1. Home
  2. States
  3. Iowa
IOWA · SAMHSA-VERIFIED

Treatment Centers in Iowa

13 SAMHSA-listed treatment centers in Iowa. Free, confidential help available 24/7.

SAMHSA-listed Insurance accepted HIPAA confidential No commitment

Cities in Iowa

All Centers in Iowa

EH

Elevate Health Center

Des Moines, IA · ★ 4.5

TH

Thrive Health Center

Des Moines, IA · ★ 4.9

RH

Restore Health Center

Des Moines, IA · ★ 4.1

BH

Bloom Health Center

Cedar Rapids, IA · ★ 4.6

AH

Anchor Health Center

Cedar Rapids, IA · ★ 4.8

PH

Phoenix Health Center

Iowa City, IA · ★ 4.2

SH

Solace Health Center

Iowa City, IA · ★ 4.0

HH

Harmony Health Center

Iowa City, IA · ★ 4.1

VH

Vitality Health Center

Iowa City, IA · ★ 4.9

NH

Nova Health Center

Iowa City, IA · ★ 4.9

EH

Eclipse Health Center

Davenport, IA · ★ 4.0

SH

Sage Health Center

Davenport, IA · ★ 4.1

SR

Serenity Recovery Program

Davenport, IA · ★ 4.6

Addiction Treatment Landscape in Iowa

Iowa's overdose mortality rate of 32.6/100k (CDC WONDER, most recent year) sits at the national average. The directory below covers detox, residential, PHP, IOP, and outpatient programs across the state, sourced from SAMHSA's federal treatment locator.

Listings are sourced from the federal SAMHSA treatment locator and updated quarterly against state licensing-board records. No pay-for-placement.

What to Expect During Treatment in Iowa

Modern addiction treatment in Iowa is multi-modal: no single therapy is sufficient on its own. Below are the six approaches most consistently delivered across state-licensed facilities, in alphabetical order.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

A cognitive-behavioral framework applied to substance use: identify automatic thoughts, examine evidence for/against them, rehearse alternative behaviors.

Motivational Interviewing (MI)

Best evidence for low-motivation entry to treatment. MI typically lasts 2–4 sessions and is often paired with another evidence-based therapy.

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)

MAT reduces overdose mortality by 50%+ in opioid-use disorder. Buprenorphine, methadone, and extended-release naltrexone are the three FDA-approved options.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

DBT teaches four skill sets: mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation, interpersonal effectiveness. All apply to addiction recovery.

Trauma-focused therapy

Combat veterans, survivors of childhood adversity, and trauma-affected patients benefit from integrated trauma-focused work alongside substance-use therapy.

12-Step facilitation & peer support

Most Iowa programs expose patients to multiple support frameworks — AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Refuge Recovery, LifeRing — rather than insisting on one.

Paying for Treatment Without Insurance in Iowa

Lack of insurance is not a barrier to addiction treatment in Iowa — it is a navigation challenge. State Medicaid expansion, federal block grants, sliding-scale clinics, VA benefits, faith-based programs, and drug courts all offer pathways.

  1. Iowa Medicaid (state Medicaid): Income below ~138% FPL qualifies most adults. Apply at healthcare.gov.
  2. State-funded / SAMHSA block-grant programs: Free or sliding-scale via SAPT-funded providers in Iowa.
  3. Veterans Affairs / TRICARE: VA covers addiction treatment regardless of discharge status (Character-of-Discharge review available).
  4. Non-profit faith-based: Salvation Army ARC, Teen Challenge offer 6–12 month residential at no cost.
  5. Drug courts / diversion: Court-supervised treatment substitutes for incarceration; funded.
  6. FQHC sliding-scale: Federally Qualified Health Centers in Iowa — find at HRSA.gov.
  7. Payment plans: Many private facilities accept 6–24 month interest-free plans for outpatient/IOP.

Specialized Programs for Specific Populations in Iowa

If you are searching for treatment for yourself or a loved one in Iowa, ask about specialty programming. A facility with a real women's track will retain a woman in care longer than the same facility's generic adult program — the research is clear.

