About Recovery Resource Alliance
A nonprofit providing free, partner-verified resources across the full continuum of care—helping individuals and families find, understand, and access the right support from first-time help through long-term stability.
A world where anyone—at any stage of recovery and reintegration—can quickly find trustworthy, local support across prevention, treatment, and recovery services, so care is continuous, coordinated, and accessible.
Recovery Resource Alliance is a nonprofit that provides free, partner-verified resources across the full continuum of care—helping individuals and families find, understand, and access the right support from first-time help through long-term stability.
Our directory is built through direct relationships and provider-confirmed information—never scraped listings.
Full Continuum of Care
We provide a transparent, organized directory across all stages of recovery
Recovery Housing
Sober living homes and recovery residences with varying levels of support (NARR Levels I-IV)
Treatment Centers
Inpatient, outpatient, detox, IOP, PHP, and medication-assisted treatment programs
Support Groups
AA, NA, SMART Recovery, Celebrate Recovery, Al-Anon, and other peer support meetings
Essential Services
Employment assistance, transportation, food, housing support, financial counseling, and case management
Education & Training
Family education, life skills, vocational training, GED programs, and relapse prevention
Legal Services
Criminal defense, expungement, family law, housing rights, and benefits assistance
Recovery Resource Alliance is designed for everyone involved—individuals in recovery, families, service providers, referral partners, and community professionals.
Our Approach to Quality
Recovery resources vary widely by structure, oversight, and services offered. To help people compare options clearly and make informed decisions, we reference widely-recognized standards and frameworks where they exist.
For recovery housing, we use the National Alliance for Recovery Residences (NARR) standards and Levels of Support (I–IV) model to help distinguish different types of living environments based on the level of structure and services provided.
For treatment programs, we note accreditations, insurance acceptance, and specialized services. For support groups and community services, we focus on accessibility, meeting formats, and eligibility requirements.
Our goal is to provide clear, accurate information that helps individuals and families understand their options across the full continuum of care—from prevention and early intervention through treatment, recovery support, and long-term stability.
How We Keep the Directory Trustworthy
Recovery Resource Alliance is built to stay accurate over time—not just look good at launch.
Structured Listings
Clear categories, locations, and service types
Verification Signals
We reference recognized standards and state/affiliate certification pathways when they exist
Community Submissions + Moderation
Users can submit resources and updates; we review and approve changes to reduce spam and outdated info
Transparency
We aim to clearly show what's confirmed vs. what's still being updated
Who Built Recovery Resource Alliance
Recovery Resource Alliance is created by a team that understands recovery from the inside—combining real-world operational experience with the goal of building tools that reduce confusion, increase access, and raise the standard for how information is shared across the continuum of care.
Get Involved
If you know a resource that should be listed—or you spot something outdated—please help strengthen the directory
Share your state page with local providers and partners. Small updates save people hours when they're searching under pressure.
Important Note
Recovery Resource Alliance is an information directory. It is not a crisis service.
If you or someone you care about needs immediate emotional support, call/text/chat 988 (988 Lifeline)
If you're trying to locate treatment services, FindTreatment.gov is a confidential resource.
If there is immediate danger, call 911.
