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ASAM-Aligned · Evidence-Based · Updated 2026

Addiction Treatment Programs: 16 Evidence-Based Types

Compare detox, inpatient, PHP, IOP, outpatient, and MAT by duration, cost, and success rate. Find your ASAM level of care in 5 minutes.

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⚡ Quick Answer: Which Treatment Program Do I Need?

It depends on severity, withdrawal risk, and living situation. The ASAM criteria (American Society of Addiction Medicine) map to six levels of care: Level 0.5 early intervention, Level 1 outpatient, Level 2 IOP/PHP, Level 3 residential/inpatient, Level 4 medically managed inpatient detox. Most insurance plans cover all six levels under MHPAEA parity law. Call (833) 546-3513 for a free ASAM assessment.

Addiction treatment is not one-size-fits-all. The right program depends on how severe the substance use disorder is, whether withdrawal requires medical supervision, and whether co-occurring mental health conditions need integrated care. This page compares the 16 evidence-based treatment types RehabHive matches against, with duration, typical cost, and what insurance usually covers.

Use the comparison table below to scan programs at a glance, or jump to the 3-step decision guide if you're unsure where to start. Every type listed here is covered by most major insurance plans.

Evidence-Based Care

All 16 Treatment Types

From medical detox to aftercare planning — every level of the continuum of care, matched to your severity, insurance, and schedule. Tap any card for full details, costs, and what insurance covers.

Covered
Residential Care

Inpatient Rehabilitation

30-90 days $15,000 - $30,000

Inpatient rehabilitation provides intensive, round-the-clock care in a structured residential setting. Patients live at the facility full-ti...

Full details
Covered
Flexible Recovery

Outpatient Treatment

3-6 months $5,000 - $10,000

Outpatient treatment allows individuals to receive addiction care while maintaining daily responsibilities like work, school, and family lif...

Full details
Covered
Structured Flexibility

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)

2-4 months $5,000 - $12,000

Intensive Outpatient Programs provide a higher level of care than standard outpatient while allowing patients to live at home. IOP typically...

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Covered
Day Treatment

Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP)

2-6 weeks $8,000 - $15,000

Partial Hospitalization Programs provide the most intensive level of outpatient care, typically involving 5-7 days per week of structured pr...

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Covered
Safe Withdrawal

Medical Detoxification

3-10 days $3,000 - $10,000

Medical detoxification is the process of safely managing acute withdrawal symptoms under clinical supervision. Patients receive 24-hour medi...

Full details
Covered
Evidence-Based Care

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)

Ongoing (12+ months recommended) $5,000 - $15,000/year

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

Full details
Covered
Therapeutic Approach

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

12-20 sessions $100 - $250 per session

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is an evidence-based therapeutic approach that helps individuals identify and restructure negative thought patt...

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Covered
Emotional Regulation

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

6-12 months $150 - $300 per session

Dialectical Behavior Therapy is an evidence-based treatment originally developed for borderline personality disorder that has proven highly...

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Covered
Peer Support

Group Therapy

Ongoing $30 - $80 per session

Group therapy brings together individuals in recovery to share experiences, provide mutual support, and develop social skills under professi...

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Covered
Family Healing

Family Therapy

3-6 months $100 - $250 per session

Family therapy addresses the impact of addiction on the entire family system. It helps family members understand addiction as a disease, dev...

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Covered
Whole-Person Care

Holistic and Alternative Therapy

Varies $50 - $200 per session

Holistic therapy addresses addiction by treating the whole person: mind, body, and spirit. These complementary approaches are used alongside...

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Covered
Transitional Housing

Sober Living Homes

3-12 months $500 - $3,000/month

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

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Covered
Integrated Care

Dual Diagnosis Treatment

60-90 days (residential) or 3-6 months (outpatient) $20,000 - $50,000

Dual diagnosis treatment addresses substance use disorders and co-occurring mental health conditions simultaneously. Nearly 50% of people wi...

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Covered
Trauma Recovery

Trauma-Focused Therapy

3-12 months $150 - $300 per session

Trauma-focused therapy addresses the connection between traumatic experiences and substance use. Up to 75% of people in addiction treatment...

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Covered
Peer-Led Recovery

12-Step Programs

Ongoing (lifetime) Free

12-Step programs like Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA) are peer-led support groups that follow a structured framework...

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Covered
Long-Term Success

Aftercare and Relapse Prevention

Ongoing Varies

Aftercare planning creates a structured roadmap for maintaining recovery after completing primary treatment. A comprehensive aftercare plan...

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Side-by-Side

Compare 6 Core Levels of Care

Duration, cost, success rate, and insurance coverage for each ASAM-aligned level — quick reference before you call.