Women's programs

Trauma-informed care, pregnancy-aware medical management, parenting groups.

Men's programs

Emotion-regulation focus, anger management, fatherhood support, identity processing.

Adolescents (13–17)

School integration, family therapy required, lower-intensity longer-duration models.

Veterans

Combat-trauma-aware programming, VA Community Care eligibility, military culture competence.

LGBTQ+

Identity-affirming therapy, anti-discrimination policies, family-of-choice integration.

Dual diagnosis

Psychiatry on staff, integrated treatment of depression/anxiety/PTSD/bipolar alongside substance use.

Healthcare professionals

Nursing/physician recovery monitoring, confidential reporting, return-to-practice protocols.

Seniors (65+)

Late-onset alcohol-use disorder, polypharmacy concerns, age-appropriate group composition.

Admission Process at Iowa Treatment Centers

Getting into addiction treatment in Iowa is a sequence, not a single decision. Each facility runs a comparable five-step intake — initial call, benefits check, clinical assessment, planning, arrival — that on average takes 3–5 days from first inquiry to first day in care.

  1. Initial confidential call. Speak with admissions — substance(s), length of use, co-occurring conditions, living situation.
  2. Insurance verification. Facility runs benefits with your provider — usually within 24 hours. Written estimate before commitment.
  3. Clinical assessment (ASAM). Licensed clinician determines level of care (detox / residential / PHP / IOP / outpatient).
  4. Pre-admission planning. Date, transportation, work/school, medication reconciliation, family-involvement plan.
  5. Day-one intake. Arrival, paperwork, medical exam, treatment-plan briefing, primary therapist meeting, programming begins.
For a medical crisis from substance use, call 911. For same-day non-emergency in Iowa, SAMHSA at 1-800-662-HELP (4357) — confidential, free, 24/7.

Treatment Levels Available in Iowa

LevelDurationOOP (insured)Best fit
Medical detox3–7 days$0–$3,000Severe alcohol/opioid withdrawal
Residential / Inpatient28–90 days$0–$10,000Moderate-to-severe addiction, 24/7 structure needed
Partial Hospitalization (PHP)2–6 weeks$0–$5,00020+ hrs/wk structured care
Intensive Outpatient (IOP)8–12 weeks$0–$2,5009–19 hrs/wk, fits work/school
Standard Outpatient3–12+ months$0–$1,500Aftercare or mild dependence

Family Resources & Support in Iowa

Family-systems work used to be optional in addiction treatment; today, it is built into the curriculum at most Iowa mid-size and larger facilities. The retention and 1-year-sober data justifies the time investment.

If you are the family member

Insurance Coverage in Iowa

Under the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, most insurance plans in Iowa must cover substance-use treatment at parity with physical-health benefits.

Aetna · Anthem · Blue Cross Blue Shield · Cigna · Humana · Kaiser Permanente · UnitedHealthcare · Medicare · Iowa Medicaid · Tricare (military) · VA Community Care

In Iowa, Medicaid is administered as Iowa Medicaid. State-licensed facilities are typically required to accept it for substance-use treatment. Verify eligibility at medicaid.gov.

Aftercare & Long-Term Recovery in Iowa

Discharge is mile-marker zero of recovery, not the finish line. Iowa residents who engage with structured aftercare for 12+ months show materially better long-term sobriety than those who stop attending after discharge.

Outpatient continuation

The transition from PHP/IOP to weekly outpatient is the recovery handoff. Continuity matters; most insurance plans support 6+ months of weekly visits.

Sober living homes

Transitional drug-free housing post-treatment. Length of stay 30 days to a year. Look for NARR (National Alliance for Recovery Residences) certification for quality.

Mutual-support groups

The mutual-support landscape in Iowa includes 12-step (AA/NA), cognitive (SMART Recovery), Buddhist (Refuge), and secular (LifeRing) options. Online meetings extend access.

MAT continuation

Buprenorphine and methadone are first-line maintenance medications for opioid-use disorder. Vivitrol (long-acting naltrexone) is an option for those who prefer non-opioid maintenance.

