What Are the Rules in a Sober Living Home?

By Kevin Saterfield • Updated June 13, 2026 • 7 min read

People hear "rules" and picture punishment. In a good sober living home, the rules are the opposite of that — they're the guardrails that keep you alive long enough to get your life back.

If you or someone you love is about to move into a sober living home, "what are the rules?" is one of the first and most reasonable questions to ask. The honest answer is that the rules exist for one reason: to protect a substance-free environment that every person in the house is depending on. Below is a plain-English walk-through of the rules you'll find in almost any reputable home, why each one is there, what happens if you break one, and how we handle it at Tina Marie's in Dayton.

The short version

Expect these core rules in any good sober living home: total sobriety with random drug testing, house meetings and recovery meetings, a curfew, chores, respect for other residents, honesty, and a requirement to work or attend a program. Break a small rule and you'll get a warning or a corrective consequence. A relapse is treated as a clinical event, not just a punishment. Serious violations — violence, theft, bringing substances in — can mean discharge, because the whole house's safety comes first.

Why sober living homes have rules at all

Addiction thrives on chaos, isolation, and zero accountability. Recovery is built on the exact opposite: structure, community, and accountability. The rules aren't there because anyone thinks you're a bad person. They're there because early recovery is fragile, and one person's relapse in a shared house can put everyone else at risk. A home with no rules isn't "freedom" — it's just the same environment that wasn't working before.

The rules you'll find in almost every sober living home

1. Stay completely substance-free (and get tested)

This is the one non-negotiable rule everywhere. No alcohol, no illicit drugs, and usually no non-prescribed medications. To back it up, homes use random and scheduled drug and alcohol testing. Testing isn't about catching people — it's about keeping the environment honest and safe for everyone who lives there.

2. Go to meetings — house meetings and recovery meetings

Most homes require weekly house meetings (where the community sorts out issues together) plus a set number of outside recovery meetings — AA, NA, or similar. Connection is one of the strongest protective factors in recovery, and meetings are where it gets built.

3. Keep a curfew

Especially early on, there's a curfew. It protects routine and keeps people out of the high-risk situations that tend to happen late at night in early recovery. Curfews usually loosen as you demonstrate stability — structure is tightest when you're most vulnerable and relaxes as you grow.

4. Do your chores and carry your weight

Everyone has assigned responsibilities — cleaning, kitchen duties, common-area upkeep. It sounds small, but relearning how to show up for daily responsibilities is a real part of rebuilding a stable life.

5. Respect everyone in the house

No violence, no threats, no theft, no harassment. Homes are usually gender-specific for exactly this reason — we run separate women's recovery housing and men's sober living in Dayton. This rule protects the basic safety that makes recovery possible, and it's the one most likely to lead to immediate discharge if it's broken.

6. Be honest

Honesty is the whole foundation of recovery, so dishonesty — hiding a relapse, lying about testing, sneaking substances in — is taken seriously. The goal isn't perfection; it's truthfulness, because you can't recover in a house built on lies.

7. Work, look for work, or be in a program

Most structured homes require residents to be doing something productive: working, job-hunting, or attending treatment like IOP covered through Medicaid. Purpose and structure are protective; idleness is risky.

8. Guests, phones, and overnight passes — by policy

Most homes let you keep your phone and allow approved visitors, but under guidelines that protect everyone's privacy and the recovery environment. Overnight passes are usually earned over time. Policies vary a lot between homes, so ask each one directly.

"I thought the rules were going to feel like jail. Two weeks in, I realized they were the first structure I'd had in years — and they were the reason I could finally sleep at night without my brain screaming at me."

— 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).

What happens if you break a rule?

This is where good homes separate themselves from bad ones. The response should fit the situation:

For the national perspective on what makes recovery housing effective, the SAMHSA recovery resource hub is a reliable source.

How we handle rules at Tina Marie's

At Tina Marie's, the rules are clear, explained at intake, and applied with structure and grace. We start everyone with a 7–14 day observation period and tighter structure, then loosen it as residents demonstrate responsibility across our 9–12 month program. We use random drug testing, require house meetings and recovery meetings, and expect every resident to work, job-hunt, or attend a program. And when someone stumbles, we don't lead with shame — we lead with "what do we need to change so this works." For a feel of how it all comes together, read what to expect on your first day.


Bottom line: Sober living rules aren't there to control you — they're there to protect the one thing you can't recover without: a safe, honest, substance-free place to live. If you understand that, the rules stop feeling like a cage and start feeling like the floor under your feet. Want to know exactly how ours work? Call us. (937) 930-7502.

Frequently asked questions about sober living rules

What are the basic rules in a sober living home?
Almost every home shares a core set: stay completely substance-free and submit to random drug and alcohol testing, attend house meetings and recovery meetings, follow a curfew, do your chores, respect other residents (no violence, theft, or harassment), be honest, and either work, look for work, or attend a treatment program. Specifics vary, but those categories are nearly universal.
What happens if you break a rule in sober living?
It depends. Minor issues mean a warning or corrective consequence. A relapse is handled as a clinical event — the home looks at what happened, adjusts the plan, and may require a higher level of care before you return. Repeated or serious violations like violence or bringing substances into the house can mean discharge, because the other residents' safety comes first.
Do sober living homes drug test you?
Yes. Random and scheduled drug and alcohol testing is standard in reputable homes, including Tina Marie's. It protects the substance-free environment everyone in the house depends on and gives each resident an honest, accountable structure to recover in.
Is there a curfew in sober living?
Most structured homes have a curfew, especially early on, and it usually relaxes as a resident shows stability and responsibility. At Tina Marie's, structure is tighter early and loosens as residents progress through the program.
Can you have visitors or a phone in sober living?
Most homes allow phones and approved visitors under guidelines that protect the recovery environment and other residents' privacy. Policies vary, so ask each home. At Tina Marie's, residents keep their phones, and visitor guidelines are explained at intake.
KS

Kevin "Coach Sat" Saterfield

Founder & CEO, Tina Marie's Recovery Housing

Former Youth Resource Officer for Dayton Public Schools and State Championship-winning football coach. Founded Tina Marie's in honor of his mother, Tina Marie, whose recovery journey shaped a life dedicated to second chances. Reach the office at (937) 930-7502.

Want to know exactly how our house works?

The first call is free and confidential. We'll walk you through the rules, the program, and what your first week would actually look like.

Call (937) 930-7502 See Admissions Process