50 verified providers across Ohio · sourced from SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov · refreshed monthly · Last reviewed: June 2026 · Data refreshed from SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov
Looking for drug and alcohol rehab in Ohio? Senova lists 50 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 Ohio
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
- Outpatient counseling
- Intensive outpatient programs (IOP)
- Partial hospitalization (PHP)
- Residential / inpatient rehab
- Medication-assisted treatment (methadone, buprenorphine, naltrexone)
- 12-step facilitation and group therapy
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.
Ohio Medicaid covers drug and alcohol rehab through the Ohio Home Care Waiver program. To qualify, residents typically need to meet the financial threshold (about $2,901/month for an individual) and have a documented care need that would otherwise require nursing-facility-level care. Applications go through Ohio Department of Medicaid, which is also the licensing authority for these providers.
Ohio Medicaid & eligibility deep dive
Eligibility for Ohio Medicaid
To qualify for drug and alcohol rehab under Ohio Medicaid, applicants generally need to meet two criteria: financial eligibility and a documented care need. Financial eligibility is based on income — typically $2,901/month for an individual — and on countable assets, usually capped around $2,000 for an individual (with separate rules for spouses). The care-need test typically requires a level-of-care assessment showing the applicant would need nursing-facility-level care without home- and community-based support.
The Ohio Home Care Waiver program
Ohio's primary vehicle for drug and alcohol rehab coverage is the Ohio Home Care Waiver. Covered services typically include outpatient counseling, intensive outpatient programs, partial hospitalization, residential treatment for qualifying conditions, medication-assisted treatment for substance use disorder, and crisis intervention. Some programs require pre-authorization through a managed-care organization.
How to apply
- Complete the Medicaid application through Ohio Department of Medicaid (medicaid.ohio.gov/), by phone, in person at a local office, or through healthcare.gov.
- Provide income documentation (pay stubs, tax returns, Social Security benefit letters), bank statements, and proof of citizenship or legal residency.
- Once enrolled in Medicaid, request a long-term services and supports (LTSS) assessment to determine eligibility for the Ohio Home Care Waiver.
- If approved, you can choose any participating drug and alcohol rehab provider — the ones listed below all accept Medicaid where they have contracts.
Application timelines vary: Medicaid itself can be approved in 30–45 days for most applicants, while waiver enrollment may take 60–180 days due to assessments and waitlists. Some Ohio regions have shorter waitlists than others — typically urban metros move faster than rural counties.
Ohio drug and alcohol rehab by the numbers
- 50 verified SAMHSA-listed substance use treatment providers across Ohio.
- Sourced from SAMHSA FindTreatment.gov (the federal substance use & mental health directory), refreshed monthly.
- Ohio Medicaid is Ohio's primary public payer for drug and alcohol rehab.
- Average wait time to start care varies — urban metros generally start within 7–14 days; rural counties may take 30+ days.
How much does drug and alcohol rehab cost in Ohio?
| Payer | Coverage | Out-of-pocket |
|---|
| Medicare | Limited — outpatient mental health visits covered with copay; substance-use treatment partially covered | 20% coinsurance after Part B deductible |
| Ohio Medicaid | Yes — through Ohio Home Care Waiver for qualifying low-income residents | $0 for most enrollees; small copays in some states |
| Private insurance | Most plans cover drug and alcohol rehab subject to network rules and prior auth | Deductible + 10–30% coinsurance typical |
| Private pay | Outpatient: $50–$200/session. IOP: $3,000–$10,000. Residential: $5,000–$30,000+ for 30 days | Full cost |
| Long-term care insurance | Generally not — designed for chronic-care services | Per 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 Ohio. For a tighter view, check the city pages for specific Ohio 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.
