It's the question almost everyone asks on the first call: "How long do I actually have to stay?" The honest answer isn't the one that's easiest to hear — but it's the one that keeps people sober.
The short answer
Plan on 90 days as the floor and 9–12 months as the goal. Decades of research show that time in structured recovery housing is the single strongest predictor of lasting sobriety — stronger than which program you pick or how much you pay per week. At Tina Marie's in Dayton, our program is built for a 9–12 month stay for exactly this reason. Call (937) 930-7502 and we'll walk you through what that timeline looks like for your situation.
What the research actually says
This isn't an opinion we invented to keep beds full. The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) has found for years that 90 days is roughly the minimum length of participation that produces meaningful results, and that longer stays produce better outcomes. In sober living specifically, the pattern is consistent:
- Residents who stay 3 months or less have relapse rates above 60%.
- Residents who stay 6 months see significant outcome improvements.
- Residents who stay 9–12 months show the strongest sustained sobriety.
The SAMHSA recovery resource hub reaches the same conclusion from the national data: recovery is a process measured in months and years, not days.
Why longer works (it's not about willpower)
Early recovery feels fragile because it is fragile — and time is what changes that. Here's what those extra months are actually doing:
- The brain heals on its own schedule. The reward and decision-making systems disrupted by addiction recover over months, not weeks. Leaving at day 30 means leaving before the biology has caught up.
- New habits replace old ones. Sobriety has to become the default, not a daily fight. That kind of automatic, boring, dependable routine takes months of repetition in a safe environment to build.
- Life gets rebuilt piece by piece. A job, an income, repaired relationships, a driver's license, a sober friend group — the scaffolding of a stable life can't be reassembled in a month. Our structured program spaces this work across phases on purpose.
- The support network sets. The people you get sober alongside become the network you lean on for years. Those bonds need time in the same house to form.
What 9–12 months actually looks like
A longer stay isn't 9 months of the same day on repeat. The program moves through phases:
- Days 1–14 — observation & stabilization. A supervised window to settle in safely, establish routine, and connect with clinical care through our clinical provider. (See what to expect on your first day.)
- Months 1–3 — early structure. House meetings, drug testing, accountability, and the daily rhythm that makes sobriety stick. This is the window where leaving early is most dangerous.
- Months 3–9 — rebuilding. Job-readiness, employment, life skills, and steadily increasing independence and responsibility.
- Months 9–12 — reintegration. Planning the transition out — housing, finances, and a sober support plan — so the next step is forward, not backward.
"But doesn't staying longer cost more?"
This is the fear that pushes people out the door too early, so let's be straight about it. Length of stay matters far more than the weekly price. Sober living averages $20–$35 a day, and in Dayton, Medicaid coordination, vouchers, and sliding-scale support bring most residents to $0–$50 per week out of pocket — see exactly how on our sober living cost page and the detailed Medicaid guide.
Saving $25 a week by leaving at month three isn't a savings — it's the most expensive decision you can make. The cost of relapse, in dollars and in human terms, is orders of magnitude higher than the cost of finishing the program.
"I told everybody I'd be out in 90 days. At 90 days I was sober but I wasn't ready — no job, no plan, same phone full of the same numbers. Staying the full year is the only reason I'm still here. Month nine is when it finally felt like mine."
— Composite testimonial from a Tina Marie's resident
Quotes in this article are composites drawn from real conversations with residents and families. Names and identifying details are changed to protect privacy — standard practice in the recovery field, where confidentiality is protected by federal law (42 CFR Part 2).
How do you know when you're actually ready to leave?
Readiness is about stability, not a date on the calendar. Before someone transitions out, we want to see most of these in place:
- Steady, tested sobriety over months — not weeks.
- A job or stable income.
- A real sober support network and a home group.
- Life skills — budgeting, transportation, conflict resolution — running on their own.
- A safe, substance-free place to go next, with a written plan for handling a bad day.
When those are real, you're ready — whether that's month 9 or month 12. We'd rather help you plan the transition than watch you time out on an arbitrary deadline.
Bottom line: the most important number in recovery isn't the weekly rate — it's the number of months you stay. If you're weighing sober living in Dayton for yourself or someone you love, call us and we'll tell you honestly what a 9–12 month path looks like, and how it gets paid for. (937) 930-7502.