PTSD, or anxiety doubles relapse risk and needs integrated dual-diagnosis care.

Cost-wise, ranges span from $20–$50 per outpatient visit to $30,000+ per month for luxury residential. With Aetna, BCBS, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, or Medicaid, out-of-pocket typically drops to 10–40% of that after deductible. Our full directory lets you filter by carrier across all 50 states. Below — each treatment type explained, with costs, duration, and who it fits.

ASAM continuum of care — 7 treatment levels mapped to severity
48.7M
Americans with SUD1
Only 24%
Received any treatment1
60%
Recovery success rate2
17,000+
Treatment centers in US3

7 Types of Evidence-Based Treatment

Each program serves a specific need in the recovery journey. Many people progress through multiple levels of care — starting with detox and stepping down through less intensive programs.

Residential Treatment

Inpatient Rehab Programs

Inpatient rehabilitation provides round-the-clock care in a structured, supervised environment. Patients live at the facility full-time, removing them...

30-90 days $15,000 - $30,000
Learn more → 40-60% success rate
Flexible Treatment

Outpatient Treatment Programs

Outpatient treatment allows individuals to receive addiction care while living at home and maintaining daily responsibilities like work, school, or fa...

3-6 months $5,000 - $10,000
Learn more → 30-50% success rate
Safe Withdrawal

Medical Detox Programs

Medical detoxification is the process of safely managing acute withdrawal symptoms when someone stops using drugs or alcohol. It takes place in a clin...

3-10 days $3,000 - $10,000
Learn more → 70-80% completion success rate
Evidence-Based Care

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)

Medication-Assisted Treatment combines FDA-approved medications — such as buprenorphine (Suboxone), methadone, or naltrexone (Vivitrol) — with counsel...

Ongoing (12+ months recommended) $5,000 - $15,000/year
Learn more → 60-75% success rate
Integrated Care

Dual Diagnosis Treatment

Dual diagnosis treatment addresses both substance use disorders and co-occurring mental health conditions simultaneously. About 50% of people with add...

60-90 days (residential) or 3-6 months (outpatient) $20,000 - $50,000
Learn more → 45-65% success rate
Transitional Housing

Sober Living Homes

Sober living homes provide structured, substance-free housing for people in early recovery. Residents live together in a supportive community, follow...

3-12 months $500 - $3,000/month
Learn more → Ongoing support success rate
Structured Flexibility

Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP)

Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP) provide a higher level of care than standard outpatient but allow patients to live at home. IOP typically involves...

2-4 months $5,000 - $12,000
Learn more → 35-55% success rate

Understanding Levels of Care

The American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) defines a continuum of care from least to most intensive. Your clinical assessment determines which level is appropriate.

Level 0.5

Early Intervention

Assessment and education for at-risk individuals. Brief interventions, screening, and referral to services (SBIRT). No formal treatment program required.

Level 1

Outpatient Treatment

Less than 9 hours/week of structured programming. Individual and group therapy while maintaining daily life. Suitable for mild substance use disorders with strong social support.

Level 2.1

Intensive Outpatient (IOP)

9-20 hours/week of structured programming. Group therapy 3-5 days per week plus individual sessions. Step-down from residential or step-up from standard outpatient.

Level 2.5

Partial Hospitalization (PHP)

20+ hours/week of structured programming. Full-day sessions while living at home or in sober housing. Provides near-residential intensity with more independence.

Level 3.1-3.5

Residential / Inpatient

24/7 supervised care in a structured facility. Individual therapy, group counseling, medical monitoring, and life skills training. 30-90 day programs with full immersion in recovery.

Level 3.7-4

Medically Managed Intensive

Hospital-level care for severe withdrawal and acute medical conditions. 24-hour nursing, physician-directed care, medication management. Required for alcohol, benzodiazepine, and severe opioid withdrawal.

Not sure which level you need? A free clinical assessment can determine the right ASAM level of care for your situation.

Free Assessment: (833) 567-5838

Overwhelmed by Options?

A treatment specialist can assess your situation and recommend the right program in under 5 minutes. Free, confidential, available 24/7.

(833) 567-5838
Decision tree — three clinical variables that drive treatment placement

How to Choose the Right Program

Five key factors determine which treatment type is most appropriate for your situation. A clinical assessment evaluates all of these.

