Alcohol Rehab Cost: 28-Day, Annual, and Full-Episode Pricing
Alcohol rehab costs $15,000–$45,000 for a 30-day inpatient program without insurance, or $5,000–$18,000 out-of-pocket with PPO insurance. Medical detox adds $2,000–$10,000 because alcohol withdrawal can be fatal and requires 24/7 CIWA-Ar-guided benzodiazepine protocols. A full year of structured treatment — detox, inpatient, PHP, IOP, and MAT — averages $25,000–$70,000 self-pay or $8,000–$25,000 out-of-pocket with insurance.
| Level of Care | Duration | Without Insurance | With PPO |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical detox (alcohol) | 5–10 days | $2,000 – $10,000 | $800 – $4,000 |
| Inpatient residential | 30 days | $15,000 – $45,000 | $5,000 – $18,000 |
| Inpatient residential | 60 days | $28,000 – $80,000 | $8,000 – $30,000 |
| Inpatient residential | 90 days | $42,000 – $120,000 | $12,000 – $42,000 |
| Partial hospitalization (PHP) | 4–6 weeks | $6,000 – $18,000 | $2,000 – $7,500 |
| Intensive outpatient (IOP) | 8–12 weeks | $3,000 – $8,000 | $1,000 – $3,500 |
| MAT (naltrexone or Vivitrol, monthly) | Ongoing | $200 – $1,500 | $25 – $250 |
Alcohol use disorder is the most common substance use disorder in the U.S. — NIAAA reports 28.9 million adults met diagnostic criteria in 2023, yet fewer than 8% received any formal treatment. The single biggest barrier most families report is cost uncertainty. This guide answers the four questions people search most — how much to treat an alcoholic, how long is the stay, how much per year, how much for 28 days — and walks through the CIWA-Ar detox protocol, the 4-medication MAT decision tree, and the 2026 insurance math.
How Much Does It Cost to Treat an Alcoholic? (The Full Episode)
Most cost guides stop at the 30-day inpatient number. That number is the entry point, not the full episode. A clinically complete alcohol-use-disorder treatment episode stretches across 4–5 months of structured care plus year-one MAT.
| Phase | Duration | Self-Pay | PPO Out-of-Pocket |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical detox | 5–10 days | $2,000 – $10,000 | $800 – $4,000 |
| Inpatient residential | 21–25 days (within 30-day cycle) | $13,000 – $35,000 | Continues toward OOP max |
| Partial hospitalization (PHP) | 4–6 weeks | $6,000 – $18,000 | Capped by OOP max |
| Intensive outpatient (IOP) | 8–12 weeks | $3,000 – $8,000 | Capped by OOP max |
| MAT year 1 (naltrexone or acamprosate) | 12 months | $400 – $1,500 | $120 – $900 |
| Standard outpatient / aftercare year 1 | Ongoing | $1,000 – $4,000 | $300 – $900 |
| Full-episode total | 4–5 months + year 1 | $25,000 – $76,500 | $7,000 – $9,500 OOP max |
The PPO insight: Once your deductible and coinsurance add up to your annual out-of-pocket maximum ($7,000–$9,500 for individual plans in 2026, $18,900 for family), the insurer pays 100% for the rest of the plan year. Most insured alcohol-treatment patients hit their OOP max inside the first 7–14 days of inpatient care, which means PHP, IOP, MAT, and outpatient therapy through the end of the calendar year are effectively free.
For the underlying insurance math, see how much does rehab cost and does insurance cover rehab.
How Long Is the Average Alcohol Rehab Stay?
Average inpatient stay: 28–30 days. This is the industry-standard insurance billing cycle, not a clinical recommendation.
Clinically recommended total: 90+ days of structured care across the continuum.
The gap between these two numbers exists because most insurers authorize residential care in 5–14 day blocks with concurrent review, while NIDA and NIAAA research consistently shows better 12-month outcomes with longer total treatment time. The evidence-based sequence:
| Phase | Duration | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Medical detox | 5–10 days | CIWA-Ar assessment every 4 hours, benzodiazepine taper, thiamine, medical stabilization |
| Inpatient residential | 21–25 days | Individual + group therapy, initiation of MAT, family sessions, relapse prevention |
| Partial hospitalization (PHP) | 4–6 weeks | 30–40 hours/week clinical programming, return home each evening |
| Intensive outpatient (IOP) | 8–12 weeks | 9–15 hours/week, return to work with modified schedule |
| Standard outpatient + MAT | 12+ months | Weekly therapy, monthly MAT management, aftercare |
NIDA recommendation: The minimum 90 days is typically achieved by stacking inpatient + PHP + IOP, not by remaining at the most intensive level the entire time. Stacking is also more insurance-friendly — insurers readily authorize step-down even when they push back on extended inpatient.
