If you've been researching sober living, you've probably run into the name "Oxford House" — and a lot of confusion about what it actually is. Here's the plain-English answer, with no sales pitch, plus an honest look at when an Oxford House is the right move and when you need something with more support.
An Oxford House is one of the oldest and most recognized models of recovery housing in America. It's a great fit for a lot of people — and the wrong fit for others. Because we run structured sober living in Dayton, people ask us about Oxford Houses all the time, and we'd rather give you the truth than steer you. Below is exactly what an Oxford House is, how it works, what it costs, the rules, and how to tell whether it fits where you are in recovery right now.
The short answer
An Oxford House is a self-run, self-supporting sober home with no paid staff — the residents run it themselves, split the bills equally, and vote on who moves in. It runs on three rules: pay your way, run it democratically, and anyone who uses alcohol or drugs leaves immediately. It's affordable and open-ended, and it works best for people who already have stable footing in recovery. If you're in early or fragile recovery — or just leaving treatment — a staffed sober living home with 24/7 support is usually the safer first step. Call us at (937) 930-7502 if you want help figuring out which one fits you.
What an Oxford House actually is
Oxford House started in 1975 in Silver Spring, Maryland, when a group of men whose halfway house was closing decided to rent the building and run it themselves. That simple idea — people in recovery governing their own sober home — grew into Oxford House, Inc., a national nonprofit that today charters thousands of houses across the United States.
The defining feature is what an Oxford House doesn't have: no paid staff, no house manager, no counselors, and no required treatment program. A rented single-family home is leased by the residents, who run everything themselves — collecting the weekly share, paying the rent and utilities, assigning chores, holding house meetings, and deciding together who gets to live there. Each house operates under a charter from Oxford House, Inc., which sets the model and the rules but does not staff or manage the home.
The three rules every Oxford House runs on
The entire Oxford House model comes down to three non-negotiable principles:
- The house must be financially self-supporting. Residents split the actual cost of running the home equally. No outside funding pays the weekly bills, and no one carries anyone else.
- The house must be run democratically. Residents elect officers (like a president and treasurer), vote on house decisions, and admit new members by vote. Everyone has an equal say.
- Anyone who returns to drinking or using must leave immediately. Because there's no staff to manage a relapse, this rule is what keeps everyone else safe.
How an Oxford House works day to day
Living in an Oxford House looks a lot like living with responsible roommates who share one serious goal. Here's what to expect:
- Single-sex homes. Houses are for men, for women, or in some cases for women with children. Men and women don't live together.
- You run it together. Weekly house meetings handle money, chores, conflicts, and votes. Officers are elected and rotate.
- No set length of stay. As long as you stay sober, pay your share, and follow the rules, you can stay as long as you need — months or years.
- Accountability is peer-driven. Residents may require attendance at AA, NA, or other recovery meetings, and the house can call for drug tests, but it's the members enforcing it, not staff.
- You bring your own structure. There's no built-in program, transportation, or clinical care. You arrange your own work, treatment, and appointments.
That self-direction is the model's strength and its limit at the same time. For someone steady enough to manage their own recovery, it builds real independence. For someone still finding their feet, the lack of staff support can be the gap they fall through.
Oxford House vs. staffed sober living: the real difference
This is the question that actually matters, so here's the honest comparison. Both are "sober living." The difference is how much support is built in.
An Oxford House gives you
- The lowest cost (you only split the real bills — no charge for services)
- Peer-run independence and an open-ended stay
- A democratic community where you have an equal vote
- No required program, no staff oversight
Staffed sober living (like Tina Marie's) gives you
- 24/7 staff on call, not just peers
- Staff-run drug testing, house meetings, and accountability
- Transportation to meetings and clinical appointments
- Life-skills and job-readiness programming
- Coordination of clinical care (IOP, PHP, counseling) through our partner, Visualize Wellness Living
- A structured program designed to carry you through early recovery
Neither is "better" in the abstract — they're built for different moments. If you've been sober a while, have income or a plan to get it, and want an affordable, independent place to keep building, an Oxford House can be excellent. If you're days or weeks out of treatment, fragile, or you know you need someone in your corner around the clock, the structure of a staffed home is what protects your sobriety. We dig into a related distinction in our guide to sober living vs. a halfway house, which trips up just as many people.
