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About Marble Creek Recovery

Connecting people with verified treatment — not selling it

Our Mission

Marble Creek Recovery exists for one reason: to make finding legitimate addiction treatment less confusing and less dangerous. The treatment industry is flooded with misleading marketing, fake reviews, and pay-to-play directories that prioritize profit over patient outcomes. We built something different.

Every facility in our database is verified against federal and state databases — primarily SAMHSA's National Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Facilities and state licensing records. We don't accept payment for placement, and we don't manufacture reviews or ratings.

What We Are

We're an informational directory. We aggregate publicly available data about treatment facilities, organize it in a way that's actually useful, and present it without the manipulation that dominates this industry.

  • 21,568 verified facilities across all 50 states
  • Real data only — addresses, phone numbers, services, and insurance information sourced from federal databases
  • No fake reviews — we don't invent ratings or testimonials
  • No pay-to-play — listing position isn't for sale

What We Are Not

We are not a treatment provider. We don't diagnose, treat, or prescribe. We don't employ doctors, therapists, or counselors. When you call our helpline, you'll speak with a treatment specialist who can help you understand your options, verify insurance coverage, and connect you with appropriate facilities — but we are not delivering clinical care.

Why This Matters

In 2024, over 107,000 Americans died from drug overdoses. Many of those deaths were preventable with timely access to appropriate treatment. But finding that treatment is unnecessarily hard. Insurance coverage is confusing. Facility quality varies enormously. And the loudest voices in the room are often the ones with the worst incentives.

We can't fix all of that. But we can make the search part easier — and more honest.

Our Editorial Standards

All content on Marble Creek Recovery is written by our editorial team and reviewed for medical accuracy. We cite sources. We distinguish between evidence-based treatments and experimental ones. We don't publish content designed to scare people into calling a phone number.

If you find an error in any of our listings or content, please contact us. We take accuracy seriously.

Contact

For questions about treatment options or insurance verification, call . Available 24/7, free and confidential.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does addiction treatment cost?
Costs vary based on treatment type, length of stay, and amenities. Inpatient programs typically range from $500 to $2,000 per day; outpatient and IOP can be $250 to $750 per session. Most insurance plans cover a portion of treatment under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. Our team can help you verify coverage at no cost.
Will my insurance cover rehab?
Most major insurance providers — Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Humana, Kaiser — cover some level of addiction and mental health treatment. The Affordable Care Act and Mental Health Parity laws require equal coverage for behavioral health conditions. Coverage specifics depend on your plan; we can verify benefits and out-of-pocket costs before you commit.
How long does treatment usually last?
Treatment length varies based on individual needs. Medical detox typically takes 5-10 days. Residential/inpatient programs range from 28 days to 90+ days. Outpatient programs may continue for several months. Research consistently shows that longer engagement (90+ days) is associated with better long-term outcomes, especially when followed by aftercare or sober living.
Do I need medical detox first?
Detox is recommended (and sometimes medically essential) for substances that produce significant physical dependence — alcohol, opioids, benzodiazepines. Withdrawal from alcohol and benzos can be dangerous and requires medical supervision. Opioid withdrawal is rarely life-threatening but is severe and best managed with medication-assisted treatment. Stimulant withdrawal is typically psychological, not physical.
What happens after I complete the program?
Aftercare is critical for sustained recovery. Common post-treatment supports include: outpatient therapy, 12-step or alternative support groups (SMART Recovery, Refuge Recovery), sober living homes, medication-assisted treatment continuation, peer recovery coaches, and family therapy. The National Institute on Drug Abuse emphasizes that treatment is most effective when accompanied by long-term aftercare planning.
Is everything I share kept confidential?
Yes. Federal law (42 CFR Part 2) provides strict confidentiality protections for substance use treatment records — generally stricter than standard HIPAA protections. Treatment providers cannot share information without your written consent except in narrow circumstances (medical emergency, suspected child abuse, court order). Your privacy is protected throughout the assessment, treatment, and follow-up process.