0 SAMHSA-listed treatment centers in West Virginia. Free, confidential help available 24/7.
The overdose death rate in West Virginia stands at 80.9/100,000 in CDC's latest data — above the US average (32.6). Available treatment in the state covers the full ASAM continuum: medically supervised withdrawal management, 28–90-day residential stays, PHP and IOP step-down programs, and ongoing outpatient counseling.
Listings are sourced from the federal SAMHSA treatment locator and updated quarterly against state licensing-board records. No pay-for-placement.
Behavioral therapy, medication management, peer support, and family work each play a role in West Virginia addiction treatment programs. The mix varies by facility and patient profile, but the six modalities below are present in some form at virtually all accredited centers.
The standard frontline therapy for most substance-use disorders. CBT outperforms placebo and matches medication-only treatment for many alcohol and stimulant disorders.
Person-centered counseling that resolves ambivalence about change. Often used in the first weeks of treatment.
Long-term medication management is appropriate and recommended for opioid-use disorder. Discontinuation after short-term treatment raises overdose risk.
Helpful for co-occurring borderline personality, self-harm, or chronic suicidality with substance use.
Untreated trauma is a major relapse driver. Modern addiction programs offer parallel or integrated trauma-focused therapy for the substantial trauma-affected subset.
Most West Virginia programs expose patients to multiple support frameworks — AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Refuge Recovery, LifeRing — rather than insisting on one.
Lack of insurance is not a barrier to addiction treatment in West Virginia — 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.
Whether the patient is a teenager, a returning veteran, a healthcare professional, or someone managing a co-occurring mental-health diagnosis, West Virginia facilities increasingly offer matched programming designed for that demographic.
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.
The path from "I need help" to "I am in treatment" in West Virginia usually moves through five gates over 3–7 days: a confidential call, an insurance check, a clinical assessment, planning logistics, and finally arrival at the facility.
| 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 |
In West Virginia as nationally, family-focused treatment components are now standard at accredited treatment centers because the evidence base for their effectiveness has grown.
Under the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, most insurance plans in West Virginia must cover substance-use treatment at parity with physical-health benefits.
Aetna · Anthem · Blue Cross Blue Shield · Cigna · Humana · Kaiser Permanente · UnitedHealthcare · Medicare · WV Medicaid · Tricare (military) · VA Community Care
In West Virginia, Medicaid is administered as WV Medicaid. State-licensed facilities are typically required to accept it for substance-use treatment. Verify eligibility at medicaid.gov.
If you complete a residential or IOP program in West Virginia without an aftercare plan, your relapse risk is materially elevated for the first 90 days post-discharge. Most facilities build an aftercare plan with you during the last week of treatment.
Step down from PHP/IOP to weekly individual therapy + monthly med management. Most plans cover 6+ months.
Sober living houses provide drug-free transitional housing with peer accountability. NARR-certified residences in West Virginia are the safest bet — verify before signing.
Peer support groups are the longest-running aftercare modality. AA and NA are most common; SMART Recovery, LifeRing, and Refuge Recovery offer secular/cognitive alternatives.
MAT is a chronic-disease management strategy, not a short-term bridge. West Virginia patients on long-term MAT show materially lower relapse and overdose rates.
Lived-experience navigators with state certification. Particularly effective for newcomers to recovery navigating employment, housing, and court-system involvement.
Narcan (naloxone) is the overdose-reversal medication. Available without prescription at West Virginia pharmacies and from many harm-reduction organizations. Train your inner circle.
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.