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Midwest

Nicotine & Behavioral Addiction Treatment in Michigan

24/7 Support Available

The federal treatment locator counts 359 Michigan programs for tobacco use and behavioral addictions, roughly a third of them around Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Flint. To fit the rotating shifts that still shape auto-country work, evening and weekend quit-smoking counseling has become routine in Michigan treatment — and in a casino city like Detroit, the same intake often screens for gambling problems alongside tobacco.

Updated: July 5, 2026
Sources:
Verified Information

Explore Treatment Centers in Michigan

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11,800+ Centers
SAMHSA Data

Addiction Treatment in Michigan

Those 359 listings come from SAMHSA's treatment locator, and behind the number sits a coordinated system: Community Mental Health Service Programs (CMHSPs) organize care region by region, while the University of Michigan Addiction Center connects clinical work to ongoing research. Most Michigan nicotine addiction treatment now pairs coaching with FDA-approved quit medication — nicotine patches and lozenges, bupropion, or varenicline — and larger clinics increasingly fold gambling disorder and related behavioral addictions into the same treatment plan.

Why Choose Treatment in Michigan?
  • The University of Michigan Addiction Center ties treatment to active clinical research in Ann Arbor.
  • Community Mental Health Service Programs coordinate detox, residential, and outpatient care across each region.
  • The Healthy Michigan Plan, the state's expanded Medicaid program, covers quit counseling and cessation medication.
  • Detroit's casino district has pushed local clinics to build out gambling-addiction counseling.
  • Dawn Farm and other long-running recovery communities give the state deep peer-support roots.
University of Michigan Addiction Center research programs
Regional care through Community Mental Health Service Programs
Dawn Farm recovery community near Ann Arbor
Detroit casino-driven gambling counseling
Insurance & Payment in Michigan

Michigan expanded Medicaid in 2014 through the Healthy Michigan Plan, which covers behavioral health care along with quit-smoking counseling and cessation medication. Private plans must cover tobacco-cessation treatment under federal parity rules, and enrollment in the Healthy Michigan Plan stays open year-round.

Types of Treatment Available in Michigan

Medical Detox

Safe, supervised withdrawal with 24/7 medical support and monitoring

Residential Treatment

Live-in programs with structured daily therapy and comprehensive care

Partial Hospitalization (PHP)

Intensive day treatment programs with medical oversight

Intensive Outpatient (IOP)

Flexible scheduling for working professionals and families

Standard Outpatient

Weekly therapy sessions and support groups for ongoing recovery

Sober Living

Transitional housing with peer support and accountability

Expert Tips for Michigan

Start with the Michigan Tobacco Quitline at 1-800-QUIT-NOW (1-800-784-8669) — free coaching and, for many callers, a starter supply of nicotine patches or gum.

If gambling has grown alongside a smoking habit — common in the Detroit casino corridor — ask whether a clinic treats both, since many now do.

Healthy Michigan Plan coverage begins the month you enroll, so there's no reason to delay a first appointment waiting for open enrollment.

Michigan Treatment Resources

Official state resources and organizations providing addiction treatment support in Michigan.

Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS)

State agency that oversees substance use and tobacco-cessation services and directs treatment funding.

1-844-799-9876

Michigan Substance Use Disorder Helpline

Confidential 24/7 line for treatment referrals and support across the state.

1-844-446-7842

Healthy Michigan Plan (Medicaid)

Michigan's expanded Medicaid program, covering addiction care and quit-smoking treatment.

University of Michigan Addiction Center

University research center offering clinical care and trials for substance use disorders.

1-734-232-0200

National Resources

Federal resources and hotlines available 24/7 for addiction support.

Free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service

Find treatment facilities in your area

Provides 24/7 free and confidential support for people in distress

Research and information on drug use and addiction

Your Questions, Answered

Michigan programs span the full continuum for nicotine dependence and behavioral addictions: outpatient counseling, intensive outpatient (IOP), partial hospitalization (PHP), and residential care, with telehealth quit coaching extending reach into rural areas.

Michigan expanded Medicaid in 2014 through the Healthy Michigan Plan, which covers behavioral health care along with quit-smoking counseling and cessation medication. Private plans must cover tobacco-cessation treatment under federal parity rules, and enrollment in the Healthy Michigan Plan stays open year-round.

Timelines differ by person and program. Quit-medication courses generally run 8-12 weeks, structured counseling programs 4-12 weeks, and residential stays for co-occurring behavioral addictions 30-90 days; many people stay with support groups well past the initial program.

The University of Michigan Addiction Center ties treatment to active clinical research in Ann Arbor. Community Mental Health Service Programs coordinate detox, residential, and outpatient care across each region. The Healthy Michigan Plan, the state's expanded Medicaid program, covers quit counseling and cessation medication. Detroit's casino district has pushed local clinics to build out gambling-addiction counseling. Dawn Farm and other long-running recovery communities give the state deep peer-support roots.
Important Notice

This website provides general information about addiction treatment facilities. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing a mental health crisis, please call 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or 911 for immediate assistance. For substance abuse help, call SAMHSA at 1-800-662-4357.

Data sourced from SAMHSA Treatment Locator, state licensing databases, and facility submissions.