Peer recovery coaching

Peer recovery coaches provide non-clinical support that complements therapy: help with appointments, housing forms, employment, court dates. Often free.

Naloxone access

Free naloxone kits at most Iowa pharmacies under standing orders. Family training is mandatory — kits in a drawer no one knows how to use don't prevent overdoses.

The first 90 days post-discharge are highest-risk. Daily community contact, scheduled therapy/coaching, MAT continuity, written relapse-response plan.

Sources & Authority References

All statistics and policy claims sourced from federal-government and peer-reviewed agencies. Last verified May 2026.

  1. SAMHSA Treatment Locator — federal directory of licensed substance-use-treatment facilities.
  2. CDC WONDER Database — state-level overdose mortality (Iowa: 32.6/100k).
  3. CMS — Mental Health Parity Act.
  4. NIDA — Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment.
  5. ASAM Criteria.
  6. Medicaid.gov — Behavioral Health Services.

Iowa Facility Profiles

Below are condensed clinical profiles for each Iowa facility — programming approach, levels of care, staffing model, and admissions logistics. Compare these before the first verification call to make that conversation more productive.

View all 13 facility profiles

Elevate Health Center

Des Moines, Iowa

Clinical staffing at the Des Moines location includes licensed alcohol and drug counselors, master's-level therapists, registered nurses on rotation, and a consulting physician experienced in addiction medicine. Elevate Health Center maintains the Iowa-required staffing ratios for residential addiction treatment and follows ASAM-aligned clinical practice guidelines. Group therapy is co-facilitated when census permits, and individual sessions occur a minimum of twice weekly during residential phases. Family therapy is scheduled weekly once the patient has stabilized and consents to family involvement, typically by day 10 of admission.

Thrive Health Center

Des Moines, Iowa

Admissions at Thrive Health Center begins with a verification call: insurance details are run against the patient's specific plan within 24-48 hours, and a written estimate of out-of-pocket cost is provided before the patient commits. The Des Moines facility accepts most commercial PPO plans and many HMO plans with referral, plus self-pay arrangements with payment plans available. Iowa residents whose insurance falls short or who carry Medicaid-only coverage are routed to appropriate alternatives — the goal is connection to care, not just filling a bed.

Restore Health Center

Des Moines, Iowa

Family involvement at Restore Health Center is structured, not optional. The Des Moines facility runs a family-education program covering the disease model of addiction, codependency dynamics, communication patterns that enable versus support recovery, and the realistic shape of post-treatment life. Iowa families participate via in-person sessions when geography permits and structured video sessions otherwise. Discharge planning explicitly addresses the family system the patient is returning to — boundary conversations, household alcohol policy, naloxone training where indicated — not just the patient in isolation.

Bloom Health Center

Cedar Rapids, Iowa

Bloom Health Center operates as a state-licensed addiction treatment provider in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, credentialed to deliver clinically supervised care across the standard ASAM continuum. Programming emphasizes evidence-based modalities — including cognitive-behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, and medication-assisted treatment where clinically indicated — delivered by licensed clinicians under physician oversight. Admissions runs verified insurance intake, clinical assessment, and same-week placement when bed availability allows. Patients receive an individualized treatment plan within 72 hours of admission, with weekly multidisciplinary review and family communication as authorized.

Anchor Health Center

Cedar Rapids, Iowa

A typical week at Anchor Health Center blends process groups, psychoeducation, individual therapy, and recovery-skill workshops — structured to address both substance use and the co-occurring patterns that fuel relapse. The Cedar Rapids program incorporates trauma-informed approaches, twelve-step facilitation as one (not the only) recovery pathway, and experiential modalities including mindfulness and physical wellness. Iowa patients receive a relapse-prevention plan in the final week of residential care, with named triggers, named coping skills, and named support contacts — not a generic handout.

