The most comprehensive sober living directory in America. Men's, women's, coed, Oxford Houses, halfway houses, luxury, and faith-based recovery homes in thousands of cities nationwide.
Recovery housing comes in many forms. Whether you need a structured halfway house, a self-governing Oxford House, a women's home, or a luxury recovery residence, we can help you find the right fit.
Men's sober living homes provide a structured, substance-free living environment exclusively for men in recovery. These homes offer accountabilit...
Women's sober living homes offer a safe, supportive environment exclusively for women in recovery from addiction. These homes address issues uniq...
Coed sober living homes house both men and women in recovery, typically with separate sleeping quarters and shared common areas. Coed environment...
Oxford Houses are self-supporting, democratically run sober living homes with no time limits on residency. Each house is financially self-sustain...
Halfway houses serve as transitional living between inpatient treatment and independent living. Often run by government agencies, nonprofits, or ...
Faith-based sober living homes integrate spiritual practices and religious community into the recovery living environment. These homes may incorp...
Luxury sober living homes offer premium amenities including private rooms, gourmet meals, fitness facilities, pools, holistic therapies, and conc...
LGBTQ+ sober living homes provide affirming, inclusive recovery housing for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer individuals. These hom...
Pet-friendly sober living homes allow residents to bring their pets — typically dogs and cats — into the recovery living environment. For many pe...
Sober living homes provide structure, accountability, and community during the critical early months of recovery. Research consistently shows that people who live in sober housing after treatment have significantly better long-term recovery outcomes.
Sober living homes provide house rules, curfews, drug testing, and accountability without the clinical restrictions of inpatient treatment. You live in a home, not a facility.
Living with other people in recovery creates a built-in support network. Housemates understand your struggles, celebrate your victories, and hold you accountable.
Sober living lets you practice independent living skills — cooking, cleaning, budgeting, working, socializing — while still having the safety net of a substance-free environment.
Most sober living homes have phases that gradually increase your freedom and responsibility. You earn privileges like later curfews and weekend passes as you demonstrate stability.
Many sober living homes require employment or active job seeking. Some provide job placement assistance, resume help, and connections to local employers willing to hire people in recovery.
Most sober living homes require residents to attend recovery meetings regularly. This builds the habit of meeting attendance that sustains long-term sobriety after you move out.