Women's Sober Living in Dayton: What to Look For (and What to Expect)

By Kevin Saterfield • Updated June 15, 2026 • 7 min read

A woman in early recovery isn't just trying to stay sober — she's often rebuilding safety, trust, and sometimes a relationship with her children at the same time. The home she walks into matters. Here's how to choose one in Dayton, and what honest women's sober living should look like.

If you're a woman looking for sober living — or a mom, sister, or friend trying to find it for someone you love — you've probably noticed that most listings blur together. They all say "safe" and "supportive." This guide is the opposite of that: the specific things that actually make a difference for women, what to ask before you commit, and how women in Dayton pay for it. For the full picture of our women's program, see our page on women's recovery housing in Dayton.

The short answer

Look for a women-only home that is OhioMHAS-registered, runs a real program length (not a 30-day revolving door), includes transportation and drug testing, takes trauma seriously, and will help you with the court or child-welfare paperwork that so many women are juggling. Tina Marie's runs dedicated women's recovery housing in Dayton that does all of this. Call (937) 930-7502 — the first call is free and confidential.

Why a women-only home matters

Recovery is hard for everyone. For many women it comes layered on top of trauma, unsafe relationships, and the weight of being separated from their kids. A women-only living environment takes a whole category of distraction and risk off the table, so the focus can stay where it belongs: on healing.

In a dedicated women's home, the community itself becomes part of the medicine. Women who have walked the same road hold each other accountable, celebrate the small wins, and understand the hard days without needing them explained. That shared understanding is something a co-ed setting simply can't replicate in early recovery.

Working toward reunifying with your children

For a lot of the women who call us, the deepest motivation isn't abstract — it's a son or daughter they want back in their life. Sober living can be a direct part of that path. A stable, drug-free, supervised address with documented structure is exactly the kind of stability that courts and caseworkers look for when they evaluate a parent's progress.

We help women stay on top of case-plan requirements, keep their appointments, and document their stay so there's a clear record of the work they're putting in. We can't promise an outcome — no one honest can — but we can give you the kind of foundation that reunification is built on.

What to look for in a women's sober living home

Before you commit to any home in Dayton, run down this list. Any honest provider will answer every one of these in plain language:

What daily life actually looks like

Structure is what makes sober living work. In our women's housing, a typical week includes house meetings, weekly check-ins, random and scheduled drug testing, transportation to AA/NA meetings and clinical appointments, shared meals and chores, and quiet accountability from staff and housemates. If you want the hour-by-hour version of arriving, read what to expect on your first day, and the house rules that keep everyone safe.

"I got here with nothing and a court date I was terrified of. Having a women's house — just women, all of us fighting the same fight — is the first time in years I felt safe enough to actually do the work. Eight months in, I have my daughter on weekends again."

— Composite testimonial from a Tina Marie's women's resident

Quotes in this article are composites drawn from real conversations with residents and families. Names and identifying details have been changed to protect privacy — standard practice in the recovery field, where confidentiality is protected by federal law (42 CFR Part 2).

How women pay for recovery housing in Dayton

Cost should never be the reason a woman stays in a dangerous situation. The same payment pathways apply to women as to anyone, and most residents combine more than one:


Bottom line: the right women's home isn't the one with the prettiest photos — it's the one that's women-only, structured, honest about cost, and willing to stand with you through court dates and case plans. That's the home we built. Learn more about women's recovery housing at Tina Marie's, or just call and tell us where you are. (937) 930-7502.

Frequently asked questions about women's sober living in Dayton

Is there women-only sober living in Dayton, Ohio?
Yes. Tina Marie's Recovery Housing operates dedicated women's recovery housing in Dayton — a women-only living environment with structure, drug testing, transportation, and 24/7 staff support. A women-only home removes the dynamics that often distract early recovery and gives women a safer space to focus on their own healing.
Why does separate housing matter for women in recovery?
Many women entering recovery are also carrying trauma, and a women-only home lets them rebuild in a setting that feels safe. Gender-specific housing reduces distraction, supports trauma-sensitive routines, and builds a community of women who understand each other's experiences. It is one of the strongest predictors that a woman will stay long enough for recovery to take hold.
Can I work toward getting my children back while in sober living?
Yes. Reunifying with children is one of the most common goals our women residents work toward. A stable, drug-free, supervised address is exactly the kind of stability that courts and caseworkers look for. We help women document their stay, stay on top of appointments and case-plan requirements, and build the routine that reunification requires. Call (937) 930-7502 to talk through your situation.
How do women pay for sober living in Dayton?
The same pathways apply to women as to anyone: Medicaid covers the clinical services delivered while in housing (CareSource, Buckeye, Molina, UnitedHealthcare), the Montgomery County ADAMHS Board funds recovery housing for residents who qualify, and we offer sliding-scale arrangements for women who arrive with nothing. Private pay and family support are also options. The first call is free and confidential.
What should I look for in a women's sober living home?
Ask whether the home is women-only, whether it is OhioMHAS-registered, what the program length is, whether transportation and drug testing are included, how staff handle trauma and relapse, and whether they will help with court or child-welfare paperwork. Honest providers answer these in plain English without dodging.
How long do women typically stay?
Our structured program runs 9–12 months. Length of stay is the single strongest predictor of long-term recovery — the longer a woman stays in supportive housing, the better her outcomes. We don't push anyone out the door at 30 or 90 days.
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.

Looking for a women's home you can trust?

The first call is free and confidential. Tell us where you are — with your recovery, your finances, your kids — and we'll tell you the truth about what comes next.

Call (937) 930-7502 See Women's Recovery Housing