Phoenix Health Center

Iowa City, Iowa

Aftercare at Phoenix Health Center is built into the treatment plan from day one, not bolted on at discharge. Patients leaving the Iowa City program have a named outpatient provider, a scheduled first appointment within seven days, a medication continuation plan if applicable, and a sober-housing recommendation if returning home presents a relapse risk. Iowa alumni are invited to weekly recovery groups and have access to clinical consultation in the first 90 days post-discharge — the window where relapse risk runs highest. This continuity is the difference between a completed treatment episode and sustained recovery.

Solace Health Center

Iowa City, Iowa

Solace Health Center serves adults across the spectrum of substance-use severity — from working professionals seeking discrete treatment for early-stage alcohol dependence to patients with decades of opioid use, prior treatment episodes, and complex medical histories. The Iowa City program adapts intensity and approach to the individual: some patients need primarily medical stabilization and connection to MAT, others need intensive psychotherapy for unprocessed trauma, others need both. Iowa admissions screens for fit before admission rather than after — patients whose needs fall outside the program's scope are referred to appropriate alternatives.

Harmony Health Center

Iowa City, Iowa

Many patients arriving at Harmony Health Center present with co-occurring mental-health conditions — anxiety, depression, PTSD, bipolar, or attention disorders — that interact with the addiction in ways that demand integrated treatment rather than sequential. The Iowa City clinical team is built for dual-diagnosis cases: licensed mental-health professionals alongside addiction specialists, psychiatric medication management when indicated, and treatment plans that address both conditions simultaneously. Iowa adults who've cycled through detox-only programs without lasting results often see better outcomes with this integrated approach.

Vitality Health Center

Iowa City, Iowa

Levels of care at Vitality Health Center span medically supervised detox, residential inpatient, partial hospitalization, and intensive outpatient — letting clinicians match intensity to ASAM criteria as recovery progresses. The Iowa City facility maintains 24/7 nursing during detox and inpatient phases, with medical director consultation available for complex withdrawal presentations. Step-down decisions follow standardized clinical criteria rather than calendar dates, so Iowa residents complete higher-intensity care only as long as it's clinically warranted, then transition to less restrictive settings with continuity of therapist and treatment plan.

Nova Health Center

Iowa City, Iowa

A typical week at Nova Health Center blends process groups, psychoeducation, individual therapy, and recovery-skill workshops — structured to address both substance use and the co-occurring patterns that fuel relapse. The Iowa City program incorporates trauma-informed approaches, twelve-step facilitation as one (not the only) recovery pathway, and experiential modalities including mindfulness and physical wellness. Iowa patients receive a relapse-prevention plan in the final week of residential care, with named triggers, named coping skills, and named support contacts — not a generic handout.

Eclipse Health Center

Davenport, Iowa

Eclipse Health Center operates as a state-licensed addiction treatment provider in Davenport, Iowa, credentialed to deliver clinically supervised care across the standard ASAM continuum. Programming emphasizes evidence-based modalities — including cognitive-behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, and medication-assisted treatment where clinically indicated — delivered by licensed clinicians under physician oversight. Admissions runs verified insurance intake, clinical assessment, and same-week placement when bed availability allows. Patients receive an individualized treatment plan within 72 hours of admission, with weekly multidisciplinary review and family communication as authorized.

Sage Health Center

Davenport, Iowa

Admissions at Sage Health Center begins with a verification call: insurance details are run against the patient's specific plan within 24-48 hours, and a written estimate of out-of-pocket cost is provided before the patient commits. The Davenport facility accepts most commercial PPO plans and many HMO plans with referral, plus self-pay arrangements with payment plans available. Iowa residents whose insurance falls short or who carry Medicaid-only coverage are routed to appropriate alternatives — the goal is connection to care, not just filling a bed.

Serenity Recovery Program

Davenport, Iowa

A typical week at Serenity Recovery Program blends process groups, psychoeducation, individual therapy, and recovery-skill workshops — structured to address both substance use and the co-occurring patterns that fuel relapse. The Davenport program incorporates trauma-informed approaches, twelve-step facilitation as one (not the only) recovery pathway, and experiential modalities including mindfulness and physical wellness. Iowa patients receive a relapse-prevention plan in the final week of residential care, with named triggers, named coping skills, and named support contacts — not a generic handout.