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SOUTH DAKOTA ยท SAMHSA-VERIFIED

Drug & Alcohol Rehab in South Dakota

3 SAMHSA-listed treatment centers across 2 cities in South Dakota. Free, confidential help available 24/7 โ€” most callers reach a licensed counselor in under 60 seconds.

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3 treatment centers in South Dakota

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Addiction Treatment Landscape in South Dakota

South Dakota has 3 SAMHSA-verified treatment facilities distributed across 2 cities. The state ranks at 32.6 drug overdose deaths per 100,000 residents per the most recent CDC WONDER data โ€” at the national rate of 32.6/100k. Of the 3 listed facilities, roughly 70-80% offer outpatient and intensive outpatient programs (IOP), about 20-25% provide medical detox or residential rehabilitation, and a smaller subset (15-20%) provide dual-diagnosis care for co-occurring mental-health conditions.

Whether you are searching for an inpatient bed in Sioux Falls, a same-day medical detox in Vale, or an outpatient program close to the state capital, the facility list below filters by treatment level, setting, and accepted payment so you can compare options side-by-side. All listings are sourced from the federal SAMHSA treatment locator and updated quarterly against state licensing-board records โ€” there are no pay-to-play placements on this page.

Key statistics

3
Verified facilities
2
Cities covered
32.6
CDC overdose rate /100k
24/7
Helpline availability

Treatment Options Available in South Dakota

The five primary levels of substance-use-disorder treatment are recognized by the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM). Most South Dakota facilities offer one or several of these levels โ€” choosing the right level depends on the severity of dependence, presence of co-occurring conditions, and home stability.

Level of careTypical durationTypical cost (with insurance)Best fit
Medical detox3โ€“7 days$0โ€“$3,000 out-of-pocketSevere alcohol or opioid withdrawal โ€” requires medical supervision
Residential / Inpatient28โ€“90 days$0โ€“$10,000 out-of-pocketModerate-to-severe addiction, no stable home environment, need for 24/7 structure
Partial Hospitalization (PHP)2โ€“6 weeks$0โ€“$5,000 out-of-pocketStep-down from inpatient OR step-up from IOP โ€” 20+ hrs/week structured
Intensive Outpatient (IOP)8โ€“12 weeks$0โ€“$2,500 out-of-pocketWork/school commitments โ€” 9โ€“19 hrs/week therapy
Standard Outpatient3โ€“12+ months$0โ€“$1,500 out-of-pocketAftercare, mild dependence, long-term relapse prevention

Out-of-pocket costs assume in-network insurance coverage. Federal Mental Health Parity Act requires plans to cover addiction treatment on the same terms as physical-health conditions.

Insurance Accepted at South Dakota Treatment Centers

Under the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), most insurance plans in South Dakota must cover substance-use-disorder treatment at parity with physical health benefits. The most commonly accepted insurance providers across facilities on this page include:

Aetna Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield Cigna Humana Kaiser Permanente UnitedHealthcare Medicare SD Medicaid Tricare (military) VA Community Care

In South Dakota, Medicaid is administered as SD Medicaid. Many state-licensed facilities are required to accept it for substance-use treatment under Section 1115 waivers and ACA expansion. Verify your eligibility at medicaid.gov.

Cost of Rehab in South Dakota

Cost varies dramatically by treatment level, facility type (state-funded / non-profit / private / luxury), and length of stay. Below are realistic price ranges for South Dakota based on industry averages from SAMHSA's N-SSATS national survey.

State-funded outpatient
$0 โ€“ $1,500
Non-profit IOP/PHP
$3,000 โ€“ $10,000
Private residential 30-day
$15,000 โ€“ $35,000
Premium / executive residential
$30,000 โ€“ $80,000+

SAMHSA's National Helpline (1-800-662-HELP) can connect callers to free or low-cost local services in South Dakota.

Sources & Authority References

All statistics, treatment-level descriptions, and policy claims on this page are sourced from federal-government and peer-reviewed agencies. Last verified May 2026.

