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Louisiana recovery centers

Best Rehabs in Louisiana

Browse 167 accredited rehab centers in Louisiana. Compare treatment programs, verify insurance acceptance, and narrow your calls to facilities that match the level of care you actually need.

Directory Listings

Treatment Centers in Louisiana

Directory listings with contact information. Facilities can upgrade to a full profile.

167 listed
1101 SE Boulevard, Morgan City, Louisiana, 70380
985-395-2424

Claire House for Women and Children in Morgan City, Louisiana offers an inpatient recovery setting for clients with varied backgrounds and support needs facing…

10627 US 71 Cheneyville, Cheneyville, Louisiana, 10627
(855) 705-4037

Edgefield Recovery Center in Cheneyville, Louisiana offers an inpatient recovery setting with attention to alcohol use disorder, drug addiction, and opioid use…

106 South 4th Street P.O. Box 44, Oberlin, Louisiana, 70655
337-639-4716

Allen Outreach serves Oberlin, Louisiana with an outpatient recovery program for children, adolescents, and older adults facing co-occurring mental health…

10473 Old Hammond Highway, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 10473
(225) 924-1910

For people seeking support in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Woodlake Addiction Recovery Center - Baton Rouge delivers a residential treatment program for older…

10425 Plaza Americana Drive, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 10425
225-810-4719

Located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Beacon Behavioral Outpatient Baton Rouge provides an outpatient recovery program with attention to co-occurring mental…

Louisiana data brief

Louisiana Addiction Statistics and Rehab Trends

If you are looking for rehab in Louisiana, a facility list only tells part of the story. Louisiana addiction statistics give you a clearer view of how many people may need care, how many still miss treatment, and which substances show up most often across the state. In the 2023 and 2024 annual average, SAMHSA estimated that 664,000 people age 12 and older in Louisiana had a substance use disorder. In 2024, 727,000 were classified as needing substance use treatment, and 574,000 did not receive it. SAMHSA also estimated that 849,000 used marijuana in the past year and 887,000 reported binge alcohol use in the past month. That matters when you are trying to move quickly, compare levels of care, and avoid wasting time on programs that do not match the substances involved.

Treatment gap 79.0%

of people in Louisiana who were classified as needing substance use treatment in 2024 did not receive it.

What stands out

  • 664K with substance use disorder: SAMHSA estimated this many people age 12 and older in Louisiana had a past-year substance use disorder.
  • 727K needed treatment: These residents were classified as needing substance use treatment in 2024.
  • 574K did not receive treatment: The treatment gap remains large across the state.
  • 849K used marijuana in the past year: Cannabis use remains common enough to shape screening and treatment demand.
  • 887K reported binge alcohol use: Alcohol remains a major part of the state addiction picture.

Louisiana Addiction Statistics at a Glance

Substance use disorder 664K

Estimated people age 12 and older in Louisiana with a past-year substance use disorder in the 2023 and 2024 annual average.

Needed treatment 727K

Residents classified as needing substance use treatment in 2024.

Did not get treatment 574K

People who were classified as needing treatment but did not receive it.

Marijuana use 849K

Estimated people in Louisiana who used marijuana in the past year.

Binge alcohol use 887K

Estimated people who reported binge alcohol use in the past month.

What Louisiana addiction statistics mean for treatment access

The clearest signal in the Louisiana data is the treatment gap. SAMHSA estimated that 727,000 people in Louisiana were classified as needing substance use treatment in 2024, yet 574,000 did not receive it. That means about 79.0% of the people identified as needing treatment were still outside care.

In Louisiana, the access problem is not only how many people need care. It is how many still do not receive it.

If you are comparing programs, use that gap as a practical filter. Fast admissions, clear insurance verification, detox access when needed, and a realistic step-down plan can matter more than long amenity lists. The goal is to get into the right level of care without losing momentum while you or your family are ready to act.

Which substances are shaping rehab demand in Louisiana

The substance pattern in Louisiana is not limited to one drug. SAMHSA estimated that 849,000 people used marijuana in the past year and 887,000 reported binge alcohol use in the past month in the 2023 and 2024 annual average. Those numbers help explain why many programs need to be ready for both alcohol-related treatment needs and drug-related care at the same time.

Alcohol can drive withdrawal risk, medical complications, and relapse cycles that require a higher level of care. Heavy marijuana use can still disrupt work, school, motivation, sleep, or mental health. If either substance is central to the problem, ask whether the rehab treats that issue directly rather than assuming it is secondary.

How to use these Louisiana addiction statistics when choosing rehab

Statistics are only useful if they help you make a better decision. When you contact rehabs in Louisiana, use the state data to ask direct questions about safety, fit, and follow-through.

  1. Ask what level of care fits the substances involved and whether detox can be arranged if withdrawal risk is high.
  2. Confirm the center actually treats alcohol, cannabis, opioids, stimulants, or polysubstance use if that matches your situation.
  3. Verify insurance, wait time, and admission timing early in the call so you do not lose time on a poor fit.
  4. Ask about dual-diagnosis care if depression, anxiety, trauma, or another mental health issue is part of the picture.
  5. Make sure there is a step-down plan after the first level of treatment, such as outpatient care, peer support, or recovery housing.

Rehab in Louisiana is not one-size-fits-all. The best option is the program that can admit you safely, treat the substances actually involved, and keep you connected to care after discharge.

Louisiana Rehab FAQ

What do Louisiana addiction statistics say about treatment demand?

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SAMHSA estimated that 727,000 people age 12 and older in Louisiana were classified as needing substance use treatment in 2024. 574,000 did not receive treatment, which shows the gap between need and actual care is still large.

Is alcohol still a major addiction concern in Louisiana?

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Yes. SAMHSA estimated that 887,000 people in Louisiana reported binge alcohol use in the past month in the 2023 and 2024 annual average. That does not mean every person needs rehab, but it does show alcohol remains a major driver of screening, early intervention, and treatment demand.

How common is marijuana use in Louisiana?

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SAMHSA estimated that 849,000 people in Louisiana used marijuana in the past year in the 2023 and 2024 annual average. For some people, heavy cannabis use can still disrupt school, work, sleep, or mental health and may require treatment.

What kind of rehab should you look for in Louisiana?

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Start with the level of care that matches your risk. If withdrawal, overdose risk, or heavy alcohol or sedative use is involved, look for a program that can arrange medical detox. Then confirm the center can treat co-occurring mental health issues, accepts your insurance, and offers follow-up care after the first stage of treatment.

Finding the Right Next Step in Louisiana

Louisiana addiction statistics show broad treatment need, a large treatment gap, and continued demand tied to both alcohol and drug use. Use the directory above to compare the 167 rehab centers listed for Louisiana, then narrow your calls to programs that match the substances involved, confirm insurance quickly, and offer continuing care after the first stage of treatment.

Sources

Counts cited above come from SAMHSA state tables and are reported in thousands using 2023 and 2024 annual averages.

  1. SAMHSA. National Survey on Drug Use and Health: 2023-2024 State Releases.
  2. SAMHSA. National Survey on Drug Use and Health: 2023-2024 State-Specific Tables of Model-Based Estimates.