Rehab Cost in Idaho: 2026 Treatment Cost Guide

Updated April 2026

340 Drug Overdose Deaths (2022) Source: CDC WONDER — National Vital Statistics System
18 Inpatient Facilities Source: SAMHSA Treatment Locator
8.8% Uninsured Rate (2023) Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 2023
$14,000–$40,000 30-Day Inpatient (Uninsured) Source: Idaho treatment center surveys / RehabNet.com

Idaho recorded an estimated 340 drug overdose deaths in 2022, a rate of approximately 17 per 100,000 residents according to CDC WONDER data. While Idaho’s overall overdose rate remains below the national average of 32 per 100,000, the state has experienced a steady increase in fentanyl-involved deaths since 2019, and methamphetamine continues to drive the majority of treatment admissions. The Idaho Office of Drug Policy reports that fentanyl now accounts for more than 70% of opioid-involved overdose deaths — a dramatic shift from 2018 when prescription opioids dominated.

Idaho’s treatment landscape was reshaped in January 2020 when Medicaid expansion took effect following the 2018 voter approval of Proposition 2. An estimated 90,000 additional adults gained Medicaid coverage, closing the coverage gap and dramatically expanding access to substance use disorder treatment. Idaho has approximately 112 licensed treatment facilities statewide (including 18 offering residential or inpatient care), with the greatest concentration in the Boise metropolitan area. This guide breaks down what rehab actually costs in Idaho, what insurance and Medicaid cover, and how to find help anywhere in the state.

Rehab Costs in Idaho: 2026 Overview

Treatment TypeWithout InsuranceWith PPO InsuranceDuration
Medical Detox$1,400 – $5,500$500 – $2,8005-14 days
Inpatient Rehab$14,000 – $40,000$5,000 – $18,00030 days
Luxury/Executive Rehab$35,000 – $65,000+$12,000 – $28,00030 days
Outpatient IOP$2,500 – $8,000$700 – $3,200per month
Standard Outpatient$900 – $3,600$275 – $1,300per month
Medication-Assisted Treatment$225 – $700/month$20 – $160/monthongoing
Sober Living Housing$500 – $1,600/monthtypically not coveredongoing

Source: Idaho treatment center surveys; RehabNet.com; ClearCostRecovery aggregated data, 2026.

Idaho treatment costs run slightly above the national average for the Mountain West, largely because facility capacity is concentrated in a small number of metropolitan areas (Boise, Nampa, Idaho Falls, Coeur d’Alene) while demand spans a very large rural territory. Daily inpatient rates typically range from $450 to $1,300. Sun Valley and Ketchum-area luxury programs command premium pricing well above mainstream Boise rates.

Why Idaho Rehab Costs Vary So Widely

Several Idaho-specific factors drive the wide cost range in the state:

Limited Residential Capacity: Idaho has only 18 residential/inpatient facilities statewide serving nearly 2 million residents. Limited supply combined with steady demand keeps private-pay rates elevated.

Boise Market Concentration: More than half of Idaho’s residential treatment capacity sits in Ada and Canyon counties. Boise-area programs face higher labor and real estate costs than rural competitors.

Rural Travel Burden: For residents in the Panhandle, Eastern Idaho, or the Magic Valley, traveling to residential treatment adds time, transportation expense, and family disruption costs. Many rural residents ultimately cross state lines to Washington, Montana, or Utah for care.

Luxury Sun Valley Premium: Ketchum and Sun Valley host a small number of executive and luxury programs charging $40,000-$80,000+ per month, pulling the upper end of Idaho’s published cost range well above the median.

Geographic Cost Variation:

  • Boise/Nampa Metro: $14,000-$35,000 (largest market, highest volume)
  • Idaho Falls/Eastern Idaho: $12,000-$28,000 (moderate market)
  • Coeur d’Alene/Panhandle: $14,000-$32,000 (growing market)
  • Twin Falls/Magic Valley: $10,000-$22,000 (smaller market)
  • Sun Valley/Ketchum: $35,000-$80,000+ (luxury/executive tier)

Idaho’s Treatment Landscape

Idaho has approximately 112 licensed substance use treatment facilities, including 18 offering residential or inpatient care, according to the SAMHSA Treatment Locator. The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Division of Behavioral Health licenses providers and administers state and federal block grant funding through seven regional behavioral health authorities.