For the step-down logic, see types of rehab programs, 30-day, 60-day, and 90-day programs.
How Much Does Alcohol Rehab Cost Per Year?
No top-ranking cost page directly answers this, but it’s the most practical question for families planning a full recovery year. The annual cost breaks into three tiers.
Year One (Full Treatment Year)
Detox + inpatient + step-down + MAT + aftercare.
- Self-pay: $25,000 – $70,000
- PPO with insurance: Capped at OOP max — typically $7,000 – $9,500
- HMO with insurance: $5,000 – $15,000 OOP
- Medicaid: $0 – $500
Year Two (Maintenance Year)
MAT continuation + standard outpatient therapy + possible sober living.
- MAT (oral naltrexone or acamprosate): $400 – $1,500 self-pay; $120 – $500 insured
- Standard outpatient (monthly–biweekly): $1,200 – $6,000 self-pay; $300 – $1,200 insured
- Sober living (if used): $6,000 – $30,000 (most plans don’t cover)
Year two without sober living: $1,600 – $7,500 self-pay; $420 – $1,700 insured.
Year Three and Beyond
Most people continue MAT plus less-frequent outpatient check-ins.
- Annual cost: $500 – $3,000 self-pay; $100 – $500 insured
One-Year Insurance Ceiling
With PPO insurance, total alcohol rehab cost in year one is bounded by your plan’s annual OOP max — it cannot exceed that number regardless of how long the treatment lasts or how expensive the facility is, as long as you stay in-network. This is why the insurance math almost always favors enrollment before paying self-pay. See how to get insurance to cover rehab.
How Much Is 28 Days of Alcohol Rehab?
The “30-day program” is almost always billed on a 28-day insurance cycle. This is the exact number most people search for.
Self-pay (in-network accredited facility): $14,000 – $42,000.
With PPO insurance, out-of-pocket:
| Plan Design | Your 28-Day OOP |
|---|---|
| $2,000 deductible / 20% coinsurance / $8,700 OOP max | $5,000 – $8,700 |
| $3,500 deductible / 30% coinsurance / $9,500 OOP max | $7,000 – $9,500 |
| $1,500 deductible / 10% coinsurance / $7,000 OOP max | $3,000 – $7,000 |
Worked example: Facility bills $35,000 for 28 days. You have $2,000 deductible, 20% coinsurance, $8,700 OOP max, $0 met year-to-date.
- Deductible: $2,000
- 20% of remaining $33,000: $6,600
- Running total: $8,600 (below OOP max — that’s what you pay)
If the facility bills $55,000 instead:
- Deductible: $2,000
- 20% of remaining $53,000: $10,600
- Running total: $12,600, capped at OOP max → $8,700
Once the facility bill crosses roughly $35,500 on this plan, your out-of-pocket is capped. Staying longer or picking a more expensive program doesn’t cost you more — it costs the insurer more. See how much does rehab cost for the same math applied to all substances.
The CIWA-Ar Protocol and Why Alcohol Detox Costs More
Alcohol detox is the most clinically intensive detox after benzodiazepines. Understanding what’s inside the per-day rate explains why it costs $250–$800/day at freestanding facilities and $1,000–$3,000+/day at hospital-based units.
Withdrawal Timeline
| Time Since Last Drink | Symptoms | Medical Priority |
|---|---|---|
| 6–24 hours | Anxiety, tremor, sweating, nausea, elevated vitals | Baseline CIWA-Ar, initiate benzodiazepine protocol |
| 24–48 hours | Peak seizure risk; symptoms intensify | Continuous monitoring, IV access, seizure precautions |
| 48–72 hours | Peak DTs risk | 1:1 monitoring if DTs develop; transfer to ICU if severe |
| Day 5–7 | Acute resolution | Taper benzodiazepines, initiate MAT planning |
| Weeks 2–8 | Post-acute withdrawal (PAWS) | Outpatient monitoring, sleep/mood support |
The CIWA-Ar Assessment
Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol, Revised. A 10-item validated scale scored every 4 hours. Items include nausea, tremor, sweats, anxiety, agitation, tactile/auditory/visual disturbances, headache, and orientation.
