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✎ 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, NIDA, and ASAM clinical guidelines.
Inpatient drug rehab — also called residential treatment — is the highest level of structured care available for addiction. You live at the treatment facility 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, fully immersed in a clinical and therapeutic environment designed for one purpose: your recovery.
It is not the right fit for everyone. But for people with severe addiction, prior failed outpatient attempts, co-occurring mental health conditions, or an unstable home environment, inpatient rehab is often the difference between sustained recovery and continued relapse.
This guide covers everything you need to know — who inpatient rehab is for, what a typical day looks like, which therapies are used, how long it lasts, what it costs, and how to choose the right facility.
What Is Inpatient Drug Rehab?
Inpatient drug rehab is a live-in addiction treatment program where patients reside at the facility around the clock, receiving continuous medical supervision, therapy, and structured support. Unlike outpatient programs where you return home each day, inpatient treatment removes you entirely from your everyday environment — eliminating access to substances and distance from the triggers, people, and situations that reinforce addictive behavior.
Addiction is recognized by NIDA, the AMA, and the American Society of Addiction Medicine as a chronic brain disease — not a moral failing or lack of willpower. Inpatient rehab treats it accordingly, using evidence-based clinical protocols alongside therapeutic and holistic support to address both the physical and psychological dimensions of addiction.
After completing inpatient treatment, most people transition into a step-down level of care such as intensive outpatient treatment or aftercare programs to maintain the progress made during residential treatment.
Who Needs Inpatient Drug Rehab?
Inpatient rehab is not the only path to recovery, but it is the most appropriate level of care for certain situations. Here are the clearest indicators that inpatient treatment is the right choice:
| Situation | Why Inpatient Is Recommended |
|---|---|
| Severe addiction or long-term heavy use | The brain has undergone significant chemical changes that require intensive, sustained clinical intervention to reverse |
| Prior failed outpatient attempts | If outpatient hasn't worked, a higher level of structure and supervision is clinically indicated |
| Co-occurring mental health conditions | Dual diagnosis requires integrated psychiatric and addiction care that outpatient rarely provides adequately |
| Unstable or triggering home environment | If your home environment involves other people using, domestic conflict, or easy access to substances, distance is essential |
| High withdrawal risk (alcohol, benzos, opioids) | Life-threatening withdrawal requires 24/7 medical detox supervision that only inpatient can provide |
| No strong sober support network at home | Inpatient provides the peer community and professional support that a missing home network would otherwise need to supply |
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Inpatient vs. Other Levels of Care
Addiction treatment exists on a continuum. The right level of care depends on your specific clinical needs — not simply which option is most convenient or least disruptive to your routine.
| Level of Care | Hours/Week | Living Situation | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inpatient / Residential ⭐ | 168 hrs (24/7) | Live at facility | Severe addiction, dual diagnosis, failed outpatient, high relapse risk |
| PHP (Day Treatment) | 30–40 hrs | Home or sober living | Step-down from inpatient, needs structure but stable home |
| IOP | 9–15 hrs | Home | Mild/moderate addiction, working adults, stable support system |
| Standard Outpatient | 1–8 hrs | Home | Ongoing aftercare, maintenance therapy |
What to Expect in Inpatient Drug Rehab
The Admission Process
Admission to inpatient rehab begins with a comprehensive clinical assessment — your medical history, substances used, duration and severity of use, mental health history, and any previous treatment attempts. This assessment determines your level of care, whether you need medical detox first, and what specific treatment components your program should include. Insurance is verified during this process — most major insurers cover inpatient rehab under the Mental Health Parity Act.
