

You have finished treatment. The clinical work is done, the medical detox is behind you, and the staff who helped you through the hardest part are saying goodbye. Now comes the question that trips up more people in early recovery than almost any other: what do you do next?
Going straight back to the environment where active addiction took hold is one of the most significant risk factors for relapse. A sober living house offers a different option, a structured, substance-free home environment where you can rebuild your life at a manageable pace, surrounded by other people who are doing the same work. This article explains what sober living is, what it is not, who it helps most, and how to decide if it is the right step for you.

A sober living house, sometimes called a recovery residence or transitional housing, is a shared living arrangement for people in recovery from substance use disorder. Residents live together in a home setting, follow house rules that support sobriety, and typically participate in ongoing treatment, 12-step programs, or other recovery support activities. The model is grounded in the social model of recovery, the understanding that environment and community are not just helpful in recovery but essential to it. As SAMHSA describes recovery housing, these are safe, healthy, substance-free living environments centered on peer support and connection to services that promote long-term recovery. The setting is not incidental. It is part of the treatment.
Sober living houses vary in structure. Some are highly organized, with required meetings, curfews, and regular accountability check-ins. Others are more flexible, designed for people who are already employed or in outpatient programs. What they share is the commitment to a substance-free environment and the presence of peers who understand the challenges of early recovery.
Sober living is not inpatient treatment. There are no clinicians on-site around the clock, no detox services, and no medical supervision. It is not a halfway house in the traditional sense, which typically refers to court-ordered transitional housing as part of a criminal justice sentence. And it is not a permanent solution, though some residents stay for a year or more as they build the stability and confidence needed to live independently.
It is also not a last resort. Many people who have never been to inpatient treatment benefit from sober living, particularly those stepping down from outpatient programs or navigating a life transition that increases their risk of relapse. The decision to pursue sober living is a sign of awareness, not failure.
The research on recovery housing is consistent. A peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs followed 557 sober living house residents over 12 months and found that participation was associated with sustained improvements in substance use outcomes, psychiatric symptoms, and employment. Residents who stayed longer showed better outcomes across the board.
The mechanism is not mysterious. Early recovery is fragile, not because the person in recovery is weak, but because the brain is still recalibrating. Cravings are intense, stress tolerance is low, and the habits and environments associated with active use are powerful triggers. A sober living environment removes many of those triggers while providing the kind of daily accountability and peer connection that research consistently links to better outcomes.
This is especially relevant for Texans. The state's vast geography means that many people returning from treatment face long drives back to communities that lack robust recovery infrastructure. Sober living fills that gap, offering a local anchor for recovery in places where outpatient programs and peer support meetings may be sparse.
Most sober living houses have a clear set of expectations for residents. Common elements include:
The structure varies by house. Some require residents to be employed within a certain number of weeks. Some have curfews. Some organize group activities or have peer leadership systems where longer-term residents mentor newer ones. What they all share is the expectation that residents are actively working on their recovery, not just abstaining.
Daily life in a well-run sober living house tends to resemble what most people would recognize as ordinary adult life, with grocery shopping, chores, jobs or school, and evening meetings. That ordinariness is the point. Recovery is not just about not using. It is about building a life that does not need substances to feel livable.
Sober living is worth considering if any of the following apply:
Sober living is generally not the right fit if you need medical supervision, if you are in active withdrawal, or if you have not yet completed an initial course of treatment. In those cases, a higher level of care is the appropriate starting point. MTR's relapse prevention program and care team can help you identify where you are in your recovery journey and what level of structure you need.
Texas has a large and varied landscape of recovery housing, but quality varies significantly. When evaluating a sober living house, look for clear house rules and accountability structures, affiliation with a recognized recovery housing network, transparency about costs and length-of-stay expectations, and a demonstrated connection to clinical or peer support resources in the community.
If you are currently in treatment at More Than Rehab, your care team can help you navigate the transition to sober living and identify options that align with your recovery plan. We also offer aftercare and sober living support as part of our continuum of care, including our Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program for those who need ongoing structure after leaving residential treatment.
Costs vary widely depending on location, amenities, and the level of structure provided. Most sober living houses charge weekly or monthly rent that covers housing, utilities, and sometimes meals. Many are designed to be affordable on an entry-level income. Some may accept insurance for associated outpatient services, though the housing itself is typically paid out of pocket.
There is no fixed timeline. Some residents stay three to six months during the initial step-down from inpatient treatment. Others stay a year or more. Research consistently shows that longer stays are associated with better long-term outcomes, so the decision to leave should be based on readiness and support rather than an arbitrary timeline.
Yes, and most sober living houses encourage or require residents to be employed or actively pursuing employment. Working is considered a core part of rebuilding the structure and purpose that support long-term recovery.
Policies vary by house. Most sober living environments have clear consequences for relapse, including temporary or permanent removal from the house, depending on the circumstances. A relapse does not mean recovery is over. It means the level of care or support may need to be recalibrated. If you or someone you know relapses while in sober living, reaching out to a treatment professional immediately is the right move.
If you or someone you love is looking for the right next step after treatment, More Than Rehab is here to help. Reach out today for a confidential conversation about your options.


