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By State · SAMHSA-verified directory

Addiction treatment in Virginia

479 verified treatment centers across Virginia. Overdose rate 26.9 per 100,000 (CDC 2023) · Medicaid expanded.

479

Centers

20

Cities

Expanded

Medicaid

24/7

Helpline

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Understanding treatment in Virginia

Making sense of addiction treatment in Virginia starts with a simple fact: 479 licensed facilities exist, but they are not interchangeable. This guide walks through how to think about them — what matters clinically, what matters financially, and what families consistently wish they had known sooner.

The Medicaid question

Regarding public coverage in Virginia: Virginia expanded Medicaid in 2019 under the Affordable Care Act. The significance is structural — has realistic access to Medicaid coverage for addiction treatment once enrolled, and that fact ripples into facility-level economics, charity-care availability, and the real network a patient can access.

The overdose-mortality context

The overdose rate in Virginia runs 26.9 per 100,000 residents (CDC 2023). That number is a useful input, not a verdict — it reflects the scale of the local crisis and helps calibrate urgency. Appalachian-southwest counties differ markedly in access from Northern Virginia Treatment-planning decisions work backward from what the local epidemiology implies.

How access actually works in Virginia

Access in Virginia is more uneven than aggregate data suggests. Appalachian-southwest counties differ markedly in access from Northern Virginia For a patient trying to narrow the 479 facility list to 3-5 candidates, the practical filter is: (1) in-network status with your specific plan product; (2) ASAM-aligned level-of-care match; (3) MAT policy for opioid use disorder. Anything less than all three leaves gaps.

What to do next

The most productive next step in Virginia is usually an outside clinical assessment — a primary-care doctor, a licensed substance-use counselor, or the SAMHSA National Helpline (1-800-662-HELP). The assessment clarifies what level of care is actually warranted, which is the foundation for everything that follows.

Last updated April 2026. Sources: SAMHSA Treatment Locator, CDC WONDER (overdose mortality 2023), KFF Medicaid Tracker, ASAM Criteria 4e. See our editorial policy.