0 SAMHSA-listed treatment centers in Washington. Free, confidential help available 24/7.
Per CDC WONDER's latest reporting cycle, Washington sees 32.5 overdose deaths per 100,000 people — below the US average (32.6/100k). The full ASAM treatment continuum is represented on this page, with most listed facilities offering outpatient or IOP-level care and a meaningful minority providing residential or detox services.
Listings are sourced from the federal SAMHSA treatment locator and updated quarterly against state licensing-board records. No pay-for-placement.
Modern addiction treatment in Washington 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.
A short-term, goal-focused therapy. CBT for addiction works on identifying high-risk situations and rehearsing alternative responses before they occur in the wild.
For ambivalent patients, MI outperforms didactic education. The clinician evokes rather than installs reasons for change.
Long-term medication management is appropriate and recommended for opioid-use disorder. Discontinuation after short-term treatment raises overdose risk.
Useful when the patient struggles with emotion regulation, chronic suicidality, or self-harm in addition to substance use.
About half of people entering addiction treatment also meet criteria for a trauma-related diagnosis. Specific therapies (EMDR, CPT, Seeking Safety) address both.
For aftercare, peer-led mutual-support is often the highest-impact, lowest-cost component. Multiple frameworks exist; finding the right fit matters.
Without insurance, the cost of Washington treatment can seem prohibitive, but every uninsured-pathway in the state has been used by real people. The trick is matching pathway to your circumstance: income, veteran status, court involvement, religious openness.
Generic addiction programming works for some; targeted programming works better for many. Below are the population-specific tracks most commonly available across mid-size and larger Washington treatment centers.
Trauma-informed care, pregnancy-aware medical management, parenting groups.
Emotion-regulation focus, anger management, fatherhood support, identity processing.
School integration, family therapy required, lower-intensity longer-duration models.
Combat-trauma-aware programming, VA Community Care eligibility, military culture competence.
Identity-affirming therapy, anti-discrimination policies, family-of-choice integration.
Psychiatry on staff, integrated treatment of depression/anxiety/PTSD/bipolar alongside substance use.
Nursing/physician recovery monitoring, confidential reporting, return-to-practice protocols.
Late-onset alcohol-use disorder, polypharmacy concerns, age-appropriate group composition.
For most Washington residents, the admission pipeline runs: free confidential phone consultation → insurance verification (24 hours) → ASAM clinical assessment → logistics planning → arrival day. Same-day starts are available at facilities offering medically supervised detox.
| Level | Duration | OOP (insured) | Best fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical detox | 3–7 days | $0–$3,000 | Severe alcohol/opioid withdrawal |
| Residential / Inpatient | 28–90 days | $0–$10,000 | Moderate-to-severe addiction, 24/7 structure needed |
| Partial Hospitalization (PHP) | 2–6 weeks | $0–$5,000 | 20+ hrs/wk structured care |
| Intensive Outpatient (IOP) | 8–12 weeks | $0–$2,500 | 9–19 hrs/wk, fits work/school |
| Standard Outpatient | 3–12+ months | $0–$1,500 | Aftercare or mild dependence |
Family involvement in Washington treatment programs has moved from optional extra to core curriculum over the last 15 years. Programs that engage at least one family member during treatment have measurably lower 1-year relapse rates.
Under the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, most insurance plans in Washington must cover substance-use treatment at parity with physical-health benefits.
Aetna · Anthem · Blue Cross Blue Shield · Cigna · Humana · Kaiser Permanente · UnitedHealthcare · Medicare · Apple Health · Tricare (military) · VA Community Care
In Washington, Medicaid is administered as Apple Health. State-licensed facilities are typically required to accept it for substance-use treatment. Verify eligibility at medicaid.gov.
Treatment alone does not produce long-term sobriety in Washington; structured aftercare during the 12 months after discharge does most of the work. Plan for it before treatment ends, not after.
Step down from PHP/IOP to weekly individual therapy + monthly med management. Most plans cover 6+ months.
A drug-free environment with house rules, peer accountability, and employment expectations. Sober living can be 30 days to 12+ months. Check NARR certification.
AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Celebrate Recovery, Refuge Recovery, LifeRing, Women for Sobriety.
MAT is a chronic-disease management strategy, not a short-term bridge. Washington patients on long-term MAT show materially lower relapse and overdose rates.
A growing component of Washington's recovery infrastructure: certified peer specialists who have lived experience and state credentials. Available through many Medicaid plans.
Free naloxone kits at most Washington 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.
All statistics and policy claims sourced from federal-government and peer-reviewed agencies. Last verified May 2026.