Find a licensed treatment center.
21,568+ SAMHSA-verified rehab facilities across all 50 US states and Puerto Rico. Filter by insurance carrier, clinical level of care, or specific substance — then call the program directly at no cost. Free 24/7 placement helpline if you want help narrowing your options.
Waukesha Comprehensive Treatment Center
Waukesha County Behavioral Health Services
Wausau Clinic - Children’s Wisconsin
Wausau Comprehensive Treatment Center
Waushara County Clinical Services Wautoma
Waushara SHINES
Wavelengths Sonoma
Waverly Health Center Behavioral Health
Waves Behavioral Health
Waves of Hope
Way Back
Way Back Inn Grateful House
Quick answer — how do I use this directory?
Filter by your state (top of page), then narrow by insurance carrier, level of care, and substance in the sidebar. Every listing is SAMHSA-verified, free to contact, and updated monthly. Unsure what level of care fits? Call (833) 567-5838 for a free 5–10 minute placement consultation with a licensed specialist.
About this directory
Every center in our 21,568-facility directory starts as a record in the SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator — the federal registry of licensed addiction and mental-health programs in the United States. We sync that source monthly, carry over each facility’s address, phone, level-of-care, accepted insurance, and accreditation, and then layer our own review on top. The 17,316 facilities with verified geographic coordinates are additionally cross-checked against Google Business records so that the addresses you see match what a taxi or rideshare driver would actually find.
What “Verified” means on each card
The green “Verified” badge on a facility card means three specific things. First, the center is currently active in SAMHSA’s locator — removed listings drop off within one sync cycle, usually within 30 days of the facility closing or losing licensure. Second, the phone number we show is the number that picks up when our placement team called it most recently; we do not route through marketing gateways, and we do not allow pay-for-placement number substitution. Third, level-of-care and insurance tags reflect what the facility self-reports to the federal register, not what someone paid us to highlight. The badge is proof-of-existence, not a quality rating — for outcomes and success rates, read our how-to-choose guide.
How the filters work
The sidebar combines three filter groups that reflect how real placement conversations go. Level of care — residential, outpatient, IOP, detox, sober living, co-occurring — maps to the ASAM criteria that clinicians use to match program intensity to a person’s clinical needs. Insurance lists each of the 24 commercial and public carriers we track individually so you can confirm coverage before you call. Substance narrows to programs that explicitly treat what you or your loved one is facing: alcohol, opioids, benzos, stimulants, dual-diagnosis, and more. Filters combine with AND logic — select detox + Aetna + opioids and you get centers that accept Aetna, offer medically-supervised detox, and treat opioid dependence specifically.
Which level of care fits which situation?
The American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) publishes the clinical rubric that placement specialists use. In practice, the five levels we filter for map to five different scenarios. Here is the shortest version any clinician would recognize:
| Level of care | Typical duration | Who it fits | Rough cost* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical detox | 5–10 days | Alcohol, opioid, or benzo dependence requiring medical supervision of withdrawal | $5,000–$10,000 |
| Residential (inpatient) | 30–90 days | Moderate-severe addiction, unstable home environment, prior relapse, or co-occurring mental-health disorder | $15,000–$60,000 |
| Intensive Outpatient (IOP) | 8–12 weeks | Mild-moderate addiction, stable housing, need to keep working or caring for family | $3,000–$10,000 |
| Standard outpatient | 3–6 months | Early-stage use disorder, strong support system, step-down after residential | $1,000–$5,000 |
| Sober living | 3–12 months | Post-residential transition, need drug-free housing while returning to work | $500–$2,500 / month |
*Rough ranges based on SAMHSA 2023 data and industry averages. Insurance typically covers 60–90% of in-network care under MHPAEA parity rules.
If you’re not sure which row applies, two questions usually sort it. Can you go 24 hours without using safely? If no, you need detox first. Is home a supportive environment or a triggering one? If triggering, residential makes the rest of treatment possible; if supportive, outpatient is usually enough.
Insurance, parity, and what coverage actually looks like
Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) — federal law since 2008, strengthened in 2020 — most commercial insurance plans are required to cover addiction treatment at the same financial and treatment-limit levels as they cover physical illness. Translation: if your plan pays 80% for a broken leg, it must pay 80% for detox or residential rehab at the same in-network rate. We list each of the 24 carriers we track individually in the Insurance filter so you can see only centers that accept your plan.
The carriers that appear most often in network agreements are Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Humana, and Kaiser Permanente. Public plans — Medicaid in all 50 states, Medicare for 65+, and TRICARE for military — cover treatment differently depending on state and plan type. Always run a free verification before committing.
What this directory is not
We are not a treatment provider, we are not a marketing arm of any specific facility, and we do not take referral fees that change which programs show up on your screen. The ranking you see when you land here is either alphabetical or newest-first — never pay-to-play. If a center is exactly right for you, you call them directly; if nothing fits, a call to our free placement line works through the same filters with a human clinician on the line. Read our editorial standards in About RehabFlow and Editorial policy.
Frequently asked questions
How does RehabFlow verify treatment centers?
Does it cost anything to call a center listed here?
What does the “Verified” badge mean?
How do insurance and level-of-care filters combine?
Can I filter to find Medicaid-accepting centers?
What is the difference between Residential and Outpatient?
Are there free or sliding-scale options here?
How often is this directory updated?
Sources & references
- SAMHSA — Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator, findtreatment.gov. Primary data source for facility records (accessed April 2026).
- SAMHSA — 2023 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). samhsa.gov/data.
- NIDA — Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment: A Research-Based Guide (3rd Edition). nida.nih.gov.
- CDC — Drug Overdose Deaths in the U.S. Top 100,000 Annually. cdc.gov/drugoverdose.
- ASAM — The ASAM Criteria for the Treatment of Addictive, Substance-Related, and Co-Occurring Conditions. American Society of Addiction Medicine, 2013 (reference framework for level-of-care filter).
- Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) — 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-26, as amended 2020. U.S. Department of Labor summary: dol.gov.
Spotted an error in a listing?
Facilities move, phones change, licensure lapses. Email [email protected] with the facility URL and we will re-check it against SAMHSA within 24 hours.
Last verified April 2026. Directory sync: monthly. Editorial content reviewed quarterly by the RehabFlow editorial team. This page is informational and not a substitute for professional medical advice.