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Opiate Addiction Treatment Centers: Detox, MAT & How to Find the Right One (2026)
✎ Editorial Standards: Content reviewed by licensed addiction counselors and medical staff. Updated March 2026. Drug Rehab Headquarters does not accept payment to influence rankings or recommendations. Read our full editorial policy →
Medically Reviewed by: Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) & CADC-II Certified Addiction Counselor. Last reviewed: March 2026. Information sourced from SAMHSA 2024 NSDUH, NIDA, CDC overdose surveillance data, and ASAM clinical guidelines.
Opiate addiction treatment encompasses the medical, pharmacological, and therapeutic programs that help people recover from dependence on opiates and opioids — including heroin, fentanyl, oxycodone, hydrocodone, morphine, codeine, and methadone. Opiates bind to the brain's opioid receptors, producing powerful pain relief and euphoria while simultaneously restructuring brain chemistry in ways that drive compulsive, continued use.
The opioid crisis remains the deadliest drug epidemic in American history. In 2023, over 81,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses — the majority involving illicitly manufactured fentanyl, which is now present across virtually the entire drug supply. What makes opiate addiction treatment today critically different from a decade ago is this fentanyl contamination: heroin users, pill users, and even cocaine users are unknowingly encountering fentanyl — a substance 50–100 times more potent than morphine — in virtually every illicit drug they use.
The good news: opiate addiction treatment works. Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) — combining FDA-approved medications with behavioral therapy — is the most effective evidence-based treatment for opioid use disorder, dramatically reducing overdose deaths, improving treatment retention, and supporting long-term recovery. This guide covers everything you need to know about finding the right opiate addiction treatment center.
⚠ If Someone Is Overdosing Right Now — Call 911 Immediately
Signs of opioid overdose: unresponsive, slow or stopped breathing, blue lips or fingertips, pinpoint pupils, gurgling sounds. Administer naloxone (Narcan) if available and call 911. Do not leave the person alone. Good Samaritan laws protect you in most states when calling 911 for an overdose.
What Is Opiate Addiction & Who Needs Treatment?
Opiates and opioids — natural, semi-synthetic, and fully synthetic versions — all work by binding to opioid receptors in the brain and nervous system. This blocks pain signals and triggers a powerful dopamine release, producing the characteristic euphoria, warmth, and sense of well-being that drives repeated use. With continued use, the brain reduces its own natural opioid production and becomes physically dependent on the external supply — creating the cycle of tolerance, withdrawal, and compulsive use that defines Opioid Use Disorder (OUD).
Common opiates and opioids requiring treatment include:
- Heroin: Illicit opioid, now almost universally contaminated with fentanyl. Most fatal overdoses in the U.S. involve heroin/fentanyl combinations.
- Fentanyl: Illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF) is now the primary driver of overdose deaths. Also present as a contaminant in stimulants, counterfeit pills, and other drugs.
- Prescription opioids: Oxycodone (OxyContin, Percocet), hydrocodone (Vicodin), morphine, codeine, tramadol — all carry addiction risk, particularly with extended use.
- Methadone: Used therapeutically for pain and opioid use disorder treatment, but also misused and involved in overdose deaths.
- Buprenorphine (Suboxone): Prescribed for OUD treatment, rarely causes overdose when used as directed.
Signs that opiate addiction treatment is needed: using opioids in larger amounts or for longer than prescribed, failed attempts to cut down or stop, spending significant time obtaining or recovering from opioids, neglecting work, family, or responsibilities, withdrawal symptoms when not using, continued use despite serious health consequences, or surviving an overdose.
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Opiate Withdrawal: Symptoms & Timeline
Opiate withdrawal is caused by the brain's sudden loss of the opioids it has become physically dependent on. For short-acting opioids (heroin, oxycodone, hydrocodone), withdrawal begins within 8–24 hours of the last use. For long-acting opioids (methadone, extended-release oxycodone), onset may be delayed 36–48 hours. While opioid withdrawal is rarely fatal in otherwise healthy adults, severe dehydration from vomiting and diarrhea can cause dangerous complications — and the overwhelming discomfort is the primary driver of relapse.
| Phase | Timeline | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| Early Withdrawal | Hours 8–24 | Anxiety, restlessness, yawning, runny nose, teary eyes, sweating, muscle aches, intense cravings, insomnia. |
| Peak Withdrawal | Days 2–3 | Severe muscle cramps and pain, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, chills and goosebumps ("cold turkey"), rapid heart rate, elevated blood pressure, profound anxiety, overwhelming cravings. This is the highest-risk period for relapse. |
| Acute Withdrawal | Days 3–7 | Gradual physical improvement. Continued fatigue, mood instability, insomnia, appetite disruption, and persistent cravings. GI symptoms begin to ease. |
| Post-Acute (PAWS) | Weeks–Months | Intermittent cravings, depression, anxiety, sleep disruption, cognitive difficulties, and emotional dysregulation. PAWS can persist for months and is a major driver of late relapse — making structured aftercare essential. |
Why attempting opiate detox at home is dangerous: Tolerance drops rapidly during even a short period of abstinence. People who relapse after a failed home detox attempt often use the same dose they were using before — which can now be fatal. Additionally, the severity of physical withdrawal without medical support leads to relapse in the overwhelming majority of unsupervised attempts. Medical detox significantly improves safety and the probability of successfully entering treatment.