Distribution of Treatment Facilities in Idaho

Treatment capacity follows Idaho’s population centers:

  • Ada County (Boise): 32 facilities (state’s treatment hub)
  • Canyon County (Nampa/Caldwell): 14 facilities
  • Kootenai County (Coeur d’Alene): 11 facilities (Panhandle hub)
  • Bonneville County (Idaho Falls): 10 facilities (Eastern Idaho hub)
  • Twin Falls County: 8 facilities (Magic Valley)
  • Bannock County (Pocatello): 7 facilities
  • Nez Perce County (Lewiston): 5 facilities

Rural Idaho counties — particularly in the Panhandle, Central Mountains, and Owyhee region — often have no residential treatment and limited outpatient options. Telehealth-delivered MAT and counseling have become critical access points for these communities.

Key Idaho Treatment Regulations

Medicaid Expansion (2020): Idaho voters approved Medicaid expansion via Proposition 2 in 2018. Coverage began January 2020, adding approximately 90,000 adults earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level. This closed Idaho’s coverage gap and expanded SUD treatment access.

Idaho Behavioral Health Plan: Idaho Medicaid administers SUD and mental health benefits through a statewide managed care contract (currently with Magellan Healthcare). All medically necessary SUD treatment — including ASAM levels 1.0 through 3.7 — is covered.

Division of Behavioral Health: Idaho’s Division of Behavioral Health licenses providers, administers the federal Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (SAPT) Block Grant, and operates state hospitals (State Hospital North, State Hospital South).

Behavioral Health Crisis Centers: Idaho operates four regional Behavioral Health Crisis Centers (Boise, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Falls, Twin Falls) providing 24-hour walk-in crisis stabilization — a model that has reduced emergency room utilization and jail bookings.

Insurance Coverage in Idaho

Idaho’s uninsured rate of 8.8% (U.S. Census Bureau, 2023 ACS) is close to the national average. Your Health Idaho, the state-based marketplace, enrolled more than 100,000 residents for 2025 coverage.

Major Insurance Carriers in Idaho

Blue Cross of Idaho — Idaho’s largest commercial health insurer. Broad statewide provider network and comprehensive behavioral health coverage including residential and MAT.

Regence BlueShield of Idaho — Second-largest Idaho carrier. Strong employer plan presence and comprehensive SUD benefits.

SelectHealth — Intermountain Healthcare-affiliated insurer with significant Eastern Idaho presence. Behavioral health benefits cover residential, PHP, IOP, outpatient, and MAT.

PacificSource Health Plans — Regional carrier with growing Idaho membership. Community-based behavioral health network.

Mountain Health CO-OP — Small co-op insurer offering marketplace plans in Idaho and Montana.

Molina Healthcare / Magellan — Idaho Medicaid managed behavioral health administration.

What Insurance Covers in Idaho

Under the ACA and Idaho insurance law, commercial plans must cover:

  • Inpatient/residential treatment: 24/7 care in a licensed facility
  • Partial hospitalization (PHP): 6+ hours/day of structured programming
  • Intensive outpatient (IOP): 9-12 hours/week of therapy
  • Standard outpatient therapy: Weekly counseling sessions
  • Medication-assisted treatment: Buprenorphine, methadone, naltrexone, and related monitoring
  • Medical detoxification: Medically supervised withdrawal management
  • Psychiatric care: For co-occurring mental health conditions
  • Crisis intervention: Emergency behavioral health services

Don’t Have Insurance in Idaho?

Idaho expanded Medicaid in 2020, creating more pathways to coverage than existed for the prior decade. Options include:

Idaho Medicaid: Covers adults earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level. Apply at idalink.idaho.gov, call 2-1-1, or visit a local Department of Health and Welfare office. If you qualify, comprehensive SUD treatment is covered at minimal or no cost.

Your Health Idaho (ACA Marketplace): Idaho operates its own state-based marketplace at yourhealthidaho.org. Open enrollment runs November 1 through December 15. Most enrollees qualify for premium tax credits, with many paying $0-$75/month after subsidies. All marketplace plans cover SUD treatment as an essential health benefit.

State-Funded Treatment: The Idaho Division of Behavioral Health administers federal block grant funding through seven regional behavioral health authorities. Uninsured residents can access no-cost or sliding-scale treatment through contracted providers.