- Score 0–9: Mild withdrawal — symptom-triggered benzodiazepine dosing
- Score 10–19: Moderate withdrawal — scheduled benzodiazepine taper
- Score 20+: Severe withdrawal — consider ICU, continuous infusion, possible airway protection
What’s in the Per-Day Rate
- 24/7 RN/LPN coverage with CIWA-Ar assessments every 4 hours
- Daily physician rounds
- Benzodiazepine taper (lorazepam/Ativan or chlordiazepoxide/Librium)
- Thiamine 100 mg IV/IM daily before any glucose (prevents Wernicke-Korsakoff)
- Folate, multivitamin, magnesium repletion
- IV fluids with electrolytes
- Anti-nausea medication (ondansetron)
- Cardiac telemetry if indicated
- Psychiatric consultation if mood/suicidality concerns
- Seizure precautions
When Hospital-Based Detox Is Required
Freestanding detox is sufficient for most patients. Hospital-based detox is clinically required when:
- History of seizures or DTs
- Cardiac arrhythmia or severe hypertension
- Liver failure or pancreatitis
- Active suicidal ideation or psychosis
- Pregnancy
- CIWA-Ar persistently above 20
Hospital detox adds $500–$2,000 per day but is covered under your plan’s inpatient hospital benefit. See medical detox cost for the full hospital-vs-freestanding breakdown.
Which MAT Medication? (The 4-Approach Decision Tree)
Three FDA-approved medications plus one evidence-based dosing protocol. Most cost pages list them; few help you choose.
Naltrexone (Daily Oral or Monthly Vivitrol)
Mechanism: Opioid-receptor antagonist. Reduces alcohol cravings and blunts the pleasurable reward from drinking.
Best for: People who want to reduce drinking or maintain abstinence with ongoing temptation. Also used for the Sinclair Method (see below).
Form: 50 mg oral tablet (ReVia) daily, or 380 mg intramuscular injection (Vivitrol) monthly.
Cost:
- Generic oral: $30–$80/month self-pay; $10–$75 insured
- Vivitrol injection: $1,200–$1,500/month self-pay; $25–$250 insured
Acamprosate (Campral)
Mechanism: Modulates glutamate/GABA neurotransmission disrupted by chronic alcohol use. Helps the post-detox brain re-stabilize.
Best for: People who have stopped drinking and want to stay stopped. Most effective when initiated after 5–7 days of abstinence.
Form: 333 mg tablets, two tablets three times daily (1,998 mg total).
Cost: $150–$400/month self-pay; $10–$60 insured.
Disulfiram (Antabuse)
Mechanism: Blocks aldehyde dehydrogenase. Drinking alcohol while on disulfiram produces flushing, nausea, vomiting, headache, hypotension — a physically aversive reaction.
Best for: Highly motivated patients, especially with supervised dosing (spouse, clinic, court-ordered monitoring). Not a craving reducer — a deterrent.
Form: 250–500 mg tablet daily.
Cost: $30–$90/month self-pay; under $20 insured.
The Sinclair Method (Targeted Naltrexone)
Mechanism: Naltrexone taken only 1 hour before drinking (not daily). Over months, pharmacological extinction reduces the drive to drink.
Evidence: European studies since the 2000s show ~78% of compliant patients achieve reduced drinking or abstinence over 12–18 months. Still underused in U.S. clinical practice as of 2026 — which is why most cost guides omit it.
Best for: People unwilling to commit to abstinence upfront but open to cutting back.
Cost: Same as oral naltrexone — $30–$80/month self-pay, $10–$75 insured, but used more sparingly (only before drinking occasions).
Combination Therapy
The 2006 COMBINE study found that naltrexone + medical management and acamprosate + behavioral therapy both outperformed single agents for most outcomes. Many clinicians now prescribe naltrexone + acamprosate together for patients who can tolerate both.
Insurance note: MHPAEA prohibits insurers from applying more restrictive coverage to addiction medications than to comparable medications for other chronic conditions. All four approaches should be on formulary.
Alcohol Use Disorder in 2026: The Data
- 28.9 million adults had alcohol use disorder in 2023 per NIAAA/NSDUH — 11.2% of the U.S. adult population
- ~178,000 deaths/year attributable to excessive alcohol use (2020–2021 CDC data); fourth leading preventable cause of death in the U.S.
- Fewer than 8% of adults with AUD receive any formal treatment in a given year — the largest treatment gap of any SUD
- 1%–5% mortality from untreated severe alcohol withdrawal (NEJM reviews)
- $249 billion/year economic cost of excessive alcohol use per CDC — lost productivity, healthcare, criminal justice, motor vehicle crashes
These numbers are why 28.9 million people qualify for treatment but only a small fraction enter it. Cost transparency is the lever that closes the gap.
