Opioid Rehab Cost: 28-Day, Annual Pricing, and MAT Economics

With Insurance (PPO) $7,500 – $22,000 30-day inpatient
Without Insurance $18,000 – $55,000 30-day inpatient

Updated April 2026

Opioid rehab costs $18,000 to $55,000 for a 30-day inpatient program without insurance, or $7,500 to $22,000 out-of-pocket with PPO insurance. Medical detox adds $2,000 to $8,000. MAT with buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone adds $100 to $1,800 per month self-pay ($10–$300 insured). Total first-year recovery cost runs $25,000–$75,000 self-pay or is capped at your $7,000–$9,500 annual out-of-pocket maximum with PPO coverage.

PhaseDurationWithout InsuranceWith PPO
Medical detox5–10 days$2,000 – $8,000$1,200 – $5,000
Inpatient residential30 days$18,000 – $55,000$7,500 – $22,000
Inpatient residential60 days$36,000 – $110,000$12,000 – $44,000
Inpatient residential90 days$54,000 – $165,000Capped at OOP max
PHP4–6 weeks$6,000 – $20,000Capped at OOP max
IOP8–12 weeks$3,000 – $10,000Capped at OOP max
MAT (monthly)12–24+ months$100 – $1,800$10 – $300

Opioid use disorder remains one of the most urgent public health crises in the U.S. CDC data show roughly 81,000 opioid-involved overdose deaths in 2023, with fentanyl driving approximately 75% of that total. SAMHSA data indicate 2.5 million adults had past-year opioid use disorder in 2023, yet fewer than 20% received evidence-based treatment including MAT. This guide answers the four questions people search most — is it free with insurance, annual cost, 28-day pricing, and self-pay pricing — and covers the post-2023 X-waiver elimination and 2024 MHPAEA final rule changes that most opioid cost pages haven’t updated for.

Is Opioid Rehab Free With Insurance?

Not literally free — but your out-of-pocket is capped, and the cap is often hit during inpatient, making the rest of the year effectively free.

How the Cap Works

  1. You pay the deductible first. Typical 2026 PPO deductibles run $1,500–$3,500 per individual.
  2. Coinsurance kicks in. Insurance pays 60–80%; you pay 20–40% until your OOP max is met.
  3. Out-of-pocket maximum. 2026 ACA-compliant individual plans cap OOP at $7,000–$9,500. Family plans cap at $18,900.
  4. After OOP max, insurance pays 100% for the rest of the plan year.

What This Looks Like for Opioid Treatment

TimingTypical Outcome
Days 1–7 of inpatientDeductible + coinsurance eats $3,000–$6,000
Days 8–14 of inpatientTypically hits OOP max ($7,000–$9,500)
Days 15–30 of inpatient$0 to you — insurance pays 100%
PHP (weeks 5–8)$0 — still capped
IOP (weeks 9–20)$0 — still capped
MAT for rest of calendar year$0 copay — still capped
MAT in next plan yearSubject to new-year deductible

By Plan Type

  • PPO: $7,000–$9,500 typical individual OOP max
  • HMO: $5,000–$17,000 typical 30-day OOP (lower deductibles, lower OOP max often)
  • EPO: $5,500–$18,000
  • Medicaid: $0–$100 for full treatment
  • Medicare Advantage: Varies; Part A covers inpatient, Part D covers MAT

See does insurance cover rehab for full coverage mechanics.

What Is the Cost to Rehabilitate for One Year?

This is the most complete framing of recovery cost, and it’s absent from every top-ranking opioid cost page.

Year One (Full Recovery Year)

Detox + 30-day inpatient + PHP + IOP + MAT for 12 months + aftercare.