Free and Low-Cost Programs:

  • Boise Rescue Mission Ministries — Long-term residential recovery for men and women
  • Teen Challenge Pacific Northwest — Faith-based long-term residential
  • Terry Reilly Health Services — Federally Qualified Health Center with sliding-scale outpatient and MAT
  • Heritage Health (North Idaho) — FQHC with behavioral health integration
  • Family Health Services (Twin Falls) — FQHC with sliding-scale SUD services

Detox Costs in Idaho

Alcohol Detox: $200-$475 per day ($1,400-$6,650 total for 7-14 days). Alcohol withdrawal can be life-threatening and requires 24/7 medical monitoring.

Opioid Detox: $200-$425 per day ($1,400-$4,250 total for 7-10 days). Most Idaho programs use buprenorphine-assisted withdrawal rather than abrupt cessation.

Benzodiazepine Detox: $225-$500 per day ($3,150-$7,000 for 14 days). Requires slow tapering due to seizure risk.

Methamphetamine/Stimulant Detox: $175-$375 per day ($875-$2,625 for 5-7 days). Meth withdrawal requires psychiatric monitoring for severe depression, fatigue, and suicidal ideation. Given Idaho’s meth-dominant drug landscape, most Idaho detox programs are experienced with stimulant withdrawal management.

Fentanyl Detox: $200-$450 per day ($2,000-$4,500 for 10+ days). Fentanyl’s potency often requires extended stabilization and micro-dosing buprenorphine induction.

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) Costs in Idaho

Suboxone (buprenorphine/naloxone):

  • Without insurance: $300-$600/month
  • With PPO insurance: $20-$150/month
  • With Idaho Medicaid: Free for eligible members

Methadone:

  • Without insurance: $250-$450/month (includes daily dosing and counseling)
  • With Idaho Medicaid: Covered
  • With private insurance: $40-$175/month

Vivitrol (extended-release naltrexone):

  • Without insurance: $1,250-$1,600 per monthly injection
  • With insurance: $0-$250/month
  • Patient assistance programs available through Alkermes

Oral Naltrexone:

  • Without insurance: $40-$110/month
  • With insurance: $10-$35/month

MAT access is strongest in Boise, Nampa, Idaho Falls, and Coeur d’Alene. Rural access is improving through telehealth buprenorphine prescribing, but methadone remains limited to a small number of certified opioid treatment programs.

Free and Low-Cost Treatment Options in Idaho

State-Funded Treatment Through Regional Behavioral Health Authorities

Idaho’s seven Regional Behavioral Health Authorities coordinate state-funded treatment for uninsured and underinsured residents:

  1. Call 988 for crisis support and immediate referral
  2. Contact your Regional Behavioral Health Authority — Each of Idaho’s seven regions maintains an intake and referral line
  3. Request an assessment — Regional authorities arrange no-cost or sliding-scale placement at contracted providers
  4. Access services — Covered services include crisis stabilization, outpatient counseling, MAT, and limited residential treatment

Federally Qualified Health Centers

Idaho has more than a dozen FQHCs offering sliding-scale SUD services — no one is turned away for inability to pay. Key providers include Terry Reilly Health Services (Treasure Valley), Heritage Health (Panhandle), Family Health Services (Twin Falls), and Health West (Southeast Idaho).

Faith-Based and Nonprofit Programs

Boise Rescue Mission Ministries — Operates long-term residential recovery programs for men (Lighthouse Rescue Mission) and women (City Light Home for Women and Children).

Teen Challenge Pacific Northwest — Long-term faith-based residential program with Idaho intake.

Salvation Army — Operates residential programs in Boise with work-therapy recovery model.

How Long Does Rehab Take in Idaho?

30-Day Programs: Most common length. Appropriate for moderate addiction with strong outpatient follow-through and support systems.

60-Day Programs: Better outcomes for moderate-to-severe addiction. Programs like Northpoint Recovery and Ashwood Recovery offer extended stays.

90-Day Programs: Evidence-based best practice. NIDA research shows 90+ days produces significantly better one-year outcomes.

Long-Term Residential (6-12 months): Available through faith-based programs (Boise Rescue Mission, Teen Challenge) and some state-funded therapeutic community placements.

Idaho Treatment Continuum:

  1. Medical detox (5-14 days)
  2. Residential/inpatient (30-90 days)
  3. Partial hospitalization (2-6 weeks, 5-6 hours/day)
  4. Intensive outpatient (8-12 weeks, 9-15 hours/week)
  5. Standard outpatient and recovery support (ongoing)

Choosing the Right Rehab in Idaho

When evaluating Idaho treatment programs:

State Licensing: Verify the facility holds a current Idaho Department of Health and Welfare license.