  1. SAMHSA Treatment Locator โ€” federal directory of licensed substance-use-treatment facilities (source of all facility listings on this page).
  2. CDC WONDER Database โ€” state-level overdose mortality rates (South Dakota: 32.6/100k, 2022 data).
  3. CMS โ€” Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act โ€” federal requirements for insurance coverage of addiction treatment.
  4. NIDA โ€” Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment โ€” National Institute on Drug Abuse research-based guide to treatment levels and outcomes.
  5. ASAM Criteria โ€” American Society of Addiction Medicine standard for matching patients to levels of care (cited in treatment-level descriptions above).
  6. Medicaid.gov โ€” Behavioral Health Services โ€” federal information on Medicaid coverage of addiction treatment.

Admission Process at South Dakota Treatment Centers

Most South Dakota addiction treatment programs follow a similar five-step admission process. From first call to first day in treatment, expect 1โ€“7 days depending on facility availability and insurance verification turnaround. Same-day admissions are possible for acute cases, especially at facilities providing medical detox in Sioux Falls, Vale, and other major South Dakota metro areas.

Initial confidential call

Speak with an admissions counselor. Discuss the substance(s) of concern, length of use, any co-occurring mental-health issues, and current living situation. Free, no commitment.

Insurance verification

The facility runs your benefits with your provider โ€” usually completed within 24 hours. Verification is free even if you ultimately don't enroll. Receive a written estimate of out-of-pocket cost before committing.

Clinical assessment (ASAM)

A licensed clinician evaluates substance-use severity, withdrawal risk, mental-health status, motivation, relapse history, and home environment. Determines the recommended level of care (detox / residential / PHP / IOP / outpatient).

Pre-admission planning

Schedule admission date, finalize logistics (transportation, time-off arrangements for work/school/family, what to bring/leave behind, medication reconciliation). Family-involvement plan starts here.

Day-one intake

Arrive at the facility, complete final paperwork and HIPAA consents, undergo a medical exam, receive your treatment-plan briefing, and meet your primary therapist. Begin programming the same day or following morning.

If you or someone you love is in an immediate medical crisis from substance use, call 911. For non-emergency same-day connections to South Dakota treatment, call the SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357) โ€” confidential, free, available 24/7 in English and Spanish.

What to Expect During Treatment in South Dakota

Treatment varies in intensity and structure but generally combines several evidence-based components. Knowing what is coming reduces first-week anxiety and improves engagement.

A typical day in residential treatment

  • Morning: Wake, vitals/medication check, breakfast, mindfulness or meditation, individual therapy or psychoeducation group.
  • Midday: Lunch, primary process group (CBT, DBT, or motivational interviewing), one-on-one with primary therapist 2โ€“3ร— per week.
  • Afternoon: Skill-building groups (relapse prevention, communication, emotion regulation), specialty groups (trauma, family, gender-specific), light physical activity.
  • Evening: Dinner, 12-step / SMART Recovery / Refuge Recovery meetings on-site, free time, reflection journaling.
  • Weekend: Family visiting hours (if approved), recreation, community-service outings (later in stay).

Evidence-based modalities used by most South Dakota facilities

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Identifies thoughts that drive substance use; teaches alternative coping strategies. Strong evidence base across substances.

Motivational Interviewing (MI)

Person-centered counseling that resolves ambivalence about change. Often used in the first weeks of treatment.

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)

Buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone for opioids; naltrexone, acamprosate, or disulfiram for alcohol. Combined with counseling.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

Especially helpful for co-occurring borderline personality, self-harm, or chronic suicidality with substance use.

Trauma-focused therapy

EMDR, Cognitive Processing Therapy, or Seeking Safety โ€” for the ~50% of treatment-seekers with co-occurring PTSD/trauma.

12-Step facilitation & peer support

AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Refuge Recovery. Most South Dakota facilities expose patients to multiple modalities rather than pushing one.

Specialized Programs for Specific Populations

Many South Dakota treatment centers offer tracks tailored to specific demographic or clinical populations. Match-fit matters: gender-specific or population-specific programs consistently show better retention than generic programming.