ItemSelf-Pay Range
Medical detox (5–10 days)$2,000 – $8,000
30-day inpatient$18,000 – $55,000
4–6 weeks PHP$6,000 – $20,000
8–12 weeks IOP$3,000 – $10,000
MAT year 1 (generic bup)$1,200 – $3,600
MAT year 1 (Sublocade or Brixadi)$7,200 – $21,600
Standard outpatient year 1$1,500 – $6,000
Full year 1 self-pay total$31,700 – $124,200
Full year 1 with PPOCapped at $7,000 – $9,500
Full year 1 with Medicaid$0 – $500

Year Two (Maintenance)

  • MAT (generic bup): $1,200 – $3,600 self-pay; $120 – $900 insured
  • Sublocade or Brixadi: $7,200 – $21,600 self-pay; $600 – $3,600 insured
  • Standard outpatient (monthly): $1,200 – $2,400 self-pay; $300 – $900 insured
  • Total year 2: $2,400 – $24,000 self-pay; $420 – $4,500 insured

Year Three and Beyond

Most patients continue MAT plus quarterly outpatient check-ins.

  • Annual cost: $1,500 – $10,000 self-pay; $200 – $2,000 insured

How Much Is 28 Days of Opioid Rehab?

The “30-day program” is almost always billed on a 28-day insurance cycle.

  • Self-pay: $16,500 – $51,000
  • PPO out-of-pocket: $7,000 – $20,500 — typically capped at your OOP max

Worked Example

Facility bills $38,000 for 28 days. Plan: $2,500 deductible / 20% coinsurance / $9,000 OOP max.

  • Deductible: $2,500
  • 20% of remaining $35,500: $7,100
  • Running total: $9,600, capped at OOP max → $9,000

Once the bill crosses roughly $35,000 on this plan, your cost is capped. Longer stays or more expensive facilities cost the insurer, not you.

The X-Waiver Elimination (January 2023): What Changed

Before January 2023, physicians needed a special DEA “X-waiver” to prescribe buprenorphine — a major barrier that limited the number of prescribers to roughly 100,000 nationally. The Mainstreaming Addiction Treatment Act eliminated this requirement. Any DEA-registered prescriber can now prescribe buprenorphine.

Practical impact for patients:

  • Primary care physicians can now prescribe buprenorphine
  • Telehealth MAT access has expanded
  • Wait times for MAT initiation have dropped substantially
  • Office-based MAT is now viable for more patients

Cost impact: Increased competition and access typically put downward pressure on MAT prices over time.

The 2024 MHPAEA Final Rule: Impact on Opioid MAT Access

The September 2024 Department of Labor/HHS/Treasury final rule strengthened parity enforcement. Key changes for opioid MAT:

  • Non-quantitative treatment limitations (NQTL) comparability: Insurers must demonstrate their prior-auth, step-therapy, and formulary rules for buprenorphine are no stricter than comparable medical-surgical medications
  • Outcomes data requirement: Plans must collect and evaluate denial rate data
  • Faster reversal of inappropriate denials: Appeal paths are more plan-friendly

Historically, many plans required failed Vivitrol or counseling before approving buprenorphine. These step-therapy barriers are now subject to parity comparability review and often can’t survive scrutiny.

MAT for Opioid Use Disorder (Full Medication Table)

MedicationAdministrationSelf-Pay MonthlyInsured MonthlyNIDA Retention Data
Generic buprenorphine (SL)Daily sublingual$100 – $300$10 – $75Strong 12-mo retention
Suboxone (brand)Daily sublingual$400 – $600$25 – $150Same as generic
SublocadeMonthly subcutaneous injection$1,600 – $1,900$50 – $300Improved retention vs oral
BrixadiWeekly or monthly injection$600 – $1,800$50 – $350New (FDA 2023); adopted 2024–2026
MethadoneDaily at certified OTP$300 – $600$50 – $200Strongest evidence for severe OUD
Vivitrol (naltrexone)Monthly IM injection$1,200 – $1,500$50 – $250Requires 7–14 day opioid-free window

Long-Term MAT Economics

Over 5 years at generic bup prices: $6,000–$18,000 self-pay or $600–$4,500 insured. Over 10 years: $12,000–$36,000 self-pay or $1,200–$9,000 insured.

Compare to the cost of one overdose-related hospital admission ($10,000–$80,000+) or one year of active opioid use (substance costs $18,000–$36,000 + legal + lost wages + healthcare). Long-term MAT is routinely the cheapest path.

