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By State · SAMHSA-verified directory

Addiction treatment in Wisconsin

299 verified treatment centers across Wisconsin. Overdose rate 24.2 per 100,000 (CDC 2023) · Medicaid not expanded.

299

Centers

20

Cities

Not expanded

Medicaid

24/7

Helpline

Need help choosing?

Free & confidential · 24/7 · Insurance verified while you are on the line.

(877) 444-GROW

Understanding treatment in Wisconsin

There is no gentle way to start this. Wisconsin has 299 licensed addiction-treatment facilities, a specific place in the Upper Midwest, and a specific version of the national crisis. The specific version matters, because a conversation that works for a family in another state will not land the same way here.

The Medicaid question

The Medicaid question sits under everything else. Wisconsin has not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, which typically falls into the eligibility gap — income too high for traditional Medicaid, too low to qualify for substantial Marketplace subsidies. Most national overdose statistics do not map cleanly onto state-level treatment access, but this one does: states that expanded tend to show better treatment engagement per capita.

The overdose-mortality context

At 24.2 overdose deaths per 100,000 residents (CDC 2023), Wisconsin's crisis is particular, not general. The practical context here is that partial Medicaid coverage leaves gap population with transitional treatment access — which is why the top substance categories driving the numbers are fentanyl and alcohol, with fentanyl contamination complicating patterns that used to be simpler to read.

How access actually works in Wisconsin

Treatment access in Wisconsin varies more than most national overviews acknowledge. partial Medicaid coverage leaves gap population with transitional treatment access — which does not mean treatment is unavailable, but does mean the usual advice ("call five centers, compare benefits, tour facilities") takes longer here than it would elsewhere. The practical version: start with your insurance's behavioral-health line, ask for a list of in-network facilities within 25 miles, then cross-reference with the SAMHSA federal locator to see what is actually operating.

What to do next

If you or someone in Wisconsin is weighing the decision right now, three steps tend to compress the process. First: honest self-assessment (the DSM-5-based tool on this site takes two minutes and can give you language to bring to a clinician). Second: verify insurance benefits before admission, not during, by calling the plan's behavioral-health line directly. Third: use the SAMHSA federal locator alongside any single facility's directory; the federal data is current and confirms what a facility's own website may not.

Last updated April 2026. Sources: SAMHSA Treatment Locator, CDC WONDER (overdose mortality 2023), KFF Medicaid Tracker, ASAM Criteria 4e. See our editorial policy.