The Cost of Untreated Alcohol Use Disorder
Untreated AUD costs far more over time than any treatment episode. Typical annual spend for a person in moderate-to-severe AUD:
| Category | Annual Range |
|---|---|
| Alcohol purchases ($20–$100/day) | $7,000 – $36,000 |
| Lost wages (partial/full, 3–6 months impact) | $10,000 – $40,000 |
| Emergency department visits (1–3/year × $1,500–$3,000) | $1,500 – $9,000 |
| Hospitalizations (pancreatitis, liver failure, DTs) | $10,000 – $80,000 |
| Legal costs (DUI typical ~$10,000–$25,000 all-in) | $0 – $25,000 |
| Healthcare for related conditions | $3,000 – $20,000 |
| Conservative annual total | $31,500 – $210,000 |
Compare to a PPO-insured full treatment year capped at $7,000–$9,500 OOP. The insurance-aware math almost always favors treatment.
Does Insurance Cover Alcohol Rehab?
Yes. Under ACA and MHPAEA, alcohol use disorder is an essential health benefit. See does insurance cover rehab for the federal-law specifics. Quick summary by plan type:
| Plan Type | Network | Typical 30-Day OOP | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPO | Broad | $6,000 – $22,000 (capped at OOP max) | Best flexibility |
| HMO | Narrower | $5,000 – $17,000 | Referral often needed |
| EPO | Broad | $5,500 – $18,000 | No referral; no OON |
| Medicaid | In-network | $0 – $500 | Comprehensive |
| Medicare Advantage | Varies | $2,000 – $12,000 | Part A + Part D |
Carrier-specific detail: Aetna · Cigna · UnitedHealthcare · BCBS · Humana · Kaiser · Molina
Questions to Ask Before Admission
- Is the facility in-network for my plan?
- What is my deductible, and what’s met year-to-date?
- What is my coinsurance percentage for inpatient SUD?
- What is my out-of-pocket maximum, and what’s met?
- Is prior authorization required, and what’s the timeline?
- How many days will be initially authorized?
- Is Vivitrol covered under pharmacy or medical benefit?
- If out-of-network, can a single-case agreement be pursued?
Most facilities complete a free benefits verification on your behalf. Always get the rep’s name, reference number, and written summary.
If You Don’t Have Insurance
If you’re currently uninsured, enrollment in an ACA-compliant plan almost always costs less than self-paying for treatment. Marketplace plans with broad alcohol-treatment coverage typically run $350–$700/month — less than 4 days of self-pay residential.
For full self-pay cost breakdown and financing options, see rehab cost without insurance. A licensed specialist can help identify plans that cover the specific facility and medications you need.
Sources
- National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). “Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) in the United States: Age Groups and Demographic Characteristics.” 2024. https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/alcohols-effects-health/alcohol-topics/alcohol-facts-and-statistics
- National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). “Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment: A Research-Based Guide.” 2024. https://nida.nih.gov/publications/principles-drug-addiction-treatment-research-based-guide-third-edition
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Deaths from Excessive Alcohol Use in the United States.” 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/features/excessive-alcohol-deaths.html
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. “National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH).” 2024. https://www.samhsa.gov/data/
- Kaiser Family Foundation. “Employer Health Benefits Survey.” 2024. https://www.kff.org/health-costs/report/2024-employer-health-benefits-survey/
- American Society of Addiction Medicine. “The ASAM Clinical Practice Guideline on Alcohol Withdrawal Management.” 2020. https://www.asam.org/quality-care/clinical-guidelines
- Anton RF, et al. “COMBINE Study: Combining Medications and Behavioral Interventions for Alcoholism.” JAMA. 2006.
- Sinclair JD. “Evidence about the use of naltrexone and for different ways of using it in the treatment of alcoholism.” Alcohol and Alcoholism. 2001.
- U.S. Department of Labor. “Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act Final Rule (September 2024).” https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/laws-and-regulations/laws/mental-health-and-substance-use-disorder-parity
Your Plan May Not Cover Alcohol Treatment.
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 1-866-454-9577Free 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.
Alcohol Rehab Cost by State
State-specific alcohol treatment guides with local coverage laws, pricing, and facility context.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to treat an alcoholic?
A full alcohol-use-disorder treatment episode — medical detox, 30-day inpatient, 4–6 weeks of PHP, 8–12 weeks of IOP, and the first year of medication-assisted treatment — costs $25,000 to $70,000 without insurance. With PPO insurance, out-of-pocket for the same full episode is $8,000 to $25,000, and most patients hit their annual out-of-pocket maximum ($7,000–$9,500 in 2026) during the inpatient phase, after which the rest of the year is covered in full. Stopping at 30 days of inpatient alone is cheaper upfront but has substantially worse 12-month outcomes than the full continuum.