A Typical Day in Inpatient Rehab
Every hour of the day is structured to support healing and build the habits of recovery. While schedules vary by facility, a typical day includes:
- Morning: Nutritious breakfast, morning meditation or mindfulness, and psychoeducation sessions covering the science of addiction, coping skills, and relapse prevention
- Mid-Morning: Group therapy — sharing experiences, processing emotions, building peer community with others in recovery
- Afternoon: Individual counseling with your assigned therapist, specialized therapy sessions (CBT, DBT, EMDR, trauma work), and skill-building workshops
- Late Afternoon: Holistic activities — yoga, fitness, art therapy, nature walks, or equine therapy depending on the facility
- Evening: Communal dinner, 12-step or peer support meeting, family calls or family therapy sessions, personal reflection time
- Night: Structured wind-down routine, lights-out time to establish healthy sleep patterns disrupted by addiction
Therapies Used in Inpatient Drug Rehab
| Therapy | What It Does |
|---|---|
| Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) | Identifies and restructures the negative thought patterns that drive addictive behavior |
| Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) | Builds emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and interpersonal effectiveness skills |
| EMDR | Processes unresolved trauma that underlies many cases of addiction |
| Motivational Interviewing (MI) | Strengthens internal motivation and commitment to sustained sobriety |
| Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) | Uses FDA-approved medications alongside therapy for opioid and alcohol use disorders |
| Group Therapy | Builds peer community, reduces isolation, and develops communication and relationship skills |
| Family Therapy | Heals family relationships damaged by addiction and builds the home support system needed for aftercare |
| Holistic Therapies | Yoga, meditation, art therapy, fitness — restoring physical and emotional wellness alongside clinical treatment |
How Long Does Inpatient Drug Rehab Last?
Program length is individualized based on addiction severity, co-occurring conditions, clinical progress, and insurance coverage. NIDA's research is clear: longer treatment produces better outcomes.
| Program Length | What It Covers | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox (3–14 days) | Physical stabilization and withdrawal management only | First step — not standalone treatment |
| 28–30 Days | Detox + initial therapy and stabilization | Starting point — often insufficient alone for severe addiction |
| 60 Days | Full therapeutic work, skill development, relapse prevention | Moderate to severe addiction — significantly better outcomes |
| 90 Days ⭐ | Deep therapeutic work + life skills + strong aftercare planning | NIDA-recommended minimum for lasting recovery |
| 6–12 Months | Long-term residential — full life rebuilding | Chronic relapse, severe co-occurring disorders, no stable housing |
Cost of Inpatient Drug Rehab & Insurance Coverage
Cost is one of the most common barriers people cite for not seeking inpatient treatment. The reality is that most people pay significantly less than the listed price — and many pay nothing out-of-pocket at all.
Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, insurance companies are legally required to cover addiction treatment at the same level as other medical conditions. This means inpatient rehab is covered by most private insurance plans, Medicaid, and Medicare.
| Program Type | Without Insurance | With Insurance |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox | $1,500–$3,000/week | Often fully covered |
| 30-Day Inpatient | $6,000–$20,000 | Copay/deductible only |
| 60-Day Inpatient | $12,000–$40,000 | Largely covered by most plans |
| 90-Day Inpatient | $18,000–$60,000 | Major portion covered |
| Luxury / Executive Rehab | $30,000–$100,000+/month | Partial coverage — amenities not covered |
For a full breakdown see our guide: How Much Does Rehab Cost? or verify your insurance free online.
How to Choose the Right Inpatient Drug Rehab
- Accreditation: Look for Joint Commission or CARF accreditation — these are the industry gold standards for quality and safety. State licensing is the minimum; accreditation goes significantly beyond that.
- Licensed clinical staff: Your treatment team should include licensed therapists (LCSW, LPC), addiction counselors (CADC, LCDC), and on-site medical professionals (MD, NP, RN). Ask specifically who will be providing your care.
- Evidence-based treatment: CBT, DBT, motivational interviewing, EMDR, and MAT should be core offerings — not optional add-ons.
- Dual diagnosis capability: If you have any mental health history, ensure the facility has on-site psychiatric evaluation and integrated dual diagnosis treatment. Treating only the addiction without addressing co-occurring conditions dramatically increases relapse risk.
