Whether you’re searching for yourself or someone you care about, this guide covers every type of rehab center near you, what treatment genuinely costs, how to get help without insurance, and what to expect when you make that first call. Help is closer than most people realize.
Tap a button to pull up treatment centers near your current location. Use more than one button to see different types of facilities β inpatient, outpatient, free, and those accepting Medicaid.
If you are searching for a rehab center, something brought you here that matters. Addiction and substance use disorder are recognized by every major medical organization in the United States as chronic health conditions β not moral failures, not weakness, not something to be ashamed of. You are entitled to professional, compassionate care. The SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-4357 is free, completely confidential, available every hour of every day, and connects you directly to treatment options near you. No insurance required. No personal information needed just to call. If you are searching for someone else, that same line helps family members and loved ones figure out next steps too.
These are the questions people search most when trying to find a rehab center β answered directly, in plain language, without the runaround that most people encounter when they first start looking.
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Are rehab centers free in the US? Real free options exist in every state β state-funded programs, nonprofit facilities, and sliding-scale centers. SAMHSA’s helpline at 1-800-662-4357 connects you to free and low-cost programs in your area. Medicaid covers treatment for eligible individuals. Cost alone should not be what prevents someone from getting help.State-funded treatment programs exist throughout the country and are specifically designed to serve people who cannot pay. Some operate entirely free for qualifying individuals; others use income-based sliding scales. SAMHSA’s government treatment locator at findtreatment.gov lets you filter specifically for free and low-cost programs by your zip code. Nonprofit and faith-based residential programs also offer free or deeply subsidized care. The catch with state-funded facilities: some have waitlists, particularly for residential beds. For medically urgent situations, the SAMHSA helpline can identify which programs have current availability and can often facilitate faster access than calling facilities cold. If Medicaid covers your healthcare, it likely covers substance use treatment under the Affordable Care Act’s mental health parity requirements β call any facility and ask their admissions team to verify your Medicaid benefits on the spot before you assume you can’t afford care.
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How much does rehab cost in America? Medical detox: $250β$800/day, typically 5β7 days. 30-day inpatient/residential: $6,000β$30,000 without insurance. Outpatient programs: $3,000β$10,000 for a full program. Intensive outpatient (IOP): $100β$333/day. With insurance, out-of-pocket costs drop significantly β many people pay a fraction of these numbers after coverage.The range looks terrifying, but the number most people actually pay is far lower than the sticker price suggests. Under federal mental health parity law, most commercial insurance plans must cover substance use treatment comparably to other medical conditions β after your deductible, many plans cover 70β90% of in-network treatment costs. The 2026 ACA marketplace out-of-pocket maximum is $9,200 per year, meaning even a 30-day inpatient stay costing $18,000 may cost you a few thousand dollars rather than the full amount. The most important first step before looking at price: call your insurance company and ask what your plan covers for “inpatient substance use disorder treatment” and “intensive outpatient.” Get the numbers in writing. Many treatment facilities also have admissions staff who will do this verification on your behalf for free before you commit to anything.
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What is the difference between inpatient and outpatient rehab? Inpatient (residential): you live at the facility, 24-hour care, 28β90+ days, most structured and intensive. Outpatient: you live at home, attend treatment sessions several days per week. IOP (Intensive Outpatient): mid-level, 3β5 days per week, 3+ hours per session. PHP (Partial Hospitalization): near-inpatient intensity, 5β6 days per week, 6+ hours per day, no overnight stay.Which level is right depends on several factors: severity of dependence, the substance involved (alcohol and benzodiazepines carry medical withdrawal risks that typically require inpatient medical monitoring), living situation, and whether there is a stable home environment to return to each day. Inpatient/residential programs provide the most structure and remove you from the environment associated with use β which tends to produce better outcomes for people with severe dependence, unstable home situations, or prior treatment attempts that didn’t stick. Outpatient works well for people with strong family support, stable housing, and less severe dependence, or as a step-down after completing a residential program. Many people move through multiple levels during their recovery β starting inpatient, stepping down to PHP or IOP, then continuing with standard outpatient. The level isn’t a judgment; it’s a clinical match to what you actually need.
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Does insurance cover rehab? Yes β most commercial insurance, Medicaid, and Medicare cover substance use treatment under federal law. Coverage includes detox, inpatient, outpatient, IOP, and medication-assisted treatment (Suboxone, naltrexone). The exact amount covered depends on your plan, your deductible, and whether you choose an in-network facility.The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires health plans to cover addiction treatment no more restrictively than they cover medical and surgical care. Combined with ACA requirements that substance use disorder treatment is an essential health benefit, most Americans with any form of insurance have coverage for rehab. The practical reality: getting that coverage to actually work requires some navigation. In-network facilities receive much better coverage than out-of-network ones β sometimes 70β90% coverage in-network versus 50β60% out of network. Some plans require prior authorization before an inpatient admission, which means the facility calls your insurance company to get approval before you check in. A good treatment facility’s admissions team handles all of this paperwork. Before choosing any facility, confirm with them: “Do you accept my insurance, do you handle prior authorization, and what is my estimated out-of-pocket cost?” Get the answer in writing.