Addiction Severity

Mild use disorders may respond well to outpatient care. Severe physical dependence (especially alcohol, benzodiazepines, opioids) typically requires medical detox followed by residential treatment.

Mental Health

Co-occurring conditions like depression, anxiety, PTSD, or bipolar disorder require dual diagnosis treatment that addresses both issues simultaneously for best outcomes.

Treatment History

Previous attempts that didn't work signal that a higher level of care may be needed. Someone who relapsed after outpatient may benefit from inpatient or a longer treatment duration (90+ days).

Home Environment

If your living situation involves active substance use, enabling relationships, or high-stress triggers, residential treatment or sober living removes you from those environments during early recovery.

Insurance & Finances

Most plans cover all levels of care under federal parity laws. For those without insurance: state-funded programs, sliding-scale facilities, and nonprofit organizations offer affordable options.

The Continuum Approach

Most successful recoveries involve multiple levels of care: Detox → Inpatient → IOP → Outpatient → Sober Living. Each step down maintains support while building independence. 90+ days total produces the best outcomes.

Treatment Costs & Financial Options

Cost should never be a barrier to treatment. Multiple financial pathways make recovery accessible regardless of budget.

Average Costs by Program Type

Medical Detox $3,000 - $10,000
Inpatient (30 days) $15,000 - $30,000
Dual Diagnosis $20,000 - $50,000
IOP (full program) $5,000 - $12,000
Outpatient $5,000 - $10,000
MAT (annual) $5,000 - $15,000
Sober Living (monthly) $500 - $3,000

Ways to Pay for Treatment

Insurance Coverage

Most plans cover treatment under the Mental Health Parity Act. Verify your benefits →

State-Funded Programs

Every state offers publicly funded treatment through SAMHSA block grants. Often free or very low cost.

Sliding Scale Fees

Many facilities adjust costs based on income. Nonprofit centers often provide reduced rates.

Payment Plans & Scholarships

Many private facilities offer monthly payment plans, financing, or treatment scholarships.

Medicaid & Medicare

Both programs cover substance abuse treatment. Medicaid and Medicare information.

What to Expect in Treatment

The treatment journey follows a proven progression from crisis stabilization to independent recovery.

1

Assessment & Intake (Day 1)

Clinical evaluation using ASAM criteria to determine appropriate level of care. Includes medical history, substance use assessment, mental health screening, and insurance verification. This creates your individualized treatment plan.

2

Detoxification (Days 1-10)

Medically supervised withdrawal management with FDA-approved medications for comfort and safety. 24/7 monitoring of vital signs. Critical for alcohol, opioids, and benzodiazepines where withdrawal can be life-threatening. Detox alone is not treatment — it is preparation for treatment.

3

Primary Treatment (Weeks 2-12)

The core therapeutic phase. Daily schedule includes individual therapy (CBT, DBT, EMDR), group counseling, psychoeducation, family sessions, and wellness activities. Residential programs provide 24/7 structure; outpatient programs offer similar therapies while living at home.

4

Step-Down Care (Months 3-6)

Transition to IOP or outpatient programming. 9-20 hours/week stepping down to 2-5 sessions. Focus shifts to relapse prevention skills, real-world coping strategies, and rebuilding daily routines. Many individuals move to sober living during this phase.

5

Ongoing Recovery (Lifetime)

Alumni programs, recovery meetings (12-step, SMART Recovery), ongoing therapy, peer support, and MAT when appropriate. A strong aftercare plan reduces relapse risk by up to 50%. Recovery is a lifelong journey, not a destination.

Insurance Coverage for Treatment

Under federal parity laws, insurance must cover substance abuse treatment at the same level as physical health conditions. Most plans cover all levels of care from detox through outpatient.

Verify your insurance coverage →

Find Treatment by State

Browse SAMHSA-certified treatment centers in your state. Our directory includes 17,000+ verified facilities across all 50 states.

How to get started

From first question to a matched treatment program — three steps

  1. 1

    Free 10-min assessment

    A licensed specialist asks about substance, withdrawal history, mental-health conditions, and home environment. Evidence-based; no sales script.

