Most sober living homes in Dayton won't tell you what they cost until you're on the phone, fragile and embarrassed to ask. We think that's wrong. Here's the honest answer, with no runaround.
If you're reading this, you (or someone you love) is trying to figure out how to pay for the next step of recovery. That's a hard place to be standing. The good news: sober living in Dayton is one of the most affordable forms of structured recovery support that exists, and almost nobody pays the full sticker price out of pocket. Below, we walk through exactly what it costs in 2026, what's included, and the four main ways people actually pay for it — including how we help residents who arrive with literally nothing.
The short answer
Private-pay sober living in Dayton runs $125 to $250 per week, with most homes — including ours — landing in the $150 to $200 range. With Medicaid, sliding-scale, voucher, or grant support, that out-of-pocket number drops to $0–$50 per week for the majority of residents. Call (937) 930-7502 if you want the exact number for your situation; the call is free and we don't ask for insurance information until you've decided you want to come.
What sober living actually costs in Dayton (2026 numbers)
Across the Dayton metro — from West Dayton to Kettering, Trotwood, Englewood, and Riverside — the sober living market in 2026 looks roughly like this:
- Peer-run homes (Oxford House model): $100–$150/week. Self-governing, no on-site staff, no clinical services included.
- Standard structured homes (most of the market): $150–$200/week. Staff supervision, drug testing, house meetings, transportation, included.
- Premium / amenity-heavy homes: $225–$300/week. Higher-end housing, sometimes including additional clinical or wellness amenities.
- Sober living + bundled clinical (IOP/PHP): $300–$500/week effective rate, but most of that is billed to insurance — out-of-pocket can still be small.
For comparison: recovery.com lists Dayton sober living pricing for many area providers, and the range you'll see there matches what we just laid out.
What your weekly fee actually covers
This is where homes vary widely, and where you should ask sharp questions. At Tina Marie's, here's what's included in your weekly rate:
Included
- Furnished private bedroom (bed, dresser, closet space)
- All utilities — electric, water, heat, WiFi
- Shared kitchen, living areas, laundry
- Random and scheduled drug testing
- Mandatory house meetings and weekly check-ins
- Transportation to AA/NA meetings and clinical appointments
- 24/7 staff availability
- Connections to clinical services (IOP, PHP, mental health) through our clinical partner Visualize Wellness Living
- Job readiness support and reintegration resources
Not included (you pay separately or bring your own)
- Personal food (residents shop and prepare their own meals)
- Toiletries, clothing, personal supplies
- Cell phone and personal data plan
- Medications (most are covered by Medicaid)
- Outside entertainment, transportation outside of recovery activities
If a home is charging less than $125/week, ask exactly what they don't provide. Sometimes the lower-priced homes don't include transportation, drug testing, or staff supervision — which means you're paying less but getting less of what makes sober living actually work.
The four ways people actually pay for sober living in Dayton
Almost nobody pays full freight out of pocket for the entire 9–12 month program. Here are the four real-world payment pathways our residents use, sometimes in combination.
1. Private pay (cash, family support)
About 1 in 5 of our residents pays directly. This is most common when family members are stepping in to support someone in recovery, or when someone has savings from before their addiction. Private pay gives you the most flexibility — no paperwork, no eligibility verification, no waiting.
2. Medicaid (CareSource, Buckeye, Molina, UnitedHealthcare)
Here's what's important to understand: Ohio Medicaid does not directly pay for the room-and-board cost of sober living. What Medicaid pays for is the clinical work that happens while you live in sober housing — the IOP groups, individual counseling, peer recovery support, medication management, and case management.
For most of our residents, this matters because the clinical billing covers the majority of the cost of recovery, and the housing fee becomes the smaller, manageable piece. The Ohio Department of Medicaid runs the program (medicaid.ohio.gov) and assigns you to one of the four managed care plans listed above. We'll help you understand what's covered for your specific plan when you call.
3. Vouchers and grant-funded placement
This is where a lot of doors open that people don't know about:
- HUD-VASH — housing voucher specifically for veterans. Covers a major portion of the housing cost. Coordinated through the Dayton VA.
- SSVF (Supportive Services for Veteran Families) — rapid re-housing grants for veterans and their families.
- Montgomery County ADAMHS Board housing assistance — local levy dollars that fund recovery housing for residents who qualify.
- Court-ordered placement — in some cases drug court orders include housing support funded through the court system.
4. Sliding scale and "we figure it out"
Some homes — us included — will work with people who genuinely have nothing. We are not a charity, but we have not turned anyone away because they couldn't pay on day one. Recovery is hard enough without bureaucracy keeping you out of a safe place to sleep. Call us. We'll figure it out.
"I came here with a duffel bag and $11. I didn't know how I was going to pay rent. Within two weeks they had me set up with Medicaid, my IOP was billed, and we got me on a payment plan that I could actually meet. Nobody else gave me that kind of grace."
— Composite testimonial from a current Tina Marie's resident
Quotes throughout this article are composites drawn from real conversations with residents and families. Names and identifying details have been changed to protect privacy — this is the standard practice in the recovery field, where confidentiality is protected by federal law (42 CFR Part 2).
How Dayton compares to other Ohio cities
Dayton sober living tends to be more affordable than Cincinnati, Columbus, or Cleveland equivalents. Here's a rough comparison for standard structured sober living:
- Dayton: $150–$200/week
- Cincinnati: $175–$250/week
- Columbus: $200–$300/week
- Cleveland: $175–$275/week
Why Dayton is more affordable: lower cost of living overall, strong Medicaid coverage in Montgomery County, and a relatively competitive market with multiple OhioMHAS-registered providers (us included).
Why length of stay matters more than weekly cost
Here's something the cheapest homes won't tell you: the strongest predictor of long-term recovery is how long you stay in structured housing, not how little you paid per week. Research from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and SAMHSA consistently shows that:
- 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
This is why our program runs 9 to 12 months. Saving $25 a week to leave at month 3 is not a savings — it is 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.
For more on outcomes-driven recovery, the SAMHSA recovery resource hub is the most reliable national source.
What we recommend you ask any sober living home in Dayton
Before you commit anywhere, ask these questions on the phone. Any honest provider will answer them in plain English without dodging:
- What's your weekly rate, and what exactly is included?
- Is there a move-in fee? A deposit?
- What's your average length of stay, and what's the program length?
- Do you accept Medicaid? Which plans (CareSource, Buckeye, Molina, UnitedHealthcare)?
- Are you OhioMHAS-registered? Are you ORH-certified?
- Do you provide transportation to meetings and clinical appointments?
- How do you handle relapse?
- What clinical services are included or coordinated?
- Can I tour the home before I commit?
- What happens if I lose my job and can't pay one week?
If they can't answer #5, #7, or #10, keep calling.
Bottom line: Sober living in Dayton is the most cost-effective path to durable sobriety that exists. Don't let the sticker price be the reason you don't call. Call us, tell us your situation honestly, and we will tell you exactly what your week one and week one hundred will look like financially. (937) 930-7502.