Find Treatment Centers in Hawaii
465 SAMHSA-verified facilities. 115 annual opioid deaths.
Quick Answer: Rehab in Hawaii
Yes — Hawaii has 465 SAMHSA-verified treatment centers offering detox, inpatient, outpatient, and medication-assisted programs. Most major insurance plans cover treatment under the Mental Health Parity Act. Medicaid covers treatment in all Hawaii facilities that accept it.
Call (833) 546-3513 for free insurance verification and same-day placement assistance.
Key Treatment Concepts
The American Society of Addiction Medicine's six-dimension assessment framework used to determine appropriate level of care placement for each patient.
Income-based payment adjustment offered by many Hawaii facilities. Patients pay based on ability, making treatment accessible regardless of financial situation.
Treatment approaches validated by peer-reviewed research, including CBT, DBT, motivational interviewing, contingency management, and medication-assisted treatment.
Progressive treatment model starting with the most intensive services (detox, residential) and stepping down through PHP, IOP, outpatient, and aftercare as recovery strengthens.
Quick answer: Hawaii has 465 verified treatment centers. Medicaid is expanded — many programs are free or low-cost for eligible residents. The overdose rate is 19.8/100k (#41 nationally, below the national average of 33.1). Top cities: Wahiawa, Honolulu, Lihue. Need help? Call (833) 546-3513.
Treatment Centers in Hawaii
463 facilities found
Touch Angels Behavioral Health
Wahiawa, HI
Touch Angels Behavioral Health offers personalized care in their licensed 10-bed residential facility providing inpatient treatment to adults 18+ with mental he...
Crestwood Behavioral Health Vallejo
Wahiawa, HI
Crestwood Behavioral Health Center in Vallejo, California, offers residential care for adults facing serious mental health challenges and co-occurring substance...
SSM Health Behavioral Health - Fenton
Wahiawa, HI
SSM Health's Behavioral Health clinic in Fenton addresses mental health challenges within the southwestern St. Louis community. With a range of specialized prog...
TML Behavioral Health Group - Virtual
Wahiawa, HI
The Mindful Lemon (TML) offers virtual mental health and substance abuse care for children, teens, adults, and older adults. They provide individual, couples, a...
SSM Health Behavioral Health - Fond du Lac
Wahiawa, HI
SSM Health's behavioral health program in Fond du Lac addresses mental health challenges within the community. With a range of specialized programs and medicall...
Gather Behavioral Health Virtual
Wahiawa, HI
Gather Behavioral Health provides virtual treatment for adults and adolescents with mental health concerns, making it easy for clients to access comprehensive c...
The Jackson Clinic - Behavioral Health
Wahiawa, HI
The Jackson Clinic treats stress, depression, anxiety, relationship problems, grief, addictions, ADHD or learning difficulties, and mood disorders. They offer m...
Meadow Hill Behavioral Health
Wahiawa, HI
Meadow Hill Behavioral Health treats adolescents ages 12–18 for depression, anxiety, trauma, ADHD, substance use, self-harm, psychosis, OCD, and personality dis...
Monarch Behavioral Health Outpatient Office - Wake Forest
Wahiawa, HI
Integrative outpatient care with trauma-informed approach for adolescents, adults, LGBTQ+, veterans, and co-occurring mental health conditions.
Citywide Behavioral Health
Wahiawa, HI
Citywide Behavioral Health helps people who are struggling with mental health and substance use. Their mission is to offer care that fits each person’s needs, w...
RestAura Behavioral Health
Wahiawa, HI
RestAura Behavioral Health, located in Decatur, Georgia, specializes in treating substance use disorders and co-occurring mental health conditions. They offer o...
Nova Luna Center
Makawao, HI
Nestled in the slopes of Haleakala, Nova Luna Center provides a peaceful space for healing from eating disorders, trauma, depression, anxiety, and PTSD. Through...
Addiction Treatment in Hawaii: What You Need to Know
Hawaii has 465 SAMHSA-verified treatment facilities serving a population of 1,436,000. That's approximately 32.4 facilities per 100,000 residents. The state's drug overdose death rate of 19.8 per 100,000 is below the national average of 33.1 — ranking #41 nationally. With 115 opioid-related deaths reported annually, access to evidence-based treatment programs remains critical.
Insurance & Medicaid Coverage in Hawaii
Hawaii has expanded Medicaid under the ACA, significantly broadening access to addiction treatment for low-income adults earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level (~$20,783/year for an individual). Covered services typically include medical detox, inpatient/residential rehab, outpatient counseling, and medication-assisted treatment (MAT). In addition to Medicaid, most private insurance plans — including Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, and Humana — are required by the Mental Health Parity Act to cover substance use disorder treatment at parity with medical care.
The Overdose Crisis in Hawaii
Hawaii reports 115 opioid-related deaths annually with an overdose rate of 19.8/100k (below the 33.1 national average by 40%). Substance use disorder affects approximately 4.9% of adults in the state (national average: 7.2%). Hawaii has enacted a Good Samaritan law that protects individuals who call 911 during an overdose emergency from certain criminal charges — encouraging bystanders to seek help. Naloxone (Narcan), the opioid overdose reversal medication, is available via pharmacist prescribing in Hawaii, making it accessible without an individual prescription.
Types of Treatment Available
| Program | Duration | Cost Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox | 5–10 days | $1,000–$5,000 | Alcohol, opioid, benzo withdrawal |
| Inpatient Rehab | 28–90 days | $6,000–$30,000 | Severe addiction, co-occurring disorders |
| PHP (Partial Hospitalization) | 2–4 weeks | $3,000–$10,000 | Step-down from inpatient, intensive support |
| IOP (Intensive Outpatient) | 2–4 months | $3,000–$10,000 | Work/school compatibility, 9-20 hrs/week |
| Outpatient | 3–12 months | $1,400–$10,000 | Mild-moderate, stable housing |
| MAT | 6–24+ months | $5,000–$15,000/yr | Opioid use disorder, relapse prevention |
Medicaid covers most programs for eligible residents. Call (833) 546-3513 for free insurance verification.
Where to Find Help in Hawaii
Treatment facilities in Hawaii are concentrated in urban areas, with Wahiawa leading with 402 centers, followed by Honolulu (6) and Lihue (4). For residents in rural areas, telehealth addiction counseling and out-of-area programs provide alternatives. Browse our full Hawaii directory to filter by city, treatment type, and insurance accepted.
Last updated: March 2026 · Written by the RehabHive Editorial Team · Sources: SAMHSA, CDC WONDER, KFF
Check Your Insurance Coverage in Hawaii
Medicaid expanded — most plans cover treatment. Verify your benefits — free and confidential.
Understanding Treatment Options in Hawaii
Effective addiction treatment requires at least 90 days in a structured program, according to NIDA research. In Hawaii, treatment centers offer multiple levels of care along a continuum — from medically supervised detoxification (3-10 days) through residential inpatient programs (30-90 days), partial hospitalization (PHP), intensive outpatient (IOP), and standard outpatient counseling.
Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) with buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone reduces opioid overdose deaths by 50% (CDC data). Many Hawaii facilities now integrate MAT with behavioral therapies including cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and motivational interviewing for comprehensive dual-diagnosis care.
Treatment centers that match program intensity to individual patient needs achieve the strongest long-term recovery outcomes, according to NIH research. Most insurance plans cover substance abuse treatment under federal parity law. under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, most commercial plans and Medicaid must cover substance abuse treatment at parity with medical care.
Sources: NIDA Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment (4th Ed.), CDC MMWR Vol. 72, NIH National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism