Start with the level of care, not the facility

Before you evaluate any program, you need to know what level of care your clinical situation calls for. A residential program that looks impressive on a website is the wrong choice if your needs are actually best met by a partial hospitalization program, and vice versa.

If you have not yet had a clinical assessment, that is the first step. A licensed clinician uses standardized criteria, commonly the ASAM Criteria, to recommend a level of care based on your withdrawal risk, medical and mental health needs, and home environment. Once you have a recommended level, you can evaluate programs at that level.

Read the full guide to levels of care if you are not yet clear on what each level involves and how TRICARE covers them.

Verify TRICARE coverage before anything else

The single most important practical step is confirming that a program accepts TRICARE and is in-network with your specific plan before you commit to anything. This matters more than the program’s marketing, its amenities, or how it presents itself online.

There are two separate questions to ask every program you consider:

  • Are you a TRICARE-authorized provider? This means the program is licensed to bill TRICARE at all.
  • Are you in-network with my specific TRICARE plan? This determines your actual out-of-pocket cost. A TRICARE-authorized program can still be out-of-network, which significantly increases what you pay.

Do not rely solely on what the program’s admissions team tells you. Verify independently using the TRICARE Find Care tool at tricare.mil/FindCare, or call the TRICARE number on the back of your insurance card to confirm network status before your first appointment or any financial commitment.

Use our free coverage checker

Answer a few questions about your plan and the level of care you need, and the coverage checker will walk you through what TRICARE is likely to cover and what questions to ask the program directly.

What to look for in a quality program

Once you have confirmed TRICARE coverage, evaluate programs against these criteria. No program will be perfect on every point, but the more boxes a program checks, the stronger the foundation.

Accreditation from CARF or The Joint Commission. These independent bodies evaluate treatment programs against established quality standards. Accreditation is not a guarantee of quality, but its absence is a concern. Check directly at carf.org or jointcommission.org.
Licensed clinical staff. Ask specifically whether the program employs licensed clinical social workers, licensed professional counselors, or licensed psychologists, and whether a physician or nurse practitioner oversees medical care. Ask how many clinical hours per week each patient receives.
Evidence-based treatment methods. Look for programs that explicitly use cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), motivational interviewing, or other approaches with a strong research base for substance use disorder. Avoid programs that rely primarily on unstructured group talk with no named clinical method.
Dual-diagnosis or co-occurring capability. If PTSD, depression, anxiety, or another mental health condition is part of your picture (common among veterans), choose a program explicitly equipped to treat both conditions simultaneously, not one that treats them separately or sequentially.
A structured daily schedule. A quality residential or PHP program runs on a predictable daily schedule with group therapy, individual sessions, and skills-building activities. Ask for a sample schedule before committing. Unstructured time is not treatment.
A continuum of care plan. Ask what happens when you complete the program. A quality program helps you plan the next level of care, whether that is PHP, IOP, or outpatient, and connects you to aftercare resources. Treatment that ends at discharge without a step-down plan leaves you without support at a vulnerable moment.
Family involvement options. Programs that offer family education or family therapy tend to produce better outcomes. This matters especially for veterans whose families are part of their recovery environment.

For veterans: questions specific to your situation

Veterans and active-duty service members bring specific needs that not every program is equipped to address. These questions help you identify whether a program has genuine experience with military populations or is simply marketing to them.

Does the program have specific veteran programming?

Ask whether the program runs veteran-specific groups or tracks, whether any clinical staff have military experience or specialized training in military culture, and whether PTSD treatment is integrated into the substance use program rather than being handled separately or not at all.

A program that can answer these questions in specific detail, naming the groups, the credentials, the approach, is worth more than one that says “we treat many veterans” without elaborating.

How does the program handle TRICARE prior authorization?

TRICARE requires prior authorization before residential treatment and detox. Ask whether the admissions team handles this process on your behalf and what the typical timeline is. A program that cannot clearly explain its prior authorization process is more likely to cause delays or coverage problems.

What is the program’s approach to medication-assisted treatment?

