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Insurance coverage for substance-use treatment is more navigable in 2026 than it was three years ago — the 2024 federal parity rule materially raised the floor on what commercial plans must cover. The pages below are an orientation: what each major carrier covers, where the rules apply, and what to do if a request is denied.

Coverage Guide

Does Your Insurance Cover Rehab?

Under federal parity law, every major insurer must cover medically necessary substance-use treatment on terms comparable to medical-surgical care. In practice, what that means for your out-of-pocket cost, access to residential beds, and the specific medications your plan will pay for varies substantially across carriers. Below: detailed coverage analysis for the ten insurers that together cover the majority of Americans with addiction.

Compare 10 Coverage Providers

What differs across these plans is not whether they cover addiction treatment — federal law requires them to — but how they cover it: deductibles, coinsurance, prior-authorization hurdles, network adequacy, and formulary restrictions on MAT medications.

Provider Members Deductible Cost-share OOP max Verify
Aetna 22+ million $500–$7,500 20–30% coinsurance $6,000–$18,000 per family 1-855-272-4004
BlueCross BlueShield 110+ million across the Blue system $500–$8,000 10–30% coinsurance $5,000–$18,000 per family Call the member number on your card (varies by plan)
Cigna 17+ million $500–$6,500 15–30% coinsurance $6,000–$17,000 per family 1-866-780-8546
UnitedHealthcare 50+ million $500–$8,500 15–30% coinsurance $6,000–$18,000 per family 1-866-801-4409
Humana 17+ million (heavily Medicare Advantage) $250–$6,500 $0–30% depending on plan $3,500–$18,000 1-800-457-4708
Anthem 48+ million across Elevance brands $500–$7,500 20–30% coinsurance $6,000–$18,000 1-844-840-8724
Kaiser Permanente 12+ million $250–$5,000 $0–20% coinsurance $3,000–$16,000 1-800-390-3510
TRICARE 9.6 million (active duty, retirees, and families) $0–$500 (varies by status and plan) $0–20% coinsurance depending on status $1,000–$3,500 per family (catastrophic cap) East Region: 1-800-444-5445 (Humana Military) · West Region: 1-844-866-9378 (TriWest)
Medicaid 85+ million $0 (some states have small copays) $0–$5 per service Federal Medicaid cost-sharing capped at 5% of family income (statute) Call your state Medicaid agency or managed-care plan
Medicare 65+ million Part A: $1,632 per benefit period (2024). Part B: $240 annual deductible. Part A inpatient: $0 for days 1–60, then increasing daily coinsurance. Part B: 20% coinsurance after deductible. No OOP max in Original Medicare (Parts A/B). Medicare Advantage plans have a statutory OOP max ($8,850 in 2024). 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227)

How Insurance Parity Actually Works

The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 (MHPAEA) was a short, elegant piece of legislation: a health plan that offered mental-health and substance-use benefits could not apply financial requirements (copays, deductibles, coinsurance) or treatment limitations (prior authorization, number of visits) more restrictively than it applied to medical-surgical benefits. The practical enforcement of that principle turned out to be enormously more complicated than the legal text suggested, because the way plans actually constrain access is rarely in the explicit benefit design — it is in the "non-quantitative treatment limits," or NQTLs: the prior-authorization protocols, the medical-necessity criteria, the network-provider contracts, the claim-audit thresholds.

For more than a decade, insurers could comply with parity on paper while systematically making addiction treatment harder to access in practice. A plan\'s published "unlimited outpatient mental-health visits" meant nothing if the plan quietly required pre-authorization for every visit after the sixth. A plan\'s "residential SUD benefit" meant nothing if the in-network list contained four facilities in a state with a dozen evidence-based programs.

The Biden-era rule finalized in late 2024, which took full effect in 2025–2026, changed this dynamic. Plans are now required to collect and analyze their own data on NQTLs — to prove, with actual claim and authorization records, that their behavioral-health friction is not worse than their medical-surgical friction. When the comparative analysis shows disparate impact (for example: 60% of addiction-treatment claims get denied for medical necessity vs. 20% of medical-surgical claims), the plan must correct it. This is still early in enforcement, but it has already shifted insurer behavior: facilities report faster authorizations for documented severe SUD cases, fewer "bait-and-switch" denials mid-stay, and shorter appeal timelines.

How to Actually Verify Coverage

The dance most patients and families are forced into — calling the insurance number, being routed to a benefits team that reads from a script, hearing "rehab is covered" without specifics, then discovering at intake that the facility is out of network and the authorization only covers 14 days — is avoidable if you ask specific questions and document the answers. Here is a working script:

  1. "What is my in-network coverage for residential substance-use disorder treatment? Specifically: what is the deductible, coinsurance, and out-of-pocket maximum?"
  2. "Does my plan require prior authorization for residential SUD admission? If so, how is authorization obtained, and what is the typical turnaround?"
  3. "Is there a limit on the number of days of residential care per year or per benefit period? If so, what is the limit, and what is the process for additional days?"
  4. "Which medications for opioid use disorder are on my formulary, and at what tier? Specifically: buprenorphine-naloxone, methadone, naltrexone?"
  5. "What is my in-network coverage for Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP) and Partial Hospitalization (PHP)?"
  6. "If I need out-of-network treatment because an in-network facility with the appropriate clinical specialty is not available within 25 miles of my home, what is the process for requesting a network exception?"
  7. "Can you send me the medical-necessity criteria your plan uses for residential SUD authorization? Under the 2024 parity rules, these should be available on request."