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) for Opiate Addiction
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) is the clinical gold standard for opioid use disorder. It combines FDA-approved medications with counseling and behavioral therapy to treat the whole person. MAT is not "trading one addiction for another" — this is a common misconception. These are evidence-based medicines that stabilize brain chemistry, prevent withdrawal, reduce cravings, and dramatically lower overdose risk. NIDA, SAMHSA, the American Society of Addiction Medicine, and the American Medical Association all recommend MAT as the first-line treatment for opioid use disorder.
| Medication | How It Works | Setting | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buprenorphine (Suboxone) | Partial opioid agonist — activates opioid receptors enough to prevent withdrawal and cravings without producing a full high. Ceiling effect provides overdose protection. | Prescribed by certified physicians — can be taken at home | Most opioid use disorders — the most widely prescribed MAT medication |
| Methadone | Full opioid agonist — long-acting, eliminates withdrawal for 24–36 hours per dose. Stabilizes brain chemistry without the cycle of highs and crashes. | Federally licensed opioid treatment programs (OTPs) — daily clinic visits initially | Severe opioid use disorder, people who haven't responded to buprenorphine |
| Naltrexone (Vivitrol) | Opioid antagonist — completely blocks opioid receptors. Takes away the euphoric effect of opioids entirely. Available as monthly injectable (Vivitrol) or daily pill. | Outpatient — requires full detox before starting (7–10 days opioid-free) | People who have completed detox and want to block relapse; highly motivated individuals |
| Naloxone (Narcan) | Opioid antagonist — rapidly reverses overdose by displacing opioids from receptors. For emergency use only — not a maintenance medication. | Available over-the-counter without prescription in all 50 states | Emergency overdose reversal — everyone with opioid exposure should carry it |
Opiate Addiction Treatment Programs & Levels of Care
|
Step 1
Medical Detox
Duration: 5–14 days | Setting: 24/7 clinical facility Medical detox provides around-the-clock nursing supervision while your body clears opioids, using medications — typically buprenorphine or methadone — to manage withdrawal symptoms safely. This is the critical first step. Detox alone is not addiction treatment — it must be followed by comprehensive rehab and MAT to produce lasting outcomes. |
Step 2
Inpatient / Residential Rehab
Duration: 30–90+ days | Setting: Live-in facility Inpatient rehab is the highest level of structured care, removing the person entirely from the environment and people associated with drug use. Daily therapy, MAT continuation, and peer community support produce significantly better outcomes for severe opioid use disorder. NIDA recommends a minimum of 90 days for lasting recovery. |
|
Step 3
Intensive Outpatient (IOP)
Duration: 8–12 weeks | Setting: Clinic, 9–15 hrs/week Intensive outpatient provides structured therapy and MAT continuation while allowing people to live at home, work, and meet family responsibilities. Appropriate as a step-down from residential care or for people with mild to moderate opioid use disorder and stable, drug-free home environments. |
Specialized
Dual Diagnosis Programs
Co-occurring disorders treated simultaneously Depression, anxiety, PTSD, and chronic pain are extremely common alongside opioid use disorder. Dual diagnosis treatment addresses addiction and mental health simultaneously — treating only the opioid use while leaving underlying PTSD or depression untreated dramatically increases relapse risk. |
|
Ongoing
Aftercare & Long-Term MAT
Opioid use disorder is a chronic condition. Long-term aftercare including continued MAT, individual therapy, and peer support dramatically reduces relapse risk. Research shows that longer duration of MAT produces better outcomes — there is no clinically recommended time limit on Suboxone or methadone maintenance.
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How to Choose the Right Opiate Addiction Treatment Center
With thousands of facilities across the country, the quality of opiate addiction treatment centers varies significantly. Here are the factors that matter most:
| What to Look For | Red Flags to Avoid |
|---|---|
| ✅ Joint Commission or CARF accreditation | ❌ No accreditation beyond basic state licensing |
| ✅ MAT offered (Suboxone, methadone, or Vivitrol) | ❌ Refuses MAT on ideological grounds — this is not evidence-based |
| ✅ Licensed therapists (LCSW, LPC) and medical staff (MD, NP) | ❌ Peer counselors only — no licensed clinical staff |
| ✅ Dual diagnosis psychiatric evaluation offered | ❌ No mental health assessment at intake |
| ✅ Clear discharge and aftercare planning from day one | ❌ No aftercare plan on discharge |
| ✅ Naloxone training and distribution included | ❌ No overdose prevention education |
Cost of Opiate Addiction Treatment & Insurance Coverage
The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires insurance plans to cover opioid use disorder treatment — including MAT, detox, and rehab — at the same level as other medical conditions. Medicaid covers opiate addiction treatment in all 50 states, including MAT medications.
