Find drug & alcohol treatment in Ohio — without the noise.
234 licensed treatment facilities across 10 Ohio metro areas, sourced directly from SAMHSA's federal registry. No rankings. No paid placements. Just clear, verified information for you or someone you love.
Find treatment by city
Each city page lists licensed facilities within about 15 miles — with services, payment options, and a phone number you can call today.
Columbus 25 facilities
Franklin County & central Ohio, including Westerville, Dublin, and Grove City.
View Columbus rehabs →Cleveland 25 facilities
Cuyahoga County & the North Shore, including Lakewood and Euclid.
View Cleveland rehabs →Cincinnati 25 facilities
Hamilton County & southwest Ohio, including Norwood and Covington-area access.
View Cincinnati rehabs →Toledo 16 facilities
Lucas County & northwest Ohio, including Maumee and Oregon.
View Toledo rehabs →Akron 25 facilities
Summit County, including Cuyahoga Falls, Barberton, and Green.
View Akron rehabs →Dayton 25 facilities
Montgomery County & the Miami Valley, including Kettering and Huber Heights.
View Dayton rehabs →Parma 25 facilities
Cleveland's southern suburbs, including Parma Heights and Brooklyn.
View Parma rehabs →Canton 25 facilities
Stark County, including Massillon, North Canton, and Alliance.
View Canton rehabs →Youngstown 24 facilities
Mahoning Valley, including Boardman, Austintown, and Warren.
View Youngstown rehabs →Lorain 19 facilities
Lorain County & the west shore, including Elyria and Amherst.
View Lorain rehabs →Treatment types, explained in plain language
Rehab isn't one thing. The right level of care depends on the substance, how long it's been used, and what support exists at home. These guides explain each option — what it is, what it costs in Ohio, and who it's for.
Medical Detox
Safely managing withdrawal under medical supervision — usually the first step.
Inpatient & Residential
Live-in treatment, typically 28–90 days, with structure and round-the-clock support.
Outpatient & IOP
Treatment that fits around work and family — from weekly counseling to intensive programs.
Medication-Assisted Treatment
Suboxone, methadone, and naltrexone programs for opioid and alcohol use disorder.
Dual Diagnosis
Treating addiction alongside depression, anxiety, PTSD, or other mental health conditions.
Alcohol Rehab
Programs built specifically around alcohol use disorder and its withdrawal risks.
Free & State-Funded Rehab
No-cost and sliding-scale options in Ohio — and how to qualify for them.
How to Pay for Rehab
Ohio Medicaid, private insurance, and what to do if you have neither.
How we list facilities
Federal data only
Every listing comes from SAMHSA's official treatment locator — the U.S. government registry of licensed substance use treatment providers. If a facility isn't in the federal dataset, it isn't here.
No money changes hands
Facilities cannot pay to be listed, featured, or ranked. There are no sponsored results, no affiliate links to treatment centers, and no lead selling. This directory is an informational resource.
Verify before you go
Services and payment details come from the federal dataset and can change. Always call the facility directly to confirm availability, insurance, and admissions — every listing includes a phone number.
Answers before you call
The first phone call is the hardest part. These answers cover what most families ask first.
How do I find a drug rehab center in Ohio?
Does Ohio Medicaid cover rehab?
Is there free rehab in Ohio?
How are facilities chosen for this directory?
What do I do in an emergency?
Questions families ask first
Plain, Ohio-specific answers — no jargon, no sales pitch.
How much does rehab cost in Ohio?
What detox, outpatient, and residential care actually cost — and why most Ohioans pay far less.
Read answer →Does Ohio Medicaid cover rehab?
Ohio Medicaid covers the full continuum of addiction treatment. Here's how to use it.
Read answer →Can you go to rehab without insurance?
The realistic paths into treatment for uninsured Ohioans.
Read answer →How long does detox take?
Typical timelines by substance — and why detox is the first step, not the whole journey.
Read answer →How do I get someone into rehab?
Practical steps to help a loved one start treatment in Ohio.
Read answer →Does medication-assisted treatment work?
The evidence behind MAT — and a plain answer to the "trading one drug for another" myth.
Read answer →You don't have to figure this out alone.
1-800-662-HELP (4357)The SAMHSA National Helpline connects you with treatment referrals and information, in English and Spanish, every hour of every day. In a crisis, call or text 988. For an overdose, call 911.