- Cleveland Clinic
1730 West 25th Street Suite 2-A, Cleveland, OH, 44113
216-425-7411
- Cleveland Treatment Center Inc
1127 Carnegie Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44115
216-861-4246 x240
- Clinic 5 Llc
1466 Northwest Boulevard, Columbus, OH, 43212
614-598-9960
- Clinic Security And Logistics
7400 Swaney Road, Bluffton, OH, 45817
800-829-5461
- Clinic Security And Logistics
20 Livingston Avenue, Dayton, OH, 45403
800-829-5461
- Coleman Health Services
400 Tuscarawas Street West Suite 200, Canton, OH, 44702
330-438-2400
- Coleman Health Services
3920 Lovers Lane, Ravenna, OH, 44266
330-673-1347
- Columbiana County Mh Center
40722 State Route 154, Lisbon, OH, 44432
330-424-9573
- Columbiana County Mh Center
166 Vine Avenue, Salem, OH, 44460
330-332-1514
- Columbiana County Mh Center
15613 Pineview Drive Suite A, East Liverpool, OH, 43920
330-386-9004
- Columbus Public Health
240 Parsons Avenue, Columbus, OH, 43215
614-645-9671
- Commquest Services Inc
130 1st Street NW, Massillon, OH, 44647
330-833-0234
- Commquest Services Inc
1711 Spring Avenue NE, Canton, OH, 44714
330-454-6800
- Commquest Services Inc
625 Cleveland Avenue NW Canton Campus, Building B, Canton, OH, 44702
330-445-2677
- Commquest Services Inc
1680 Nave Road SE Building A, Massillon, OH, 44646
330-830-8740
- Commquest Services Inc
1341 Market Avenue North, Canton, OH, 44714
330-453-8252
- Commquest Services Inc
1207 West State Street Suites F and M, Alliance, OH, 44601
330-821-8407
- Community Action Against Addiction
5209 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44103
216-881-0765 x202
- Community Assessment And Trt Servs
8411 Broadway Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44105
216-441-0200
- Community Assessment And Trt Servs
5162 Broadway Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44127
216-441-0200
- Community Behavioral Health
820 South MLK Jr Boulevard, Hamilton, OH, 45011
513-887-8500
- Community Counseling
2458 Stetzer Road, Bucyrus, OH, 44820
419-562-2000
- Community Counseling Ctr Of Ashtabula
2801 C Court, Ashtabula, OH, 44004
440-998-4210
- Community For New Direction
3901 East Livingston Avenue, Columbus, OH, 43227
614-252-4941 x50
- Community Medical Services
2727 Saint Johns Road Suite D, Lima, OH, 45804
567-940-9145
- Community Medical Services
42-44 East Crescentville Road, Cincinnati, OH, 45246
513-671-7117
- Community Medical Services
6495 East Broad Street Suite F, Columbus, OH, 43213
380-799-5750
- Community Medical Services
2828 Carnegie Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44115
216-859-9500
- Community Medical Services
1380 Dublin Road Suite 100, Columbus, OH, 43215
614-488-7117
- Community Medical Services
6300 Brookpark Road, Cleveland, OH, 44129
440-672-6955
- Community Medical Services
2632 Woodman Center Court, Dayton, OH, 45420
937-739-7100
- Community Medical Services
1151 South High Street Suite F, Columbus, OH, 43206
380-242-4500
- Compass Family And Community Services
320 High Street NE, Warren, OH, 44481
330-394-9090
- Compdrug
547 East 11th Avenue, Columbus, OH, 43211
614-224-4506
- Complete Healthcare
5888 Cleveland Avenue, Columbus, OH, 43231
614-882-4343
- Complete Healthcare
16645 Square Drive, Marysville, OH, 43040
614-882-4343
- Complete Healthcare
3180 East Broad Street, Columbus, OH, 43209
614-882-4343
- Complete Healthcare
1539 West Broad Street, Columbus, OH, 43222
614-882-4343
- Complete Healthcare
430 North Memorial Drive, Lancaster, OH, 43130
614-882-4343
- Complete Healthcare
118 West High Street, London, OH, 43140
614-882-4343
- Complete Healthcare
670 Hill Road North, Pickerington, OH, 43147
614-882-4343
- Concord Counseling Services
700 Brooksedge Boulevard, Westerville, OH, 43081
614-882-9338
- Cornell Abraxas Group Llc
2775 State Route 39, Shelby, OH, 44875
419-747-3322
- Coshocton Cnty Drug/Alc Council Inc
610 Walnut Street, Coshocton, OH, 43812
740-622-0033 x104
- Courage House
Newark, OH, 43055
740-345-5074
- Court Clinic
909 Sycamore Street, Cincinnati, OH, 45202
513-651-9300
- Crossroads Center
311 Martin Luther King Drive East, Cincinnati, OH, 45219
513-475-5300
- Cuyahoga County Court Of Common Pleas
310 West Lakeside Suite 500, Cleveland, OH, 44113
216-443-8250
- Darke County Recovery Services
228 North Barron Street, Eaton, OH, 45320
937-456-7694
- Darke County Recovery Services
600 Walnut Street, Greenville, OH, 45331
937-548-6842
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does drug and alcohol rehab cost in Ohio?
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. Ohio 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 Ohio?
Yes. Ohio Medicaid covers drug and alcohol rehab through Ohio Home Care Waiver. Eligibility is based on financial need (typically $2,901/month for an individual) and a documented care need that would otherwise require nursing-facility-level care. Apply through Ohio Department of Medicaid or use the federal portal at healthcare.gov.
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.