KENTUCKY
Rehab in Princeton, Kentucky
14 verified treatment centers in and around Princeton.
West Kentucky Drug and Alcohol Intervention Services/Paducah
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center Magoffin County Clinic
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center Johnson County Community of Hope
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center - Floyd County OP Clinic
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center Maysville Outpatient Clinic
West Lothian Drug and Alcohol Service
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center - Cliffview Recovery
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center- Winchester Outpatient
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center Serenity House
West Kentucky Drug and Alcohol Intervention Services
Mountain Comprehensive Care Center - Campton Outpatient
Mountain of Hope Mountain Comprehensive Care Center
Nearby in Kentucky
Other cities within Kentucky
Finding treatment in Princeton
Princeton (Kentucky) has 14 SAMHSA-verified addiction-treatment facilities. For a city of this size, the facility count is moderate — enough for reasonable choice on general treatment, sometimes thin on specialty capacity. This page is an orientation to the practical variables — insurance network, clinical framework, level-of-care match — that separate useful from marginal options.
The Kentucky context
Understanding Princeton requires reading it against Kentucky: Expanded Medicaid in 2014 under the ACA. Overdose mortality runs 55.6 per 100,000. The state-specific challenge — Appalachian counties with highest per-capita overdose rates in the state — reaches local facility operations in concrete ways.
How access actually works in Princeton
The practical first moves in Princeton are: call your insurer's behavioral-health line (not general member services) for an in-network list within 25 miles; cross-reference against SAMHSA's federal locator for current operational status; ask your primary-care doctor about warm referrals. Skip any of the three and the search takes twice as long.
Regional and nearby options
a mid-size local network typically covers general addiction-treatment needs well, with specialty capacity (dual-diagnosis, perinatal SUD, adolescent) often requiring a broader regional search. Regional search often produces better clinical matches than strict in-city search — especially for specialty programming (dual-diagnosis, perinatal, adolescent) where mid-size city-level capacity can be thin.
Practical next steps
For Princeton residents, the productive sequence: (1) take the 2-minute self-assessment to understand severity; (2) call the SAMHSA helpline (1-800-662-HELP) for a neutral option-review; (3) get an outside clinical assessment from a PCP or licensed counselor. The facility selection is the LAST step, not the first.
Last updated April 2026. Sources: SAMHSA Treatment Locator, CDC WONDER, KFF Medicaid Tracker, ASAM Criteria 4e. See our editorial policy.