Opioid Detox: Timeline and Protocol

Time Since Last UseSymptomsClinical Priority
6–12 hours (short-acting)Anxiety, yawning, sweating, muscle achesCOWS baseline, comfort meds
12–30 hours (long-acting / fentanyl)Delayed onset — same symptomsLow-dose bup induction considered
24–72 hoursPeak — muscle pain, GI symptoms, tachycardiaCOWS-guided bup induction
Day 5–7 (short-acting)Resolution of acute symptomsContinue MAT
Day 7–10 (fentanyl)Extended resolutionContinue low-dose induction titration
Weeks 2–8PAWS — mood/sleep/cravingsOutpatient MAT and therapy

What’s Included in the Detox Rate

24/7 nursing, daily physician rounds, COWS assessments every 4 hours, buprenorphine induction (traditional or low-dose for fentanyl), clonidine, loperamide, anti-nausea meds, sleep aids, IV fluids as needed, psychiatric consultation, and warm handoff to ongoing MAT and therapy.

For full protocol walkthrough, see medical detox cost. For fentanyl-specific protocols, see fentanyl rehab cost. For heroin, see heroin rehab cost.

Naloxone (Narcan): Harm Reduction That Pays

Naloxone became over-the-counter in September 2023. Two-dose nasal spray retails around $45–$50. Many states distribute it free through pharmacies, syringe services, or community programs. Having naloxone on hand has become standard harm reduction for any household affected by opioid use.

Cost insurance covers: Most insurance plans now cover at least one naloxone formulation at $0 copay under preventive-services rules. Ask your plan which version is on formulary.

Choosing Program Length

DurationBest ForInsured OOPSelf-Pay
30 daysShort-acting opioid use, motivated, strong support$7,500 – $22,000$18,000 – $55,000
60 daysLong-acting opioid, fentanyl, co-occurringCapped at OOP max$36,000 – $110,000
90+ daysSevere OUD, multiple prior treatments, complex casesCapped at OOP max$54,000 – $165,000

NIDA recommends minimum 90 days total structured treatment (stacking inpatient + PHP + IOP).

Insurance Coverage Detail

See does insurance cover rehab for full federal framework and verification process.

Carrier detail: Aetna · Cigna · UnitedHealthcare · BCBS · Humana · Kaiser · Molina

Specific Pre-Admission Questions

  1. Is buprenorphine/naloxone on formulary at generic tier?
  2. Is Sublocade or Brixadi covered under pharmacy or medical benefit?
  3. Is Vivitrol covered? Medical or pharmacy?
  4. Is prior authorization still required post-2024 MHPAEA final rule?
  5. Does my plan cover methadone maintenance through an OTP?
  6. What’s my OOP max, and what’s met year-to-date?
  7. If out-of-network, can a single-case agreement be pursued?

2023–2024 Opioid Crisis Data

  • 81,083 opioid-involved overdose deaths in 2023 (CDC WONDER)
  • Fentanyl involved in ~75% of opioid overdose deaths
  • West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio consistently highest per-capita rates
  • 2.5 million adults with past-year OUD (SAMHSA NSDUH 2023)
  • <20% of OUD patients receive evidence-based treatment in a given year
  • Naloxone OTC since September 2023 — now widely distributed
  • $1+ trillion/year estimated total economic burden (NIDA)

If You Don’t Have Insurance

Enrollment in an ACA-compliant plan almost always costs less than self-pay. Marketplace plans covering opioid treatment typically run $400–$750/month. See rehab cost without insurance.

A licensed specialist can identify plans covering specific MAT medications and facilities.

Sources

Your Plan May Not Cover Opioid 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 1-866-454-9577

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.

Opioid Rehab Cost by State

State-specific opioid treatment guides with local coverage laws, pricing, and facility context.

Cost estimates are based on aggregated facility data and may vary by location, facility, and individual circumstances. This is not a guarantee of cost or coverage. Treatment outcomes vary by individual.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is opioid rehab free with insurance?

Not literally free, but the out-of-pocket cost is capped. Under ACA and MHPAEA, insurance must cover opioid use disorder treatment. With PPO insurance, you pay the deductible ($1,500–$3,500), then 20–40% coinsurance until you hit your annual out-of-pocket maximum ($7,000–$9,500 per person for 2026). Once you hit the OOP max, insurance pays 100% for the rest of the plan year — effectively free. Most patients hit OOP max during inpatient, so PHP, IOP, and MAT for the remainder of the year are covered at $0. Medicaid plans cover opioid treatment at $0–$100 copays. The September 2024 MHPAEA final rule strengthened enforcement against arbitrary denials.

