Boston · 274 directory resources
Find Sober Living Homes
in Boston
Compare sober living homes in Boston with photos, reviews, house details, and direct phone numbers. Call homes to confirm openings.
Boston · 274 directory resources
Find Sober Living Homes in Boston
Compare sober living homes in Boston with photos, reviews, house details, and direct phone numbers. Call homes to confirm openings.
Sober Living in Boston






















Prefer to talk one-on-one?
Addiction specialists across Boston — therapists, psychologists, and counselors who work with people in recovery and their families.
AA Meetings in Boston
Browse allAudio Library
Speaker talks, Big Book chapters & transcripts
Recovery Books
Read the literature online
Other Recovery Pathways
Many people start with AA or NA. This section helps compare other established recovery communities, tools, and support styles.
Directory note: Sober Network links to official program locators and literature. We do not run these meetings or provide medical advice. Program marks are shown for identification only; no affiliation or endorsement is implied. Harm-reduction and moderation resources should not imply moderation is safe for everyone.
Check coverage before choosing treatment.
Coverage depends on the plan, provider, service, and medical-necessity rules. Ask both the facility and your insurer about network status, authorization, and your expected cost.
Browse treatment optionsCoverage varies by plan and facility. Sober living homes are usually private pay.
Recovery Blog
Stories, tips & guidance
Explore Recovery by City
All citiesOverdose Trends in Boston
CDC provisional county context for Suffolk County
CDC reports provisional drug overdose deaths by county of residence, not by city. Counts may be incomplete and can change as death records are finalized; counts from 1-9 are suppressed under NCHS confidentiality standards. CDC file published Apr 5, 2026.
Boston Crisis Resources
Local help available now
The State of Recovery in Boston
Real counts from our directory, federal SAMHSA and CMS registries, public meeting guides, and the CDC — published openly from live tables and scheduled source refreshes.