| Program Type | Without Insurance | With Insurance |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox | $1,500–$3,000/week | Often fully covered |
| 30-Day Inpatient | $6,000–$30,000 | Copay/deductible only |
| IOP (full program) | $3,000–$10,000 | 50–80% covered after deductible |
| Suboxone / MAT (monthly) | $150–$500/month | Covered by most plans & Medicaid |
| Medicaid / State-Funded | Free or sliding scale | N/A — covers all 50 states |
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Frequently Asked Questions About Opiate Addiction Treatment
What is the most effective treatment for opiate addiction?
The most effective treatment for opioid use disorder is Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) combined with behavioral therapy. NIDA, SAMHSA, and the American Society of Addiction Medicine all designate MAT as the first-line, evidence-based treatment for opioid use disorder. Buprenorphine (Suboxone) and methadone — when combined with counseling — reduce overdose deaths by approximately 50%, improve treatment retention, and produce significantly better long-term recovery outcomes compared to abstinence-only approaches. Choosing a treatment center that offers MAT is one of the most important decisions you can make.
Is MAT (Suboxone, methadone) just trading one addiction for another?
No — this is one of the most harmful and pervasive misconceptions in addiction treatment. Buprenorphine and methadone are FDA-approved medicines that stabilize brain chemistry, eliminate withdrawal symptoms, and dramatically reduce overdose risk. They are not "addictions" any more than insulin is an addiction for a diabetic. People on MAT can work, parent, and live full lives. The AMA, NIDA, SAMHSA, and every major medical organization support MAT as essential care. Facilities that refuse to offer MAT on ideological grounds are not providing evidence-based treatment — and their approach is associated with significantly higher relapse and overdose death rates.
Is opiate withdrawal dangerous?
Opiate withdrawal is rarely directly fatal in otherwise healthy adults — unlike alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal, it does not typically cause seizures. However, severe dehydration from vomiting and diarrhea can cause dangerous electrolyte imbalances and cardiac complications. More importantly: the overwhelming discomfort of unsupervised withdrawal drives relapse in the vast majority of home detox attempts. After even a few days of abstinence, tolerance drops dramatically — and relapsing with a pre-abstinence dose can be fatal. Medical detox dramatically improves safety and the probability of entering and completing treatment.
Does insurance cover opiate addiction treatment?
Yes — in most cases. The Affordable Care Act and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act require most insurance plans to cover opioid use disorder treatment, including detox, inpatient rehab, IOP, and MAT medications. Medicaid covers opiate addiction treatment in all 50 states — including Suboxone and methadone. Verify your insurance free online or call us at (866) 720-3784 to confirm your coverage in minutes.
How long does opiate addiction treatment take?
Medical detox typically lasts 5–14 days. Inpatient rehab runs 30–90+ days — NIDA recommends a minimum of 90 days for lasting recovery from opioid use disorder. After inpatient, IOP adds 8–12 weeks of structured outpatient support. MAT (Suboxone or methadone) is most effective when continued long-term — research consistently shows that longer duration of MAT produces better outcomes, and there is no recommended time limit. Post-acute withdrawal symptoms including cravings and emotional instability can persist for months, making ongoing aftercare critical.
What is the difference between opiates and opioids?
Opiates technically refers to naturally occurring substances derived from the opium poppy — morphine, codeine, and heroin. Opioids is the broader term that includes both natural opiates and synthetic or semi-synthetic drugs that work on the same receptors — including oxycodone, hydrocodone, fentanyl, tramadol, and buprenorphine. In practice, the terms are used interchangeably in clinical and treatment contexts. Treatment for all opiates and opioids is similar, centered on MAT and behavioral therapy.
What should I do if someone is overdosing on opiates right now?
Call 911 immediately. If naloxone (Narcan) is available, administer it now — it is safe, effective, and reverses opioid overdose within 2–3 minutes. Lay the person on their side (recovery position) to prevent choking. Stay with them until emergency services arrive. Good Samaritan laws in most states protect you from drug-related prosecution when you call 911 for an overdose. Do not leave the person alone. Note: with fentanyl-involved overdoses, multiple doses of naloxone may be required.
Can I get opiate treatment while keeping my job?
Yes — through Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP) and Suboxone maintenance, many people continue working throughout treatment. IOP sessions are typically scheduled in mornings or evenings to accommodate work schedules. For severe opioid use disorder, inpatient rehab produces better outcomes — and FMLA (Family and Medical Leave Act) provides up to 12 weeks of job-protected leave for medical treatment including addiction, with your employer knowing only that you are taking medical leave, not the specific condition.
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