- Aftercare planning: A quality inpatient program begins planning your discharge and aftercare on day one — not on day 29. Ask about their specific aftercare partnerships and follow-up protocols.
- Family involvement: Programs that include family therapy produce better long-term outcomes. Addiction affects the whole family — healing should too.
What Happens After Inpatient Drug Rehab?
Completing inpatient rehab is a major milestone — but it is not the finish line. Research consistently shows that people who engage in structured aftercare after inpatient treatment have significantly lower relapse rates than those who return directly to their previous environment without support.
- PHP (Partial Hospitalization): 6–8 hours of clinical programming per day, returning home or to sober living at night
- Intensive Outpatient (IOP): 9–15 hours per week of therapy and group sessions
- Sober living homes: Structured, substance-free housing with peer accountability
- 12-Step programs: AA, NA, and similar peer support communities
- Ongoing individual therapy: Continued work with a therapist to process challenges that emerge in early recovery
- Relapse prevention planning: Identifying triggers, building coping strategies, and establishing an emergency support network
Frequently Asked Questions About Inpatient Drug Rehab
What is the difference between inpatient and residential treatment?
The terms are often used interchangeably. Both refer to live-in, 24/7 programs. The subtle distinction: "inpatient" can imply a more hospital-like, medically intensive setting focused on stabilization, while "residential" often refers to a more home-like environment focused on therapeutic work and life skills. In practice, most quality programs blend both. Focus on the services, staff credentials, and accreditation rather than the label.
Are cell phones allowed in inpatient rehab?
Policies vary by facility. Most programs have an initial "blackout period" of 3–7 days with no outside contact. This allows you to fully detox, acclimate to the program, and focus entirely on treatment without distraction. After this phase, most facilities allow supervised calls and eventually broader contact. Always ask about a specific facility's communication policy before admission.
Can I leave inpatient rehab before completing the program?
Most inpatient programs are voluntary — you can technically leave at any time unless you are court-ordered. However, leaving against medical advice (AMA) significantly increases relapse risk. Your clinical team will work with you through any difficulties rather than having you leave. If you have concerns about a program, raise them with your treatment team — most issues can be addressed without leaving.
Does insurance cover inpatient drug rehab?
Yes, in most cases. The Affordable Care Act and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act require most insurance plans to cover inpatient addiction treatment. Medicaid covers it in all 50 states. Medicare Part A covers inpatient hospital-based treatment. The quickest way to know your exact coverage is to verify your insurance free online or call us at (866) 720-3784 — we verify benefits in minutes.
How do I know if 30, 60, or 90 days is right for me?
NIDA's research consistently shows that 90 days produces significantly better long-term outcomes than 30-day programs. That said, the right duration depends on addiction severity, co-occurring conditions, prior treatment history, and your clinical team's assessment. Many people begin with 30 days and extend based on progress.
What should I bring to inpatient rehab?
Most facilities provide a specific packing list but generally recommend: comfortable clothing for 30+ days, personal hygiene items (unopened, no alcohol-based products), prescription medications in original bottles, a journal, books, and a small amount of cash for incidentals. Leave behind: valuables, revealing clothing, anything with drug/alcohol references. Contact the facility directly for their specific list before admission.
Will my employer find out I went to inpatient rehab?
No — inpatient rehab is protected under HIPAA. Your employer cannot access your medical records without your written consent. FMLA allows up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for serious health conditions including addiction treatment — and your employer only needs to know you're taking FMLA leave for a medical reason, not what the condition is.
What if I relapse after inpatient rehab?
Relapse does not mean failure — it means the disease requires more treatment. NIDA reports relapse rates of 40–60% for substance use disorders, comparable to other chronic conditions like diabetes. If relapse occurs, it typically signals that treatment needs to be resumed or modified, not that recovery is impossible. Most people who achieve long-term recovery make multiple treatment attempts.
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