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Find rehab centers in every US state.

We track 21,568+ verified drug and alcohol treatment facilities across all 50 states, DC, and Puerto Rico. Pick a state to see facility counts, top cities, and what your insurance will cover.

21,568+
Treatment centers
53
States & territories
24/7
Free helpline

States with the most options

Where our directory has the largest verified coverage.

Does the state you choose really matter?

For most people researching rehab, the state question feels either wildly important or totally irrelevant — there isn’t much middle ground. The honest answer sits in between. Geography changes a handful of real variables: which Medicaid plans you can use, which facilities your private insurance has signed contracts with, how close your family can realistically visit during visiting weeks, and what the sober-community landscape looks like after you finish the program.

When staying in-state is usually better

If you have state-funded Medicaid, most programs you can afford will be in-state. If your family is a core part of your recovery plan and your clinician wants them involved in weekly family therapy, in-state keeps travel simple. And if you have a stable job or housing you need to return to, staying close shortens the transition period between discharge and aftercare.

When out-of-state can make sense

Some people need real physical distance from the people, places, and routines that feed their use. Others want access to a specific clinical modality — trauma-focused residential, equine-assisted therapy, medication-assisted treatment with a particular protocol — that isn’t widely offered near home. Private PPO insurance from national carriers usually travels with you; state-Medicaid does not. Always verify your benefits before you buy a plane ticket.

What the state pages tell you

Each state page in our directory lists the verified treatment centers we have records for, grouped by city. You will see the facility name, primary level of care (detox, residential, PHP, IOP, outpatient, sober living), accepted insurance carriers where that data is available, and direct contact information. Numbers update as facilities are reviewed — a page showing 733 centers today may show 740 next month as new records are verified.

Not sure where to look?

Tell a placement specialist your ZIP code and whether you have insurance — they can map the two or three closest in-network options in under five minutes. Call is free, no obligation, no marketing follow-up.

(833) 567-5838

Frequently asked questions

Yes, in practical ways. Medicaid coverage varies by state, in-network provider lists are state-specific, and some states have stronger public-sector programs than others. For private insurance with national carriers (Aetna, Cigna, BCBS, UnitedHealthcare), you can usually travel out-of-state without losing benefits — but confirm coverage first.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Reasons to go out of state: separation from triggers, family boundaries, access to a specific clinical program. Reasons to stay local: in-state Medicaid, family involvement in family-therapy weeks, easier transition to aftercare. A placement specialist can walk through the trade-offs with you.
California, Texas, Florida, New York, and Pennsylvania typically have the highest raw number of licensed facilities. But per-capita availability often looks different — smaller states like Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont may have more programs per resident.
Most commercial PPO plans cover out-of-state treatment at in-network rates if the facility is part of the carrier’s national network. HMO and state-Medicaid plans are usually limited to in-state providers. Always run a free verification before you commit to a program.
Every US state plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico is included in our directory. If a state page appears empty, that usually means facility-level records are still being verified — call our helpline and we will help directly.
RehabFlow Editorial Team
Clinical Content Review Board

Our content is written by health information specialists and fact-checked against SAMHSA data, CDC reports, and NIDA research. Every page is reviewed for clinical accuracy before publication.

SAMHSA-verified data
Clinically reviewed
Updated April 2026
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