What is the average cost to rehabilitate a person for one year off of drugs?

A full first year of opioid use disorder recovery costs $25,000 to $75,000 without insurance (detox + 30-day inpatient + PHP + IOP + MAT for 12 months + aftercare) or is capped by your annual OOP max of $7,000 to $9,500 with PPO insurance. Year-two maintenance — MAT plus standard outpatient therapy — costs $1,500 to $6,000 self-pay annually or $200 to $900 insured. Year three and beyond typically runs $500 to $3,000 self-pay or $100 to $500 insured, depending on MAT medication choice and therapy frequency.

How much is 28 days in opioid rehab?

A 28-day inpatient opioid rehab stay — the standard insurance billing cycle — costs $16,500 to $51,000 without insurance and $7,000 to $20,500 out-of-pocket with PPO insurance. Detox is bundled into the 28-day stay when it occurs at the same facility. Most 2026 PPO plans cap out-of-pocket at $7,000–$9,500, so insured patients typically hit that ceiling within the first 7–14 days and pay $0 for the remainder of the stay plus any step-down (PHP/IOP) in the same plan year.

How much does opioid rehab cost without insurance?

Without insurance, a 30-day inpatient opioid treatment program costs $18,000 to $55,000. Medical detox adds $2,000 to $8,000 when billed separately. MAT adds $100 to $1,800 per month depending on medication: generic buprenorphine $100–$300, brand Suboxone $400–$600, Sublocade monthly injection $1,600–$1,900, Brixadi weekly or monthly injection $600–$1,800, methadone through an OTP $300–$600, Vivitrol monthly injection $1,200–$1,500. Facilities offer sliding-scale fees, scholarships, and payment plans. See [rehab cost without insurance](/rehab-cost-without-insurance/).

Does insurance cover opioid rehab?

Yes. Under the ACA, the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, and the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act, every marketplace plan and most employer plans cover opioid use disorder treatment — including detox, inpatient, PHP, IOP, outpatient, and all FDA-approved MAT medications. The X-waiver requirement for buprenorphine prescribing was eliminated in January 2023, dramatically expanding access to office-based MAT. The September 2024 MHPAEA final rule further reduced prior-authorization barriers. PPO plans pay 60–80% after deductible. Medicaid covers at $0–$100.

How long is opioid detox?

Opioid detox takes 5 to 7 days for short-acting opioids (heroin, oxycodone, hydrocodone, non-fentanyl synthetics) and 7 to 10 days for fentanyl or long-acting opioids (methadone). Withdrawal begins 6–12 hours after last use for short-acting opioids (12–30 hours for long-acting), peaks 24–72 hours in, and acute symptoms resolve by day 5–7 for short-acting or day 7–10 for long-acting. Post-acute withdrawal (PAWS) — mood instability, sleep disruption, cravings — persists weeks to months. Long-term MAT bridges this period and prevents post-detox overdose.

What is medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for opioid use disorder?

MAT combines FDA-approved medications with behavioral therapy. The three approved medication classes are buprenorphine (Suboxone sublingual, Sublocade monthly injection, Brixadi weekly or monthly injection), methadone (daily at a certified opioid treatment program), and naltrexone (Vivitrol monthly injection). NIDA research shows MAT reduces overdose deaths by approximately 50% and improves treatment retention 2–4x over abstinence-only approaches. MAT is the clinical standard of care for moderate-to-severe opioid use disorder. NIDA recommends a minimum of 12–24 months of MAT; many patients continue indefinitely as with any chronic condition.

Is 30 days enough for opioid rehab?

For moderate-to-severe opioid use disorder, NIDA guidelines recommend a minimum of 90 days of total structured treatment plus ongoing MAT for 12–24+ months. 30 days of inpatient is a reasonable foundation when it's followed by PHP (4–6 weeks), IOP (8–12 weeks), and sustained MAT. Recovery outcomes correlate more strongly with MAT continuation than with inpatient stay length — a 30-day program that hands off to sustained MAT typically outperforms a 90-day program that ends MAT at discharge.

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