
Recovery Housing
Quality Sober Living
Recovery housing, also known as sober living or halfway houses, offers a structured environment for individuals in early stage recovery. These residences enforce rules, conduct drug tests, and provide a crucial transition step between intensive treatment and independent living. Residents engage in a supportive community, fostering personal growth and long-term recovery.
What is Sober Living Housing?
The process of recovering from active addiction often requires sustained, long-term, and targeted approaches that are designed to reduce the likelihood of relapse and to help improve a person’s ability to manage their responsibilities. We know it takes time for new patterns to take root as healthy habits. A high-quality sober living environment can provide long-term structure, support, and continued care to help you build a strong foundation for lasting recovery.
Quality sober living homes offer clean, safe, and affordable living options that are free from drugs and alcohol. Sober housing like this is also designed to help a newly recovering individual navigate the challenges of early sobriety.
Transformation House supports clients by helping connect clients with local recovery residences.
Why Consider Sober Living Housing?
A stepping-stone between addiction treatment and returning home can help make the transition back to everyday life easier. At Transformation House we offer long-term sober living housing that provides a community of support in a safe environment that can teach you how to live in recovery.
Quality Sober Living As Long-Term Support
The majority of people who use sober living housing as a tool after residential inpatient treatment find that long-term sobriety is easier to maintain and that the social network and friends they meet in sober living end up being supportive, long-term friends. Sober-living housing is generally not co-ed to help clients focus on their recovery without distraction.
Transformation House encourages our clients to use sober living housing as an additional form of support after a drug and alcohol rehab program is completed. Drug and alcohol abuse are behaviors that develop over time. Even after individuals form new habits, a supportive network of friends and positive role models help them to maintain a drug-free lifestyle.