Accreditation: Joint Commission, CARF, or COA accreditation signals quality above minimum licensing standards.

Evidence-Based Practices: Look for cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, trauma-informed care, and contingency management — the last is especially important given Idaho’s methamphetamine burden.

MAT Availability: For opioid use disorder, programs offering on-site buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone induction produce better outcomes than abstinence-only models.

Dual Diagnosis Capability: More than 60% of people with SUD have co-occurring mental health conditions. Prioritize programs with integrated psychiatric care.

Telehealth Bridge: For residents returning to rural areas, ask whether the program offers telehealth follow-up and MAT continuation.

Idaho Addiction Resources

Crisis and Referral Hotlines

  • 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: 988 (call or text, 24/7)
  • Idaho Crisis & Suicide Hotline: 988 or 1-208-398-4357
  • Idaho CareLine 2-1-1: Treatment navigation and referral
  • SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7)

State Agencies

Recovery Support

  • Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) Idaho: Statewide meetings through Area 18
  • Narcotics Anonymous (NA) Idaho: Statewide meetings
  • Idaho Recovery Community Center (Boise): Peer recovery support
  • SMART Recovery: Science-based alternative to 12-step, multiple Idaho locations
  • Celebrate Recovery: Faith-based recovery support

Final Thoughts: Getting Help in Idaho

Idaho expanded Medicaid in 2020, fundamentally changing treatment access for low-income residents. Combined with robust Your Health Idaho marketplace enrollment and a growing network of state-funded Behavioral Health Crisis Centers, Idaho now offers more coverage pathways than at any point in the state’s history.

  1. Call 988 or 2-1-1 for immediate crisis support and treatment navigation
  2. Check Idaho Medicaid eligibility — expansion covers adults earning up to 138% FPL
  3. Explore Your Health Idaho marketplace plans — subsidized ACA coverage starting as low as $0-$75/month
  4. Visit a Behavioral Health Crisis Center — walk-in stabilization in Boise, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Falls, and Twin Falls
  5. Contact your Regional Behavioral Health Authority — no-cost state-funded treatment for uninsured residents

Idaho’s methamphetamine-dominant crisis requires programs that specialize in stimulant use disorder treatment, while the state’s rapidly rising fentanyl involvement demands broad MAT availability. Treatment works — and Idaho’s expanded Medicaid and regional crisis centers have made access easier than ever.

Sources

  • CDC WONDER, National Vital Statistics System, 2022. wonder.cdc.gov
  • Idaho Office of Drug Policy. odp.idaho.gov
  • Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, Division of Behavioral Health. healthandwelfare.idaho.gov
  • SAMHSA Treatment Locator, Idaho. Accessed April 2026. findtreatment.gov
  • U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2023. data.census.gov
  • Your Health Idaho 2025 Open Enrollment Report. yourhealthidaho.org
  • CMS Marketplace 2025 Open Enrollment Period Report. cms.gov
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse, Treatment Duration and Outcomes Research. nida.nih.gov
  • RehabNet.com, Idaho Facility Cost Surveys, 2025.

Your Plan May Not Cover Treatment in Idaho.

Even with insurance, many people discover their plan doesn't cover residential treatment at the level they need. A broker who specializes in behavioral health coverage can review your situation and find a plan that works.

Call 1-866-454-9577

Free Consultation · No Obligation

Prodest Insurance Group is a licensed, independent health insurance brokerage. Calling the number above connects you with a licensed insurance agent, not a treatment facility. Insurance placement is a separate service from treatment referral.

Idaho Crisis Resources

Idaho Crisis & Suicide Hotline / 988: 988

Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, Division of Behavioral Health: https://healthandwelfare.idaho.gov/services-programs/behavioral-health

SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357

Cost estimates are based on aggregated data and may vary by facility and individual circumstances. Statistics are sourced from government and institutional databases. This is not medical advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does rehab cost in Idaho?

A 30-day inpatient rehab program in Idaho costs $14,000 to $40,000 without insurance. With PPO coverage, out-of-pocket costs typically run $5,000 to $18,000. Idaho expanded Medicaid in 2020, so qualifying low-income residents may have substance use disorder treatment coverage. Most private treatment facilities are concentrated in the Boise metro area, with Blue Cross of Idaho and Regence BlueShield as the dominant commercial carriers.

