Apr 18, 2026
After 16 Years, Federal Parity Rules Finally Force Insurers to Cover Addiction
A decade after the Mental Health Parity Act passed, federal regulators published new rules in late 2025 that close loopholes insurers used t...
Every program here is SAMHSA-verified and cross-referenced against state licensure, accreditation, and published outcome data. Browse by state, level of care, or insurance — and read the analysis behind every listing.
Every number and claim on this site traces back to an authoritative source
Three starting points
Browse SAMHSA-verified centers by state. Filtered by accreditation and parity-rule coverage status.
Levels of care, insurance navigation, and the data behind treatment decisions — all sourced.
Carrier-by-carrier coverage analysis under the 2024 federal parity rule.
Core concepts
Most published guidance skips the mechanics. These four are the ones that shape outcomes in practice — and the ones that most families learn about the hard way.
Start here
Six clinically distinct levels — from outpatient through medically managed inpatient. The right one depends on withdrawal risk, co-occurring conditions, and home stability. Matching it is a clinical judgment, not a sales pitch.
Full guide to the six levelsFor opioid use disorder, medication-assisted treatment cuts mortality by roughly half. Programs that refuse to allow it are working outside the current evidence base. Ask explicitly.
Under the 2024 federal parity rule, every major insurer must cover medically necessary substance-use treatment at parity with medical care. In practice: deductibles, in-network lists, and prior-auth hurdles still matter — and now they are auditable.
Most relapse happens in the 90 days after discharge. The strength of the aftercare plan is the single best predictor of whether the work holds. Ask about it before admission, not during discharge planning.
ASAM defines six distinct levels. The right fit depends on withdrawal risk and home stability — not on severity alone.
Medically supervised withdrawal. 5–7 days. Required first step for severe dependence.
24/7 clinical care in a facility. Typical 30 days. For severe cases or unstable home environments.
Daytime clinical care, evenings home. ~20 days. Step-down from residential.
9–12 hrs/week, life continues around treatment. 8–12 weeks. The most accessible level.
Buprenorphine / naltrexone / methadone for OUD or AUD. Cuts mortality ~50%. Ask every program.
Structured post-discharge support. 90-day window is where most relapse happens. Plan before admission.
Costs
Sticker prices are wider than most families expect. The same 30-day residential stay can list at $15,000 or $38,000. Here is the range, by level of care.
| Level of care | Duration | Sticker range | With commercial insurance (typical) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical detox | 5–7 days | $4,000 – $12,000 | Deductible + 20–30% coinsurance |
| Residential | 30 days | $15,000 – $38,000 | Deductible + coinsurance to OOP max |
| Partial hospitalization | 20 days | $7,000 – $18,000 | Deductible + 20–30% coinsurance |
| Intensive outpatient | 8–12 weeks | $3,500 – $9,000 | Often the most accessible level |
| MAT (buprenorphine) | Long-term | $1,500 – $4,000 / year | Typically Tier 1/2 generic |
The thing nobody told me was that the first question is not 'which rehab' — it is 'which level of care.' Understanding that one distinction changed everything. Our daughter didn't need residential. She needed IOP with good aftercare, and we found it because we knew to ask.
Six tools that work together — screening, cost, directory, education.
2-minute DSM-5 screening. Your answers stay in your browser.
Ballpark out-of-pocket by program type + insurance.
21,500+ SAMHSA-verified facilities, searchable.
State-level pages with local context.
Six levels of care explained clinically.
Ten insurers, what each covers, how to appeal.
Journal
Short, specific, evidence-first writing. No listicles.
Apr 18, 2026
A decade after the Mental Health Parity Act passed, federal regulators published new rules in late 2025 that close loopholes insurers used t...
Apr 12, 2026
Accreditation badges on rehab websites are often treated as proof of quality. Here is what CARF, Joint Commission, and state licensing each...
Questions people actually ask
Answered from the same sources we use on the rest of the site: SAMHSA, NIDA, CMS, ASAM, peer-reviewed research.
Directory
Sourced from the federal SAMHSA Treatment Locator. Refreshed quarterly.