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Why 30 Days Is the Common Length

Thirty days is the Act 106 covered minimum, the length most commercial insurance plans will approve on first authorization, and the ASAM standard for most first-time admissions. For alcohol, opioid, stimulant, or benzodiazepine use disorder without major complications, 30 days of structured inpatient care stabilizes withdrawal, establishes recovery routines, initiates medication-assisted treatment where indicated, and sets up outpatient aftercare.

When 30 Days Is Enough

Thirty days is usually sufficient for: first-time admits, callers with stable housing and employment to return to, callers without co-occurring psychiatric conditions, and callers using single substances. It is often insufficient for: polysubstance use, chronic relapse patterns, unstable housing, severe dual diagnosis, or callers exposed to heavy xylazine/medetomidine adulteration who need extended stabilization.

What a 30-Day Program Covers Clinically

Week 1: medical detox (3-7 days for most opioids and alcohol; up to 14 days for benzos). Weeks 2-3: intensive individual therapy, group therapy, psychiatric evaluation, family sessions, trauma-informed work where indicated. Week 4: relapse prevention planning, discharge coordination, outpatient aftercare setup, medication-assisted treatment handoff, and sober-living placement if needed.

Out-of-Pocket Cost for 30 Days

Average PA inpatient cost is $56,708 before insurance (National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics). With commercial PPO coverage, out-of-pocket is typically $3,000-$12,000 after insurance pays (La Hacienda). Variables: deductible (met or unmet), coinsurance percentage, whether detox is billed separately, and whether the program is in- or out-of-network. Free verification takes 15-30 minutes.

Talk to a placement advisor now.

Call (215) 302-0133 for free insurance verification. No obligation. Advisors answer around the clock.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 30 days long enough for fentanyl?
Often not. For fentanyl with xylazine or medetomidine exposure, 60- or 90-day programs produce better outcomes. Placement advisors explain the tradeoffs.
Will insurance cover more than 30 days?
Usually yes, when medically necessary and documented by the licensed program. Act 106 is a floor, not a ceiling — parity law raises the ceiling to whatever your medical/surgical benefits allow.
Can I leave before 30 days?
You can leave at any time — treatment is voluntary. Leaving against medical advice (AMA) may affect insurance coverage for that stay and raises relapse risk significantly in the first 30 days.

Talk to a placement advisor now.

Call (215) 302-0133 for free insurance verification. No obligation. Advisors answer around the clock.