  2. 2

    Insurance + ASAM match

    Real-time benefits check against your carrier, then the right ASAM level of care (detox, residential, IOP, outpatient, or MAT).

  3. 3

    Admissions the same day

    Warm-handoff to a specific, SAMHSA-verified program. No email capture, no callbacks — we stay on the line until you are connected.

(833) 567-5838

Free · Confidential · 24/7 · Takes about 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main types of addiction treatment?
The 7 main types are: inpatient/residential (24/7 supervised care), outpatient (flexible scheduling), medical detox (supervised withdrawal), intensive outpatient (IOP), medication-assisted treatment (MAT), dual diagnosis, and sober living homes.
How do I choose the right treatment program?
Consider 5 key factors: (1) addiction severity and substance type, (2) co-occurring mental health conditions, (3) previous treatment history, (4) home environment stability, and (5) insurance coverage. ASAM criteria provide a standardized framework clinicians use to match patients to the appropriate level of care. Call (833) 567-5838 for a free assessment.
What is the difference between inpatient and outpatient rehab?
Inpatient rehab requires living at the facility 24/7 for 30-90 days ($15,000-$30,000) with constant medical supervision. Outpatient allows living at home while attending sessions 2-5 times per week ($5,000-$10,000). Inpatient is better for severe addiction or unstable home environments; outpatient suits mild-moderate cases with strong support systems.
Does insurance cover addiction treatment?
Yes. Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, most insurance plans must cover substance use disorder treatment at the same level as physical health conditions. This includes detox, inpatient, outpatient, IOP, and MAT. Verify your specific coverage with our insurance guide.
Can I work while in addiction treatment?
Yes, with outpatient and IOP programs. Both offer evening and weekend sessions designed for working adults. The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) also protects your job for up to 12 weeks if you need inpatient treatment. Many employers' EAP programs also provide confidential referrals.
How long does addiction treatment take?
Duration varies: detox 3-10 days, inpatient 30-90 days, IOP 2-4 months, outpatient 3-6 months, sober living 3-12 months. NIDA research shows that 90+ days of combined treatment significantly improves long-term outcomes. Most successful recoveries involve multiple levels of care in sequence.
What is MAT and is it effective?
Medication-Assisted Treatment combines FDA-approved medications (buprenorphine, methadone, naltrexone) with counseling. It reduces opioid overdose deaths by 50%, improves treatment retention to 60-75%, and is the gold standard for opioid use disorder per SAMHSA and WHO guidelines. It is not "replacing one drug with another."
What happens after treatment?
Aftercare typically includes stepping down to a lower level of care, sober living housing, ongoing therapy, recovery meetings (12-step, SMART Recovery), alumni programs, and regular check-ins. A strong aftercare plan reduces relapse risk by up to 50%. Read our relapse prevention guide →
How much does treatment cost without insurance?
Costs vary widely: detox $3,000-$10,000, inpatient $15,000-$30,000+ for 30 days, IOP $5,000-$12,000, outpatient $5,000-$10,000, sober living $500-$3,000/month. Many facilities offer sliding-scale fees, payment plans, and scholarships. State-funded programs through SAMHSA provide free or low-cost treatment. See all financial options →
What is the success rate of addiction treatment?
Success rates range from 40-60% for sustained recovery — comparable to other chronic conditions like diabetes (40-60%) and hypertension (50-70%). MAT achieves 60-75% retention rates. Key factors that improve outcomes: treatment duration 90+ days, aftercare participation, family involvement, addressing co-occurring mental health conditions, and choosing the appropriate level of care.
Sources & References
  1. SAMHSA. (2023). National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). samhsa.gov/data/nsduh
  2. NIDA. (2018). Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment: A Research-Based Guide. nida.nih.gov
  3. SAMHSA. (2024). National Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Facilities. findtreatment.gov
  4. ASAM. (2013). The ASAM Criteria: Treatment Criteria for Addictive, Substance-Related, and Co-Occurring Conditions.
  5. CMS. (2008). Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act.

Last updated: May 20, 2026 · Data sourced from SAMHSA & NIDA

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Published by RehabFlow
SAMHSA-sourced directory · May 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
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Updated May 2026
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21,568 SAMHSA-verified centers · updated monthly