Drug & Alcohol Rehab in Colorado

29 verified providers across Colorado · sourced from SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov · refreshed monthly · Last reviewed: June 2026 · Data refreshed from SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov

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Need drug and alcohol rehab for a loved one in Colorado? Senova lists 29 verified SAMHSA-listed substance use treatment providers drawn directly from SAMHSA's FindTreatment.gov national directory. Information is refreshed monthly.

About drug and alcohol rehab in Colorado

Substance use treatment ranges from short-term outpatient counseling to long-term residential rehab and medication-assisted treatment. The right level of care depends on the substance, severity, mental-health co-occurrence, and home support.

Services typically offered

Insurance, Medicare, and Medicaid coverage

Most providers accept some combination of Medicaid, Medicare (limited), private insurance, sliding-scale self-pay, and state-funded coverage for those without insurance. Federal parity laws require most plans to cover addiction treatment at the same level as physical health care.

Colorado Medicaid covers drug and alcohol rehab for qualifying residents. Income limits and waiver names vary; apply through your state Medicaid agency or at healthcare.gov.

Colorado Medicaid & eligibility deep dive

Medicaid coverage in Colorado

Colorado Medicaid covers drug and alcohol rehab for qualifying low-income residents through Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers. Income limits, waiver names, and covered services vary by state. Most states cap individual income eligibility around 300% of SSI (≈$2,901/month in 2026) and require a documented need for nursing-facility-level care. Apply through Colorado Medicaid or via healthcare.gov.

Colorado drug and alcohol rehab by the numbers

How much does drug and alcohol rehab cost in Colorado?

PayerCoverageOut-of-pocket
MedicareLimited — outpatient mental health visits covered with copay; substance-use treatment partially covered20% coinsurance after Part B deductible
MedicaidYes — through state HCBS waivers for qualifying low-income residents$0 for most enrollees; small copays in some states
Private insuranceMost plans cover drug and alcohol rehab subject to network rules and prior authDeductible + 10–30% coinsurance typical
Private payOutpatient: $50–$200/session. IOP: $3,000–$10,000. Residential: $5,000–$30,000+ for 30 daysFull cost
Long-term care insuranceGenerally not — designed for chronic-care servicesPer policy

Costs are 2026 estimates. Verify with the specific provider before scheduling.

How to choose a drug and alcohol rehab provider

When you compare drug and alcohol rehab providers, focus on five things: (1) certification status (Medicare- or Medicaid-certified for clinical care; SAMHSA-listed for behavioral health), (2) services offered relative to the specific need, (3) which insurance plans and Medicaid waivers they accept, (4) how quickly they can start, (5) patient and family reviews where available. Reputable providers explain coverage, costs, and care plans up front; high-pressure sales tactics are a red flag.

Before signing a care agreement, ask for the answers to these questions in writing: which services are billed to Medicare/Medicaid versus billed to you out of pocket; who is the primary care coordinator; how the agency handles after-hours calls and emergencies; the typical response time for new requests; and two or three references from current patients or families. Providers who refuse to share references are a yellow flag — keep looking.

Related guides

What you'll find on this page

This page covers every drug and alcohol rehab provider with a verified address in Colorado. For a tighter view, check the city pages for specific Colorado cities below. Click any provider's name below to view their full profile — address, phone, services, ownership, certification details, and how to contact them. Senova never charges patients or families for these listings, and providers cannot pay to appear higher on this page.

About this data

Senova is a free, independent directory of care providers. We do not run any of the agencies listed below — we surface them from authoritative federal data so you can find them faster. Our data source is SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov. If you spot outdated or incorrect information, the source dataset is publicly auditable and refreshed by the federal government on a monthly basis. To request a correction directly, contact SAMHSA at 1-877-SAMHSA-7 or the provider directly.

Map: Drug & Alcohol Rehab across Colorado

Map shows approximate locations of drug and alcohol rehab providers across Colorado. Pins are powered by Google Maps and may include providers beyond Senova's verified directory.

All Drug & Alcohol Rehab providers in Colorado

Showing 201–229 of 229 providers.

  1. 6655 West Jewell Avenue Suite 100, Denver, CO, 80232
    303-975-1922
  2. 200 West B Street Suite 100, Pueblo, CO, 81003
    719-595-1634
  3. 700 Four Mile Parkway, Canon City, CO, 81212
    719-276-7500
  4. 4200 Morrison Road Unit 8, Denver, CO, 80219
    303-934-3040
  5. 1400 North Dayton Street, Aurora, CO, 80010
    720-920-9508
  6. 12445 East 39th Avenue Unit 207, Denver, CO, 80239
    720-335-6651
  7. 301 Knox Court, Denver, CO, 80219
    303-937-1333
  8. 2029 Larimer Street, Denver, CO, 80205
    303-295-7837
  9. 7251 East 49th Avenue, Commerce City, CO, 80022
    303-321-2533 x219
  10. 330 Fiedler Avenue Suite 103, Dillon, CO, 80435
    888-233-1553
  11. 4401 South Quebec Street, Denver, CO, 80237
    720-484-4996
  12. 3601 South Broadway, Englewood, CO, 80113
    303-658-0059
  13. 1648 Gaylord Street, Denver, CO, 80206
    303-388-5894
  14. 1620 Gaylord Street, Denver, CO, 80206
    303-388-5894
  15. 3738 West Princeton Circle, Denver, CO, 80236
    303-934-1008
  16. 3844 West Princeton Circle, Denver, CO, 80236
    303-761-7626
  17. 6303 Wadsworth Bypass, Arvada, CO, 80003
    303-935-7004
  18. 7108 South Alton Way Building A, Englewood, CO, 80112
    785-877-5111
  19. 22422 East Main Street, Parker, CO, 80138
    785-877-5111
  20. 189 East 9th Avenue, Springfield, CO, 81073
    800-511-5446
  21. 220 East 1st Street, Ordway, CO, 81063
    800-511-5446
  22. 100 Kendall Drive, Lamar, CO, 81052
    800-511-5446
  23. 711 Barnes Avenue, La Junta, CO, 81050
    800-511-5446
  24. 6901 South Pierce Street Suite 100-F, Littleton, CO, 80127
    720-692-7918
  25. 9769 West 119th Drive Suite 32, Broomfield, CO, 80021
    720-692-7918
  26. 3210 East Road, Clifton, CO, 81520
    970-245-4214
  27. 458 Ranney Street, Craig, CO, 81625
    970-824-5870
  28. 2045 West Victory Way, Craig, CO, 81625
    970-824-2557
  29. 810 Lincoln Avenue Suite 200, Steamboat Springs, CO, 80487
    970-879-7708