Document the answers in writing if possible. Request a reference number for the call. If you later receive a denial that contradicts what you were told, the written record is leverage.

What to Do When You Are Denied

Denial rates for addiction-treatment claims are higher than for most other medical specialties, and the appeals process — opaque as it is — works often enough that giving up after a first denial is usually a mistake. The key windows:

  • Expedited appeal (72 hours) when the patient is currently in treatment and a denial would interrupt care. Most plans must respond within three business days.
  • Standard internal appeal (typically 30 days) for non-urgent denials. You generally have 180 days from the denial date to file.
  • Second-level internal appeal in many plans after the first appeal is denied.
  • External review through the state insurance department or an Independent Review Organization (IRO) once internal appeals are exhausted — typically decided within 45 days.
  • Parity-specific enforcement through the federal Department of Labor (for employer plans) or state insurance commissioners for individual and small-group plans. Parity complaints have become meaningfully more productive since 2024.

Most treatment centers that accept commercial insurance have utilization-review staff who draft the clinical portion of first-level appeals on the patient\'s behalf. Ask specifically: "Does your utilization-review team handle insurance appeals on behalf of patients, or is that the patient\'s responsibility?" The answer should be "yes, we handle it." If it is "no," that itself is useful information.

Provider-Specific Guides

Choose your insurance carrier for detailed information on deductibles, plan types, common denial reasons, appeal processes, and frequently-asked questions specific to that insurer:

Sources & References

  1. CMS. Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) overview. cms.gov
  2. DOL. MHPAEA 2024 Final Rule. dol.gov
  3. Kaiser Family Foundation. Employer Health Benefits Survey, 2024.
  4. KFF. Medicaid Coverage of Substance Use Disorder Treatment, 2024.
  5. ASAM. The ASAM Criteria, 4th edition.
  6. Wit v. United Behavioral Health — 2020 federal court ruling on UHC medical-necessity criteria.

Coverage details vary by specific plan design. Always verify benefits with your insurer or a licensed admissions counselor before admission. Last updated April 2026. Sources: MHPAEA 2024 Final Rule, CMS Parity compliance database, KFF Health Tracking, ASAM Criteria 4e. See our editorial policy.

Medical Disclaimer
Information on this page is for educational purposes and should not replace advice from a licensed medical professional. If you or someone you know is in crisis, call the SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357), available 24/7. For emergencies, call 911.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my insurance have to cover addiction treatment?
Yes for most plans. Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), commercial insurance, ACA Marketplace plans, Medicaid, and most employer-sponsored plans must cover SUD treatment at parity with medical and surgical care. The 2024 Final Rule closed loopholes that previously let insurers impose restrictive non-quantitative limits.
How do I verify my benefits before admission?
Call the behavioral health number on the back of your insurance card. Ask: (1) is this provider in-network, (2) what is my deductible and out-of-pocket maximum for SUD, (3) does this level of care require pre-authorization, and (4) how many days are pre-approved. Document the representative's name, date, and reference number.
What if my insurer denies coverage?
Internal appeal first — most insurers allow 180 days. Cite specific clinical criteria such as the ASAM Criteria. If denied again, request external independent medical review, federally guaranteed under the ACA and decided within 45 days. The 2019 Wit v. United Behavioral Health ruling shows courts will overrule insurers using non-evidence-based criteria.
Will using insurance for rehab go on my permanent record?
Treatment records are protected under 42 CFR Part 2, federal regulations stricter than HIPAA. Records cannot be shared without your written consent and cannot be used in most legal proceedings. Insurance claims for SUD are coded like medical claims and are not visible to employers.
Can I use Medicaid for rehab even if I have private insurance?
Yes — Medicaid can be a secondary payer in some states. If your private plan has high deductibles or denies care, Medicaid eligibility is worth investigating. Expansion-state Medicaid programs cover SUD treatment in 41 states, often with $0 copay.

Citations

Sources & References

Government, academic, and clinical sources cited on this page.

How this content was verified
Transparent process · No fictional personas

Facility data comes from SAMHSA’s National Directory and state licensing boards. Statistics are cross-referenced against CDC WONDER, NIDA, and peer-reviewed research. Every medical claim is checked against primary sources before publication. Corrections are processed within 48 hours.

SAMHSA-sourced facility data
CDC + NIDA statistical references
Updated May 2026
Editorial Policy