Verified Treatment Center
Jewish Community Services of South Florida
Miami Beach, FL · 33139
Key Takeaways for Jewish Community Services of South Florida
- • Outpatient offered
- • Accepts Medicaid, Medicare, Private insurance, TRICARE/VA
- • SAMHSA-listed facility
- • Direct line available · Helpline free & confidential 24/7
About Jewish Community Services of South Florida
Jewish Community Services of South Florida sits in Miami Beach, FL, one of the many SAMHSA-registered addiction-treatment facilities across FL. The facility's programming is outpatient (Outpatient), not residential. The interesting questions about any specific program are rarely the ones its website answers.
Care levels at Jewish Community Services of South Florida
Jewish Community Services of South Florida is an outpatient-focused program (Outpatient) — patients live at home or in sober living and attend treatment sessions. This level of care is clinically appropriate for mild-to-moderate substance use disorder, or for patients stepping down from residential. The level-of-care question is where a lot of misaligned placements happen — a patient who needs residential ends up in IOP, or vice versa. The protection is a clinical assessment outside the facility's admissions team.
Insurance and payment
Jewish Community Services of South Florida accepts both Medicaid and commercial insurance, which is the broadest payer profile and typically correlates with programs that operate at scale across the economic spectrum. The facility also accepts TRICARE or military benefits. The insurance problem is almost never that treatment is uncovered — it is that the specific admission was authorized under different terms than the ones in the benefit summary. Get the Verification of Benefits in writing; everything else follows from that one move.
Specialty programming
The facility's documented specialty programming includes: Adolescents, Young adults, Adult women. The gap between specialty-branding and specialty-programming is where a lot of families end up disappointed. Specific questions — who, how many hours, what credentials — close the gap before admission.
Before you call
Questions that matter before admitting to Jewish Community Services of South Florida: ASAM level of care (not the facility's category, the clinical level); written VOB; MAT policy. If the clinical situation involves opioid use disorder, confirm explicitly whether Jewish Community Services of South Florida offers medication-assisted treatment — buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone. Programs that do not are operating outside the current standard of care. The ones who answer those quickly are usually the ones worth considering. The ones who dodge are almost always worth skipping.
Listing sourced from the SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator. Data last synced April 2026. Verify current programs directly with the facility.
Jewish Community Services of South Florida at a Glance
Levels of care
Outpatient
Service settings
Outpatient, Regular outpatient treatment
Therapy approaches
Anger management, Brief intervention, Cognitive behavioral therapy, Motivational interviewing, Relapse prevention, Substance use disorder counseling
Special populations
Adolescents, Young adults, Adult women, Pregnant/postpartum women, Adult men, Seniors or older adults
Insurance & Payment Accepted
Confirm in-network status before admission — verification is free.
Medicaid
Coverage details →Medicare
Coverage details →Private insurance
Coverage details →TRICARE / VA
Coverage details →Contact & Location
Address
610 Espanola Way, Miami Beach, FL 33139
Facility direct line
305-933-9820Website
www.jcsfl.orgQuestions about this facility
Common questions about Jewish Community Services of South Florida
Answered from public sources: SAMHSA listings, federal parity regulations, and our own admissions helpline intake notes.
Is Jewish Community Services of South Florida listed in the SAMHSA Treatment Services Locator?
What insurance does Jewish Community Services of South Florida accept?
How do I know if this level of care is right for me?
Is calling confidential? Will my employer find out?
What happens if I call the helpline instead of the facility?
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