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does drug and alcohol rehab cost in Colorado?

Cost varies dramatically based on level of care. Outpatient counseling can be $50–$200 per session with insurance; intensive outpatient runs $3,000–$10,000 for a typical course; residential treatment ranges from $5,000 to $30,000+ for 30 days. Medicaid covers drug and alcohol rehab for qualifying residents, and most providers below accept sliding-scale or state-funded coverage for the uninsured.

Does Medicaid cover drug and alcohol rehab in Colorado?

Yes — every state's Medicaid program covers drug and alcohol rehab for qualifying residents, though program names, income limits, and waivers vary. Start at healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip or contact your state Medicaid agency directly.

How do I choose the right drug and alcohol rehab provider?

Compare providers on five things: (1) certification status — Medicare/Medicaid certified or, for behavioral health, SAMHSA-listed; (2) services offered relative to your specific needs; (3) which insurance plans and Medicaid waivers they accept; (4) how quickly they can start care; (5) patient and family reviews where available. Reputable agencies provide written care plans, clear cost breakdowns, and answer questions without high-pressure sales tactics.

What's the difference between inpatient and outpatient rehab?

Inpatient (residential) rehab: the patient lives at the facility for 28–90+ days, with 24-hour clinical supervision. Best for severe addiction, multiple relapses, unsafe home environment, or co-occurring mental health needs. Outpatient: the patient lives at home and attends treatment 1–5 days per week. Levels include standard outpatient (1–2 hrs/week), Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP, 9–20 hrs/week), and Partial Hospitalization Programs (PHP, 20+ hrs/week). The right level depends on substance, severity, and home support.

Are these providers verified?

Yes. Every facility on this page is listed in the federal SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov national directory and refreshed monthly. SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration) is the U.S. government agency responsible for behavioral health services. Inclusion in their directory means the facility has reported its services and contact info to the federal government.

Does Senova charge for using this directory?

No. Senova is free for patients and families. We never charge to view providers, request a callback, or save vendors to your account. We don't sell your contact information. Providers can also list their agency for free; we offer optional paid plans only for premium features like priority placement on relevant searches.

Can I request a call back from a specific provider?

Yes. Click "Request vendor to contact me" on any provider card. If you're not signed in, you'll be prompted to create a free account first (takes 30 seconds) so the provider has your contact info. Your request is logged in your profile under "Callback Requests" — you can track which providers you've contacted and when.

Are reviews on Senova verified?

Reviews labeled "Verified" come from users who used Senova to request a callback from that provider — meaning they had a real interaction. Unverified reviews come from any signed-in user. We don't allow anonymous reviews and we don't accept paid reviews from providers. If you spot a review that looks fake, contact us at hello@senova.info.

What's the difference between Medicare and Medicaid for drug and alcohol rehab?

Medicare is the federal health insurance for people 65+ and certain younger adults with disabilities — it covers drug and alcohol rehab when criteria are met (homebound status, physician order, skilled need). Medicaid is the joint federal-state program for low-income Americans — it covers drug and alcohol rehab more broadly through state HCBS waivers. Many people qualify for both ("dual-eligible") and use them together to maximize coverage.

What if I'm in a mental-health or substance-use crisis right now?

Don't wait for a directory listing — call or text 988 immediately for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (free, confidential, 24/7), or call SAMHSA's helpline at 1-800-662-4357 for substance use treatment referrals. If there's immediate danger to yourself or someone else, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room. The providers below are for ongoing treatment after the immediate crisis is stabilized.

How often is the data on this page updated?

Senova refreshes the underlying federal datasets on the 1st of every month. SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov publishes updates approximately quarterly, and we sync within 24 hours of their release. Provider information that changes more often (phone numbers, addresses, accepted insurance) is only as current as the federal source — call the provider directly to confirm critical details before scheduling care.

About this directory

Senova is an independent directory of Medicare-, Medicaid-, and SAMHSA-listed care providers across the United States. We do not own, operate, or accept payment from any provider listed on this page. Listings are sourced from federal government datasets and refreshed monthly.

Sources: SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov national directory, refreshed monthly.

Medical disclaimer: This page lists care providers and explains how state and federal coverage works. It is not medical advice. For medical decisions, consult a licensed physician. In a behavioral-health crisis, call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline). For a substance use emergency, call SAMHSA's free 24/7 helpline at 1-800-662-4357.