Costs are national averages before insurance. Success rates are sustained-recovery percentages at 90 days. Sources: NIDA, SAMHSA, Recovery Research Institute.

ASAM continuum of care: Level 4 medical detox → Level 3.5 inpatient → Level 2.5 PHP → Level 2.1 IOP → Level 1 outpatient → aftercare, with durations from days to ongoing
The ASAM continuum of care — step-down from most intensive (detox) to maintenance (aftercare).
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Clinical Framework

ASAM Levels of Care Explained

The American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) criteria define six levels of care used by clinicians and insurance companies to match patients to appropriate treatment intensity.

0.5

Early Intervention

Screening, brief intervention, education for individuals at risk. Not formal treatment — often delivered in primary-care settings.

1

Outpatient (<9 hrs/wk)

Standard outpatient counseling — individual and group therapy, medication management. Work/school compatible.

2

IOP & PHP (9–40 hrs/wk)

IOP (Level 2.1) 9–20 hrs/wk. PHP (Level 2.5) 5–7 days/wk, 6–8 hrs/day. Living at home, attending structured programming.

3

Residential / Inpatient

Residential rehab 24/7 supervised care. Level 3.1 clinically managed, 3.5 enhanced, 3.7 medically monitored.

4

Medically Managed Inpatient Detox

Hospital-level medical detox with 24/7 physician and nursing care. Required for alcohol, benzodiazepine, and severe opioid withdrawal where seizures or medical complications are a risk.

Illustrative Scenarios

Three Severity Examples

Illustrative scenarios based on ASAM criteria — not real patient stories. They show how clinical assessments typically map severity to level of care.

Mild
Case
Early-Stage Example
ASAM Level 1 typical path

No physical dependence, intact support system, mild cravings. Typical recommended path: standard outpatient (3–6 months) with CBT and relapse prevention. Work/school continues. MAT may be considered for opioid use.

Typical level: outpatient + MAT
Mod-
erate
Step-Down Example
ASAM Level 2 typical path

Moderate dependence, co-occurring anxiety, one prior relapse, stable housing. Typical path: PHP 4 weeks → IOP 2 months → aftercare with dual-diagnosis therapy. Step-down continuum matches ASAM 2.5 → 2.1 → 1.

Typical level: PHP → IOP → aftercare
Severe
Case
Full-Continuum Example
ASAM Level 3&ndash;4 typical path

Physical dependence with withdrawal risk, multiple prior relapses, unstable environment. Typical path: medical detox 7 days → inpatient rehab 60–90 days → sober living. Full continuum of care maximizes 90+ day sustained recovery odds.

Typical level: detox → inpatient → sober living

Illustrative examples — not real patients. Based on ASAM criteria and NIDA-recommended continuum of care. Your specific level depends on clinical assessment. Call (833) 546-3513 for your exact details.

Evidence-based recovery path: 90+ days best outcomes, 40-60% sustained recovery rate, 50% relapse reduction with MAT
NIDA research: 90+ days of combined MAT + behavioral therapy = best sustained recovery outcomes.
Reference

Key Treatment Terms Explained

ASAM Criteria

American Society of Addiction Medicine's standardized framework for matching patients to the appropriate level of care. Used by clinicians and insurers to justify medical necessity.

Continuum of Care

The sequence from most to least intensive: detox → inpatient → PHP → IOP → outpatient → aftercare. Moving through the continuum is called “step-down.”

Medical Necessity

Insurance term requiring clinical documentation that a treatment level is appropriate. Established via ASAM assessment. Most denials are appeals-winnable with proper documentation.

Dual Diagnosis

Integrated treatment for substance use disorder plus co-occurring mental health condition (depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar). Significantly better outcomes than treating separately.

MAT (Medication-Assisted)

FDA-approved medications (Suboxone, methadone, Vivitrol, naltrexone) combined with therapy. Gold standard for opioid use disorder and alcohol use disorder.

Aftercare

Post-treatment support: alumni programs, step-down therapy, 12-step / SMART meetings, sober living. Reduces relapse risk by up to 50%.

Under 5 Minutes

How to Choose Your Treatment in 3 Steps

Assessment, level-of-care match, and insurance verification. We handle all three in one call.

1

ASAM Assessment

Call (833) 546-3513. 5-minute clinical intake determines severity and risks.

2

Level-of-Care Match

We match your ASAM level to detox / inpatient / PHP / IOP / outpatient / MAT, filtered by your state and insurance network.

3

Verify &amp; Start

We verify insurance, handle pre-authorization, and coordinate admission — often same day.

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Common Questions

Treatment Programs: FAQ

Direct answers to the 10 most-asked questions about addiction treatment programs, levels of care, and insurance coverage.