Are there Oxford Houses in Ohio and Dayton?
Yes. Ohio has a network of chartered Oxford Houses for men and women across the state, including homes in the Dayton and Miami Valley area. Like all recovery housing, beds open up only when a current resident moves out, so availability changes week to week. The most reliable way to find a current vacancy is the official Oxford House directory and vacancy locator, or by contacting Ohio's Oxford House outreach workers directly through that site.
If you call around and the Oxford Houses near you are full — which is common — don't let that stall your recovery. There are several types of recovery housing in the Dayton area, and the right move is whichever safe, sober bed you can get into now. We're glad to point you in the right direction even if that's not our house.
How much does an Oxford House cost?
Because residents simply split the real cost of running the home, Oxford House fees are usually among the lowest in recovery housing — often in the range of $100 to $150 per week, depending on the local rental market. There's no profit built in and nothing charged for services, because there are no services. New residents typically pay their first week up front, and sometimes an equal share of a small house deposit.
For comparison, staffed structured sober living in Dayton generally runs $125–$250 per week, but that fee includes supervision, testing, transportation, and programming. We break the full local picture down in our Dayton sober living cost guide, and if cost is your real worry, read whether Medicaid pays for sober living in Ohio — because the housing fee is often the smaller piece once clinical services are billed.
"I tried to go straight into an Oxford House right out of detox because it was the cheapest option. I wasn't ready — there was nobody there at 2 a.m. when I was white-knuckling it, and I left in a week. I went into a staffed house instead, got my footing for eight months, and now I'm thriving in an Oxford House. Both are good. I just needed them in the right order."
— Composite testimonial from a person in long-term Dayton recovery
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).
Who an Oxford House is right for — and who needs more
After years of watching people move through every kind of recovery housing, here's the honest fit guide:
An Oxford House is a strong fit if you:
- Have some stable time in recovery and feel steady
- Can hold a job or have a clear plan for income
- Want maximum independence and a low weekly cost
- Are self-motivated and can manage your own appointments and treatment
- Thrive with peer accountability rather than staff oversight
A staffed sober living home is the safer first step if you:
- Are newly sober or just leaving inpatient, PHP, or IOP treatment
- Have relapsed before when left without structure
- Need transportation, drug testing, or help coordinating clinical care
- Want 24/7 staff support, not just roommates, during a crisis
- Are rebuilding life skills, employment, or family relationships from the ground up
If you read that second list and recognized yourself, that's not a failure — it's self-awareness, and it's exactly the kind of honesty recovery is built on. That's who Tina Marie's Recovery Housing is built for. We serve women, men, couples, and veterans who need real structure while they get their feet under them.
How to get into an Oxford House
The process is simple, but it depends on the house having an opening and the current members choosing you:
- Find a house with a vacancy through the official Oxford House directory.
- Contact the house and ask to be interviewed. You'll meet the current residents.
- The members vote. Most houses require an 80% yes vote to admit a new resident.
- Pay your first week's equal share and move in.
- Stay sober, pay your share, follow the rules — and you have a home for as long as you need it.
If you're not sure you're ready for a self-run home — or you simply can't find an opening — we'll help you find the right next step, whether that's with us or somewhere else. Read how to get into sober living in Dayton for the full walkthrough, or what to expect on your first day.
Bottom line: An Oxford House is a proven, affordable, peer-run path that has helped hundreds of thousands of people stay sober — when it's the right fit for the moment they're in. The key is being honest about how much support you need right now. If that's "a lot," start with structure and earn your way to independence. Either way, don't let analysis paralysis keep you out of a safe, sober bed tonight. Call us at (937) 930-7502 and we'll help you find the right door — even if it isn't ours.