Orange County Sober Living

Our sober living homes provide a structured, supportive environment for individuals committed to maintaining sobriety while rebuilding stability and independence. Designed to bridge the gap between treatment and fully independent living, our homes emphasize accountability, routine, and connection to the recovery community. This is real-life recovery support—structured enough to keep people on track, flexible enough to help them move forward.

What We Offer

  • Structured curfews and clear house expectations

  • Consistent accountability and staff oversight

  • Regular check-ins and ongoing progress monitoring

  • Mandatory house meetings and peer accountability

  • Connection to the local recovery community

  • Active participation in AA meetings and sponsorship

  • Alcohol and drug testing twice weekly

  • Support with job searching, employment, and daily responsibilities

  • Guidance with routines, time management, and life skills

How It Works

Residents live in a stable, recovery-focused home while following clear guidelines designed to support sobriety and personal responsibility. Accountability is built into daily life through check-ins, testing, meetings, and community involvement. As residents demonstrate consistency and progress, the focus gradually shifts toward independence, employment stability, and long-term recovery planning.

The Goal

Sober living isn’t about control—it’s about structure with purpose. Our goal is to provide a safe, accountable environment where residents can practice recovery in real life, build momentum, and move forward with confidence.

PHP & IOP with Sober Living

For many individuals, the strongest outcomes come from combining structured clinical treatment with a stable, recovery-focused living environment. Our PHP and IOP coordination with sober living is designed to create consistency between treatment hours and real life—so progress doesn’t stop when the day program ends.

By aligning sober living expectations with clinical goals, we help reduce gaps in accountability, improve follow-through, and support long-term stability. This model works especially well for individuals transitioning out of residential care or those who need more structure than outpatient treatment alone can provide.

How the Model Works

  • Placement into a recovery-focused sober living home

  • Enrollment in PHP or IOP with a trusted treatment provider

  • Daily structure that supports treatment attendance and recovery routines

  • Clear expectations around curfews, check-ins, and accountability

  • Ongoing coordination between housing, treatment, and recovery supports

What This Provides

  • Consistent structure inside and outside of treatment hours

  • Reduced exposure to relapse triggers during early recovery

  • Built-in accountability through housing standards and monitoring

  • Support with transportation, scheduling, and daily responsibilities

  • Integration into the local recovery community (AA, sponsorship, meetings)

  • Alcohol and drug testing twice weekly

  • Support with employment readiness and reintegration into daily life

Why This Matters

PHP and IOP provide clinical care—but recovery is lived the other 18 hours of the day. Sober living reinforces what’s being learned in treatment by creating an environment where structure, responsibility, and recovery are practiced daily. When housing and treatment are aligned, outcomes improve and transitions become more sustainable.

For Families

Addiction impacts more than the individual—it affects the entire family system. We work closely with families to provide clarity, structure, and realistic expectations throughout the recovery process. Our role is to help families understand what support looks like, what boundaries are necessary, and how to stay involved without enabling.

How We Support Families

  • Clear communication around expectations, structure, and accountability

  • Guidance on healthy boundaries and family roles

  • Education on the recovery process and common challenges

  • Support during transitions into and out of sober living

  • Coordination with treatment providers and recovery supports

  • Realistic planning around employment, independence, and next steps

  • Availability for questions, concerns, and course correction when needed

What Families Can Expect

Families are kept informed, not insulated. We believe transparency and consistency are essential to long-term recovery. While we respect resident privacy, we help families stay appropriately involved and aligned with the recovery plan—so everyone is working toward the same goals.

The Goal

The goal isn’t to manage recovery for your loved one—it’s to support a structure where responsibility, accountability, and independence can take hold. When families understand their role and stay grounded in reality, outcomes improve.