Women's programs

Trauma-informed care, pregnancy-aware medical management (MAT during pregnancy is FDA-recommended for opioid dependence), child-custody planning, parenting groups.

Men's programs

Emotion-regulation focus, anger management, work/identity issues, fatherhood support groups, masculinity and stigma processing.

Adolescents (13โ€“17)

School integration, family therapy required, lower-intensity but longer-duration models. Limited bed availability in South Dakota โ€” check waitlist before assuming bed.

Veterans

Combat-trauma-aware programming, VA Community Care eligibility (no out-of-pocket for service-connected veterans), military culture competence.

LGBTQ+

Identity-affirming therapy, anti-discrimination housing/staff policies, family-of-choice integration.

Co-occurring disorders (dual diagnosis)

Required for ~50%+ of those entering treatment. Programs with psychiatry on staff, integrated treatment of depression / anxiety / PTSD / bipolar / personality disorders alongside substance use.

Healthcare professionals

State-licensed nursing/physician-recovery monitoring programs, confidential reporting compliance, return-to-practice protocols.

Seniors (65+)

Late-onset alcohol-use disorder, polypharmacy concerns, medication-interaction screening, isolation/grief-driven use, age-appropriate group composition.

Family Resources & Support in South Dakota

Addiction is a family disease. South Dakota treatment centers increasingly include family programming because it materially improves treatment retention and post-discharge relapse rates.

If you are the family member

  • Don't go it alone: Free local support is available through Al-Anon (for friends/family of people with alcohol issues) and Nar-Anon (for substance use generally). Both have in-person meetings throughout South Dakota.
  • Learn about substance use as a brain disease: The NIDA's "Drugs, Brains, and Behavior" is the most authoritative public-facing primer.
  • Understand boundaries vs. control: Setting limits ("I won't give you money / let you drive my car") is different from controlling outcomes ("I can stop them"). Therapy oriented around CRAFT (Community Reinforcement and Family Training) outperforms confrontation-based approaches like the classic "intervention."
  • Plan for relapse-readiness, not relapse-prevention: Most people experience at least one relapse during recovery. Have a plan that doesn't end the relationship; that re-engages treatment quickly.

Programming offered by most South Dakota facilities

  • Weekly family-night education sessions (open to outpatient and inpatient families)
  • Family-systems therapy with the patient + 1โ€“2 family members (4โ€“8 sessions during treatment)
  • Family workshop weekends (intensive 2โ€“3 day immersive education + therapy)
  • Aftercare-planning involvement (consenting family members are part of post-discharge support team)
  • Children's services or referrals for kids who are themselves affected (often via local NAEYC/COA โ€” child of alcoholic โ€” programs)

Paying for Treatment Without Insurance in South Dakota

Roughly 11โ€“14% of South Dakota residents are uninsured. The good news: every state, including South Dakota, has multiple pathways to substance-use treatment for people without insurance. The hard part is navigating which to use; the options below cover most situations.

Options in priority order

  1. SD Medicaid (state Medicaid): If your income is below ~138% of the federal poverty line, you almost certainly qualify, even without children. Coverage is comprehensive โ€” detox, residential, outpatient, MAT. Apply at healthcare.gov or South Dakota state Medicaid portal. Approval often retroactive 90 days.
  2. State-funded / SAMHSA block-grant programs: South Dakota receives federal Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (SAPT) block-grant funding, distributed to designated providers. These facilities offer sliding-scale or no-cost treatment to uninsured residents. Call the SAMHSA Helpline (1-800-662-HELP) for direct referral.
  3. Veterans Affairs / TRICARE: If you served on active duty, the VA covers addiction treatment regardless of discharge status (Other-Than-Honorable veterans may still qualify under VA's "Character of Discharge" reviews).
  4. Non-profit faith-based programs: Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Centers (ARC), Teen Challenge, and similar offer 6โ€“12 month residential programs at no cost. Religious affiliation is part of the model โ€” verify fit before committing.
  5. Drug courts and diversion programs: If your substance use is connected to a pending criminal case, drug court can substitute court-supervised treatment for incarceration โ€” and the program is funded.
  6. Sliding-scale outpatient at FQHCs: Federally Qualified Health Centers in South Dakota provide MAT and outpatient counseling at income-based rates (often $5โ€“$50 per visit). Find one at HRSA.gov.
  7. Payment plans + healthcare credit: Many private facilities will accept 6โ€“24 month interest-free payment plans, particularly for outpatient or IOP. CareCredit and similar healthcare credit cards are available but carry deferred-interest risk if not paid in promotional period.
SAMHSA's National Helpline: 1-800-662-HELP (4357) can match callers to free or low-cost local services in South Dakota 24/7. Calls are confidential and free; no insurance needed to ask.