How long is the average alcohol rehab stay?
The average inpatient alcohol rehab stay is 28 to 30 days — the standard insurance billing cycle — but clinical evidence supports longer structured care. A typical evidence-based plan is 5–10 days of medical detox, 21–25 days of residential inpatient, 4–6 weeks of partial hospitalization, and 8–12 weeks of intensive outpatient, totaling 4–5 months of structured treatment. NIDA and NIAAA both recommend a minimum of 90 days of total structured care (across all levels) for moderate to severe alcohol use disorder to reach significantly better 12-month abstinence outcomes.
How much does alcohol rehab cost per year?
The first full year of alcohol rehab — detox, inpatient, PHP, IOP, MAT, and aftercare — costs $25,000 to $70,000 without insurance. With PPO coverage, year-one out-of-pocket is usually capped by your annual out-of-pocket maximum at $7,000 to $9,500 per person in 2026. Ongoing MAT (naltrexone, acamprosate, or disulfiram) plus quarterly outpatient therapy in years two and beyond costs $500 to $3,000 annually self-pay or $100 to $500 with insurance. Sober living, if used in year one, adds $500 to $2,500 per month.
How much is 28 days of alcohol rehab?
A 28-day inpatient alcohol rehab stay — the standard insurance billing cycle for what's marketed as a '30-day program' — costs $14,000 to $42,000 without insurance and $5,000 to $20,000 out-of-pocket with PPO insurance. If the stay includes medical detox (days 1–7), add $1,750 to $7,000 self-pay or $800 to $4,000 with insurance. Because most 2026 PPO plans cap out-of-pocket at $7,000–$9,500, insured patients typically hit that ceiling within the first two weeks and pay $0 for the remainder of the stay.
Does insurance cover alcohol rehab?
Yes. Under the Affordable Care Act and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, every marketplace plan and most employer plans must cover alcohol use disorder treatment as an essential health benefit. Coverage includes medical detox, residential inpatient, PHP, IOP, standard outpatient, and MAT medications. PPO plans typically pay 60–80% after deductible. HMO plans require in-network facilities with copay or coinsurance. Medicaid plans cover alcohol treatment with $0–$100 copays. The 2024 MHPAEA final rule strengthened parity enforcement against arbitrary denials.
How long is alcohol detox?
Medical detox for alcohol takes 5 to 10 days. Minor withdrawal symptoms begin 6 to 24 hours after the last drink. Seizure risk peaks 24–48 hours after cessation. Delirium tremens (DTs) risk peaks days 3–5. Acute withdrawal largely resolves by day 7. Post-acute withdrawal syndrome (PAWS) — intermittent sleep disruption, mood changes, cravings — can persist 4 to 12 weeks into residential and outpatient treatment. Because alcohol withdrawal can be fatal, inpatient medical detox with CIWA-Ar-guided benzodiazepine protocols is the clinical standard for moderate-to-severe dependence.
Why is alcohol detox more dangerous than opioid detox?
Alcohol and benzodiazepines are the two substances where withdrawal can kill you. Alcohol withdrawal can cause grand-mal seizures (roughly 5% of heavy drinkers in withdrawal) and delirium tremens (DTs), which carry a 1%–5% mortality rate without medical treatment. Opioid withdrawal, by contrast, is intensely uncomfortable but almost never fatal in itself — the risk with opioids is post-detox overdose from tolerance loss, not withdrawal. This medical danger is why alcohol detox requires 24/7 nursing, CIWA-Ar scoring every 4 hours, benzodiazepine taper protocols, and thiamine/vitamin supplementation to prevent Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome — all of which drives higher daily rates than opioid detox.
Which MAT medication works best for alcohol use disorder?
All three FDA-approved medications work, but they're chosen based on the clinical situation. Naltrexone (oral or monthly Vivitrol injection) reduces cravings and blunts alcohol's reward — most effective for people who want to cut back or for the Sinclair Method (targeted dosing only before drinking). Acamprosate (Campral) stabilizes brain chemistry after detox and supports complete abstinence — best for people who have stopped drinking and want to stay stopped. Disulfiram (Antabuse) creates a physical aversive reaction to alcohol — best as a deterrent for motivated patients with supervised dosing. Combination therapy (naltrexone + acamprosate) outperformed single agents in the COMBINE study.