What are the main types of addiction treatment?
The main evidence-based types are medical detox (3–10 days), inpatient rehab (30–90 days), partial hospitalization (PHP, 2–6 weeks), intensive outpatient (IOP, 2–4 months), standard outpatient (3–6 months), and medication-assisted treatment (MAT). Each maps to an ASAM level of care from 1 (outpatient) through 4 (medically managed inpatient). Call (833) 546-3513 for help identifying your level.
How do I choose the right treatment program?
Consider addiction severity, withdrawal risk, co-occurring mental health conditions, previous treatment history, home environment stability, and insurance coverage. A clinical assessment using ASAM criteria determines the appropriate level of care. The intake team uses standardized scales like CIWA-Ar (alcohol) and COWS (opioids) to score severity objectively. Call (833) 546-3513 for a free 5-minute ASAM assessment.
Does insurance cover addiction treatment?
Yes — under the Mental Health Parity Act (MHPAEA) and the ACA, most insurance plans must cover substance use disorder treatment at the same level as physical health conditions, including detox, inpatient, outpatient, and MAT programs. Equal copays, no stricter visit limits, and no higher deductibles than medical care apply under parity law. See our insurance coverage guide for details by provider.
How long does addiction treatment take?
Duration varies significantly by level of care: medical detox 3–10 days, inpatient 30–90 days, PHP 2–6 weeks, IOP 2–4 months, outpatient 3–6 months, sober living 3–12 months, MAT 6–24 months. NIDA recommends at least 90 days of combined treatment for best sustained recovery outcomes. Most patients step-down through the continuum rather than completing one level alone.
What is the success rate of addiction treatment?
Sustained recovery rates are 40–60% at one year, comparable to other chronic relapsing diseases like diabetes and hypertension. Success improves significantly with treatment lasting 90+ days, strong aftercare planning, MAT when clinically indicated (especially for opioid use disorder), family involvement, and integrated dual-diagnosis care for co-occurring mental health conditions. Short stays under 30 days have markedly worse outcomes.
What is the difference between PHP and IOP?
PHP (Partial Hospitalization) is 5–7 days per week, 6–8 hours daily — roughly 30–40 hours weekly. IOP (Intensive Outpatient) is 9–20 hours per week across 3–5 days. PHP is more intensive (ASAM Level 2.5), usually used as step-down from inpatient; IOP (ASAM Level 2.1) is used as step-down from PHP or as standalone moderate-intensity care when inpatient is not medically necessary.
Is medical detox always required before rehab?
Medical detox is required for physical dependence on alcohol, opioids, or benzodiazepines, where withdrawal can be dangerous or life-threatening (seizures, delirium tremens). For stimulants (cocaine, meth), cannabis, or cases without severe physical dependence, detox is typically not medically necessary and patients can enter rehab directly. A clinical assessment determines the need — never attempt alcohol or benzo withdrawal without medical supervision.
What is MAT and when is it used?
Medication-Assisted Treatment combines FDA-approved medications (buprenorphine/Suboxone, methadone, naltrexone/Vivitrol) with behavioral therapy and counseling. MAT is the gold standard for opioid use disorder, cutting overdose deaths by up to 50% and is also FDA-approved for alcohol use disorder. Most insurance plans cover MAT; Medicaid covers it in all 50 states under SAMHSA TIP 63 guidelines.
Can I work or go to school during treatment?
Yes, for outpatient levels of care. Standard outpatient (3–9 hrs/week), IOP (evenings/weekends available), and MAT are specifically designed to be compatible with work or school. Inpatient and PHP require full-time commitment (typically 8–10 hours daily). FMLA protects job status for up to 12 weeks for eligible employees entering treatment; ADA applies once clean. Employers cannot fire for voluntary treatment participation.
What is dual diagnosis treatment?
Dual diagnosis (also called co-occurring disorders) treats substance use disorder alongside mental health conditions (depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar disorder, ADHD) simultaneously within one program. Research consistently shows integrated treatment produces significantly better outcomes than sequential or parallel treatment. Most Joint Commission-accredited rehabs offer dual diagnosis care. An estimated 45% of SUD patients have a co-occurring mental health condition.

Sources

  1. American Society of Addiction Medicine — ASAM Criteria for Levels of Care
  2. SAMHSA — TIP 63: Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
  3. National Institute on Drug Abuse — Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment
  4. Recovery Research Institute — Addiction Treatment Types & Success Rates
  5. U.S. Department of Labor — Mental Health Parity & Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA)

Last updated: April 21, 2026 • Content reviewed against ASAM criteria, SAMHSA TIP 63, and NIDA Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment.

Medical Disclaimer. This page is informational and does not constitute medical, legal, or insurance advice. Always verify specific benefits with your insurer. In a crisis, call the SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357) or dial 911 for life-threatening emergencies.
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