What is the cheapest rehab option in Idaho?

Affordable options include Idaho Medicaid for eligible residents (expanded in 2020), Blue Cross of Idaho in-network facilities, and SAMHSA-funded programs through the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Division of Behavioral Health. Faith-based programs like Boise Rescue Mission also offer free or donation-based long-term residential recovery. Federally Qualified Health Centers such as Terry Reilly Health Services offer sliding-scale outpatient treatment statewide.

Does insurance cover drug rehab in Idaho?

Yes. All private insurance plans sold in Idaho must cover substance use disorder treatment as an essential health benefit under the ACA. Idaho enforces the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. Idaho expanded Medicaid in 2020 after voter approval of Proposition 2. Blue Cross of Idaho, Regence BlueShield, SelectHealth, and PacificSource are the dominant carriers — call the behavioral health number on your insurance card to verify inpatient benefits.

Does Idaho Medicaid cover drug rehab?

Yes. Idaho Medicaid covers medical detox, inpatient and residential treatment, outpatient counseling, medication-assisted treatment, and psychiatric care for eligible members. Idaho voters approved Medicaid expansion in 2018 and coverage took effect in January 2020, adding approximately 90,000 residents to the Medicaid rolls. Expansion closed the coverage gap and significantly expanded treatment access for low-income adults. Apply at idalink.idaho.gov or call 2-1-1.

How much is 28 days in rehab in Idaho?

A 28–30 day inpatient rehab program in Idaho costs approximately $14,000 to $40,000 without insurance. With PPO insurance, out-of-pocket costs typically range from $5,000 to $18,000 depending on your deductible, coinsurance, and whether the facility is in-network. Luxury or executive programs in the Sun Valley/Ketchum area can exceed $50,000 for 30 days. Use our free cost calculator to estimate your specific costs.

How long is rehab on average in Idaho?

The average inpatient stay in Idaho is 30 days, though NIDA recommends 90+ days for best outcomes. Idaho programs commonly offer 30, 60, and 90-day residential options. Ashwood Recovery, Northpoint Recovery, and Intermountain Hospital offer various program lengths. Long-term residential (6-12 months) is available through faith-based organizations like Teen Challenge of Idaho and Boise Rescue Mission's recovery programs.

Why is methamphetamine Idaho's biggest addiction problem?

Methamphetamine is Idaho's dominant drug of concern, driving a larger share of treatment admissions and overdose deaths than any other substance. Idaho's proximity to West Coast drug trafficking routes, rural geography, and historically strong meth market have kept stimulant use disorder high. Unlike opioids, there is no FDA-approved medication for methamphetamine use disorder — treatment relies on behavioral therapies including contingency management, cognitive behavioral therapy, and the Matrix Model. Idaho treatment programs specializing in stimulant use disorder include Ashwood Recovery and Idaho Falls-area facilities.

Where are the best rehabs in Idaho?

Leading Idaho treatment programs include Ashwood Recovery (Boise) — evidence-based residential and outpatient; Northpoint Recovery (Boise) — 30-90 day residential with detox; Intermountain Hospital (Boise) — inpatient psychiatric and dual-diagnosis care; Walker Center (Gooding) — long-standing Magic Valley residential; and Teen Challenge of the Pacific Northwest — long-term faith-based. Look for Joint Commission or CARF accreditation, evidence-based practices, MAT availability, and dual diagnosis capability.

How much does detox cost in Idaho?

Medical detox in Idaho costs $200-$500 per day without insurance, with total costs ranging from $1,400 to $5,500 depending on the substance and length of stay. Alcohol and benzodiazepine detox require 5-14 days and close medical monitoring. Opioid detox takes 7-10 days. With PPO insurance, out-of-pocket costs for detox typically run $500-$2,800. Idaho Medicaid covers medically necessary detox for eligible members.

What should I do if I'm in rural Idaho and can't reach treatment?

Rural Idaho residents face significant treatment access barriers. Options include: telehealth outpatient and MAT services (expanded permanently post-pandemic), Idaho's Behavioral Health Crisis Centers in Boise, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho Falls, and Twin Falls (walk-in crisis stabilization), transportation assistance through some Medicaid managed care plans, and regional behavioral health authorities that coordinate referrals. Call 988 for immediate crisis support or 2-1-1 for treatment navigation.

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