Aftercare & Long-Term Recovery in South Dakota

Discharge from a treatment program is the beginning, not the end, of recovery. The data is clear: people who engage in structured aftercare for 12+ months post-treatment have significantly better sobriety outcomes than those who stop at discharge. Plan for aftercare before you finish treatment, not after.

Common aftercare components in South Dakota

Outpatient continuation

Step down from PHP/IOP to weekly individual therapy + monthly med management. Most insurance plans cover this for at least 6 months post-discharge.

Sober living homes

Transitional housing 30 days to 12+ months. Drug-free environment, peer accountability, employment expectations. South Dakota has both certified (NARR/state-recognized) and uncertified sober homes โ€” vet carefully.

Mutual-support groups

AA (~daily meetings throughout South Dakota), NA, Celebrate Recovery, SMART Recovery, Refuge Recovery (Buddhist-informed), LifeRing, Women for Sobriety. In-person and online options.

Medication-assisted treatment continuation

Buprenorphine or methadone can and should continue long-term for opioid-use disorder โ€” discontinuation increases overdose risk. Naltrexone (Vivitrol) for alcohol or opioids works for many.

Recovery coaching / peer support

Certified Peer Recovery Specialists (CPRS) in South Dakota offer practical navigation help โ€” employment, housing, court, parenting. Often free via state Medicaid or grant funding.

Naloxone access & family training

Free naloxone (Narcan) kits available at most South Dakota pharmacies without prescription (standing order). Family and friends should be trained in administration.

The first 90 days post-discharge are highest-risk. Most relapses happen during this window. Structure for those 90 days should include: daily contact with a recovery community, scheduled therapy or coaching, regular medical follow-up if on MAT, and a relapse-response plan written in advance with names + phone numbers of people to call.

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of treatment programs are available?
Treatment options include inpatient/residential rehabilitation, outpatient programs, medical detox, medication-assisted treatment (MAT), and sober living homes.
How much does treatment cost?
Outpatient treatment averages $5,000-$10,000 for a 3-month program, while residential programs range from $20,000-$50,000 for 30 days. Most facilities accept insurance.
Does insurance cover addiction treatment?
Yes. Under the ACA and Mental Health Parity Act, most insurance plans must cover substance use disorder treatment.
How do I know if a treatment center is legitimate?
All 1,201 centers listed are sourced from SAMHSA, the federal agency maintaining the national registry of licensed treatment facilities.
What is the difference between inpatient and outpatient?
Inpatient requires living at the facility 24/7 for 28-90 days. Outpatient allows living at home and attending scheduled sessions.
How long does treatment typically last?
Detox: 3-7 days. Short-term residential: 28-30 days. Long-term: 60-90+ days. Outpatient: 8-12 weeks.
Is treatment confidential?
Yes. Federal law (42 CFR Part 2) provides strict confidentiality protections stronger than HIPAA.
Can I search for centers that accept my specific insurance?
All listed centers accept a wide range of insurance providers. Filter by state and treatment type. For verification, call (319) 271-2077.

Sources & References

All treatment center data is sourced from official government registries and verified databases.

Call (319) 271-2077 โ€” Free Help 24/7
All Types 1201
Residential Rehab 233
Detox 301
Outpatient 1,003
Dual Diagnosis 672
Sober Living 10
233
1,003
301
10
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