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Addiction treatment follows a continuum of care — from medically supervised detox through residential and outpatient rehab. Understanding each level helps you find the right starting point.
There is no single path to recovery. The best type of treatment depends on the severity of the addiction, whether there is a co-occurring mental health condition, your home environment, and practical factors like work and family. Many people move through several levels of care — for example, starting with detox, then residential rehab, and stepping down to outpatient treatment.
Explore the main types of addiction treatment below, then find verified centers in your state. Not sure where to start? Our free 24/7 helpline can help you decide.
Live-in treatment with 24/7 medical and clinical support in a structured, substance-free environment.
Inpatient rehab — also called residential treatment — is a live-in program where clients stay at the facility for the duration of care, typically 30, 60, or 90 days. Removing day-to-day triggers and providing round-the-clock support gives people the focus and structure that early recovery often requires.
Explore Inpatient RehabFlexible treatment that lets you live at home while attending scheduled therapy sessions.
Outpatient rehab lets clients live at home and keep up with work, school, or family while attending treatment on a set schedule. It spans several intensity levels — from standard outpatient counseling once or twice a week, to intensive outpatient programs (IOP), to partial hospitalization programs (PHP) that run most of the day.
Explore Outpatient RehabMedically supervised withdrawal management — the safe first step of addiction treatment.
Detoxification is the process of clearing drugs or alcohol from the body while managing withdrawal symptoms. Because withdrawal from alcohol, opioids, and benzodiazepines can be dangerous, medically supervised detox is the safest way to begin recovery.
Explore Drug & Alcohol DetoxIntegrated care that treats addiction and co-occurring mental health conditions together.
Dual diagnosis treatment — also called co-occurring disorder treatment — addresses substance use and a mental health condition at the same time. Depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, PTSD, and ADHD frequently occur alongside addiction, and each condition can worsen the other.
Explore Dual Diagnosis TreatmentChoosing the right level of care can feel overwhelming. Our compassionate team is available 24/7 to assess your situation, explain your options, verify insurance, and connect you with a trusted facility — free and completely confidential.