If medication-assisted treatment (MAT) with buprenorphine or naltrexone is appropriate for your situation, confirm that the program offers it and that it is integrated into the treatment plan rather than discouraged. Some programs take a medication-free philosophical approach, which is a legitimate choice but should be an informed one, not a default assumption.

Is the program near enough to support your family?

Geographic proximity matters for family visits and family therapy, particularly for residential treatment. Programs near San Antonio allow family members to participate in family sessions without significant travel. Distant programs may be appropriate for some situations, but proximity supports family integration into treatment.

Red flags to watch for

Some practices in addiction treatment marketing are misleading or harmful. These warrant caution.

Guaranteed outcomes or specific recovery promises. No legitimate treatment program can guarantee recovery. Programs that promise specific results are making claims that cannot be supported and that signal a marketing-first orientation.
Pressure to commit before insurance verification is complete. A quality program confirms your coverage before asking you to commit to a date. Pressure to lock in a bed before the financial picture is clear is a warning sign.
Vague answers about clinical staff and methods. If a program cannot name its clinical model, its licensing requirements for therapists, or what a typical day looks like, that vagueness usually reflects a lack of clinical substance.
Marketing that emphasizes amenities over clinical content. Comfortable surroundings can support recovery, but treatment is not primarily about luxury. A program whose main selling points are spa services, gourmet meals, or resort-style accommodations without equivalent emphasis on clinical staff and methods should be evaluated with appropriate skepticism.
No clear transition and aftercare planning. Residential treatment is one phase. If a program does not ask about or plan for what comes after discharge, it is treating the episode rather than the condition.

Questions to ask every program you consider

Bring this list to every admissions conversation. A good program will answer every one of these clearly and specifically.

  • Are you TRICARE-authorized and in-network with my specific plan?
  • Do you handle prior authorization for residential admission?
  • Are you accredited by CARF or The Joint Commission?
  • What clinical model do you use? Which evidence-based therapies are included?
  • What are the credentials of the therapists and clinical staff?
  • How many hours of individual therapy does each patient receive per week?
  • Do you treat PTSD and substance use simultaneously?
  • Do you offer medication-assisted treatment if clinically appropriate?
  • What does a typical daily schedule look like?
  • What happens at the end of the program? How do you support the transition to the next level of care?
  • What family involvement options do you offer?

Questions about choosing a program

How do I know if a treatment program accepts TRICARE?
Call the admissions line and ask whether the program is TRICARE-authorized and in-network with your specific plan. Then verify independently using the TRICARE Find Care tool or by calling the number on the back of your insurance card.
What is the difference between a TRICARE-authorized and an in-network provider?
A TRICARE-authorized provider can bill TRICARE. An in-network provider has a contract with TRICARE and accepts negotiated rates. Going out-of-network means higher cost-share and possible balance billing. Always confirm network status before admission.
Should I choose a program that specializes in veterans?
If PTSD is part of your situation, a veteran-specialized program with trauma-informed care and military-culture-aware staff matters significantly. For straightforward substance use disorder without significant trauma history, a strong general program with TRICARE coverage and evidence-based methods may serve equally well.
How long should a residential program be?
TRICARE does not set a fixed length. Length is determined by clinical need and ongoing authorization. Thirty days is a common minimum. Sixty to ninety days is appropriate for many veterans with chronic use or co-occurring PTSD. Ask programs how they make length-of-stay decisions.
What red flags should I watch for when evaluating a program?
Pressure to commit before insurance verification is complete, vague answers about clinical staff and methods, guaranteed outcome promises, and no clear aftercare planning are the main warning signs. Accreditation from CARF or The Joint Commission is a reliable baseline quality indicator.

. This page provides general guidance for evaluating addiction treatment programs. It is not medical or insurance advice. Confirm your specific coverage details with TRICARE at tricare.mil or 1-800-874-2273. Accreditation status should be verified directly with CARF or The Joint Commission.

If you or someone you know is in crisis

Help is available around the clock, every day.

Veterans Crisis Line: dial 988, then press 1

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