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What is the number one rehab hospital in the US? There is no single universally ranked #1 β what matters more than national reputation is finding a program that is right for your specific situation, close enough to be practical, accepts your insurance, and is licensed in your state. SAMHSA’s treatment locator and your state’s behavioral health authority are the most reliable ways to find accredited facilities near you.Highly regarded names in addiction treatment include the Betty Ford Center (now part of Hazelden Betty Ford), McLean Hospital (Harvard-affiliated, in Belmont, MA), and the Cleveland Clinic’s Alcohol and Drug Recovery Center β but being ranked nationally means little if the facility is 2,000 miles away, out of your insurance network, or doesn’t specialize in what you need. Accreditation is the quality signal that actually matters for any facility you’re considering: look for CARF (Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities) or The Joint Commission accreditation. Both are voluntary, rigorous third-party standards that go well beyond minimum state licensing. A CARF or Joint Commission-accredited facility 20 miles from you is a far better choice than a non-accredited nationally marketed program that doesn’t take your insurance.
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What state has the best rehab centers? Florida, California, and Arizona have high concentrations of private treatment facilities. Massachusetts (McLean, Brigham and Women’s, MGH programs) and Minnesota (Hazelden Betty Ford) have nationally recognized academic programs. But the best option is almost always close to home β proximity makes aftercare, family involvement, and community support far more achievable.The “recovery destination” model β traveling across the country to an expensive facility in Florida or California β became popular in the 2010s and has genuine value for some people who need complete geographic separation from their home environment. But for the majority of people, proximity to family support, to a familiar therapist or doctor, and to the community where recovery will actually happen is more important than a facility’s zip code or marketing. Research consistently shows that strong aftercare connections β AA, NA, SMART Recovery meetings; ongoing outpatient therapy; sponsor relationships β are among the strongest predictors of sustained recovery. Those connections are much harder to build when you’re 1,500 miles from home. The best rehab center is often the one in your own state or region that is accredited, accepts your insurance, specializes in your specific situation, and has strong aftercare planning built into its program.
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Can I get into rehab the same day I call? Yes β same-day admission is possible and fairly common at private facilities for people with commercial insurance or ability to self-pay. State-funded programs may have short waitlists. If you are experiencing withdrawal symptoms or a medical emergency, go to your nearest emergency room β ER physicians can initiate medical stabilization and connect you to inpatient care.When you call a facility, say clearly: “I need inpatient treatment and I am looking for the earliest possible admission. Do you have availability today or tomorrow?” If the first facility has a waitlist, ask them to suggest facilities they know have current bed availability β facilities often know each other’s capacity. SAMHSA’s helpline (1-800-662-4357) can also identify which programs in your area currently have open slots. One important safety note: withdrawal from alcohol, benzodiazepines, and in some cases opioids can be medically dangerous. If you or someone you know is experiencing severe withdrawal symptoms β shaking, sweating, confusion, seizures, racing heart β this is a medical emergency and the right first call is 911 or a trip to the nearest emergency room, not a facility’s admissions line. Hospitals can begin withdrawal management and coordinate transfer to a residential program.
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What is medication-assisted treatment (MAT) and is it available near me? MAT combines FDA-approved medications β buprenorphine (Suboxone), methadone, naltrexone (Vivitrol) β with counseling and behavioral therapy. It is the most evidence-supported treatment for opioid and alcohol use disorders. Since 2023, most licensed physicians can prescribe buprenorphine in a standard office visit without a special waiver.Medication-assisted treatment is one of the most effective tools in addiction medicine, and also one of the most misunderstood. People sometimes hear “Suboxone” or “methadone” and think of it as substituting one substance for another β but the research is definitive: MAT reduces overdose deaths, decreases illicit drug use, improves treatment retention, and helps people maintain employment and family relationships far better than abstinence-only approaches alone for opioid use disorder. Since the removal of the DEA X-waiver requirement in 2023, far more physicians can now prescribe buprenorphine in a regular office visit β meaning MAT is more accessible than it has ever been. The SAMHSA Buprenorphine Practitioner Locator at samhsa.gov/find-help/locators can find prescribers near you. Methadone for opioid treatment requires a certified opioid treatment program (OTP) β find one at the same site.
- To SAMHSA (1-800-662-4357): “I’m looking for inpatient [or outpatient] treatment near [your city]. I have [insurance type / no insurance / Medicaid]. Can you tell me what’s available right now and what has current openings?” That’s all you need to say. They take it from there.
- To a treatment facility’s admissions line: “I’m interested in your program. Can you verify whether you accept [my insurance]? What is my estimated out-of-pocket cost? And what is your earliest available admission date?” Get every answer in writing or by email before you commit.
- If someone is in immediate medical danger: Severe withdrawal from alcohol or benzodiazepines β confusion, shaking, fever, rapid heart rate, seizures β is a medical emergency. Call 911. Emergency rooms can begin withdrawal management and arrange transfer to a treatment program.
- You don’t need to have everything figured out. You don’t need to know what substance, how long, or what type of treatment. The specialists at SAMHSA and the admissions staff at good treatment facilities ask those questions β your only job is to pick up the phone.
This guide provides general information to help people find substance use treatment resources. It is not medical advice. If you or someone you know is experiencing a medical emergency related to substance use or withdrawal, call 911 immediately. Treatment availability, costs, and insurance coverage vary by location, facility, and individual insurance plan. Always contact programs directly to confirm current availability and eligibility. SAMHSA’s helpline (1-800-662-4357) is the most reliable free resource for personalized referrals.