SA

Rehab & Recovery in South Australia

A plain-language guide to drug and alcohol treatment across South Australia. Browse cities, understand pathways, or get a free callback from a recovery specialist.

South Australia has a mature alcohol and drug treatment system, anchored by the public health network and supplemented by NGO and private providers. Wherever you are in the state, the ADIS South Australia on 1300 131 340 is the fastest first call β€” staff are trained clinicians who can refer you directly into the right pathway.

Public, private, and NGO treatment in SA

Public rehab and detox in South Australia is delivered through Local Hospital Networks (or their state equivalent) and is free at the point of access for Medicare-eligible Australians. Wait times for non-urgent admissions can range from one to several weeks, with priority for crisis presentations. Private inpatient rehab β€” typically $25,000–$45,000 for a 28-day program β€” generally admits within days. NGO providers sit between the two, often subsidised and with shorter wait times than full public programs.

How to choose between options

The right pathway depends on three things: the severity of the dependence, your home situation, and what you can afford. Severe dependence on substances with dangerous withdrawal β€” alcohol, opioids, benzodiazepines β€” usually starts with medically supervised detox. Stable home life and milder dependence often suits outpatient programs. Unstable home environments or repeated unsuccessful outpatient attempts usually point toward residential rehab. The free callback below can walk you through your specific situation, or read our cost guide for a clearer 2026 picture across all sectors.

Public, NGO, and private rehab β€” what the differences actually are

Almost every conversation about South Australia rehab comes down to a three-way choice between public, NGO (non-government organisation), and private treatment. The differences are real, but they aren't the marketing differences you usually read about. Here's how each sector actually works.

Public services

Public addiction medicine β€” delivered by state health systems and large public hospitals β€” is free at the point of access for Medicare-eligible Australians. It is genuinely high quality: addiction medicine is a recognised specialty, public detox units are staffed by specialist clinicians, and the underlying treatment models (CBT, motivational interviewing, medication-assisted treatment for opioids and alcohol) are evidence-based and current. The trade-off is access. Wait times for non-urgent residential admissions typically run from one to several weeks, with prioritisation for crisis presentations: pregnancy, post-overdose, severe co-occurring mental health crises, homelessness, child-protection involvement. If your situation fits one of those priorities, public can be remarkably fast.

NGO (non-government) providers

NGO services β€” Salvation Army Bridge, Odyssey House, Lives Lived Well, Cyrenian House, We Help Ourselves, Holyoake, Karralika, and many others β€” sit between public and private on cost and access. Many run on partial government funding plus client contributions, with sliding-scale fees. Some are free. NGO providers run a disproportionate share of Australia's longest-established residential rehabs and many of the country's most successful 60- and 90-day therapeutic communities. They also run most of the specialist programs you can't easily access elsewhere: women-only programs, parents-with-children programs, Aboriginal-specific services, and youth programs. Wait times are typically shorter than public, longer than private β€” usually one to three weeks for non-urgent admissions.

Private rehab

Private inpatient rehab admits within days, offers single-room accommodation, higher staff-to-client ratios, and typically charges $25,000–$45,000 for a 28-day program β€” sometimes meaningfully more for premium facilities. Private health insurance with hospital cover and psychiatric inclusion can offset between $400 and $700 per day, leaving an out-of-pocket cost in the $10,000–$25,000 range on a 28-day program. Private isn't automatically better than public or NGO; outcome studies consistently find that the two strongest predictors of long-term recovery are program length and aftercare engagement, not price band. What private buys is access, comfort, and a higher staff-to-client ratio β€” none of which is unimportant, but none of which is treatment quality on its own.

How to actually decide

The most useful first call in any of the three pathways is your state alcohol and drug line β€” they know all three sectors personally, can match you to wait times and program features, and have no commercial stake in which option you choose. From there, calling two or three specific providers to compare program length, clinical staffing, aftercare, and cost is the next step. The right choice depends on three things: severity of dependence, stability of your home environment, and what you can afford. Severe physical dependence with unsafe withdrawal needs medically supervised detox first. Unstable home environment usually points toward residential. Stable home plus moderate dependence usually suits outpatient. None of those rules are absolute.

What happens when you call the ADIS South Australia

The first call is the hardest part of recovery β€” and once it's made, things move. People are often surprised by how matter-of-fact the conversation is. Nobody asks for your full medical history. Nobody lectures. The clinician on the other end has heard your situation thousands of times, and there is no version of it that will be shocking to them.

A typical call runs 8–15 minutes. You'll be asked what's going on β€” broadly, in your own words β€” and a few practical questions: which substance, how long, how severe, your living situation, whether anyone else is involved, whether there's an immediate safety concern. The point isn't to assess you against criteria; it's to match you to the right pathway. After that, the clinician will usually outline two or three options that fit your situation: public hospital detox, an NGO residential program with current places, an outpatient program through your GP, a specialist addiction medicine consultation, or β€” if there's an urgent safety issue β€” a different service entirely.

State lines are bound by Australian privacy law. Calls are confidential. They don't appear on Medicare records, employer records, or any database visible to people outside the treatment system. Caller ID isn't forwarded to the next service unless you ask for it to be. You can stay anonymous if you choose. You can hang up at any point. You don't need to commit to anything on the call.

Direct line: 1300 131 340 β€” ADIS South Australia

Frequently asked questions

How much does rehab cost in Australia?

Public (government-funded) detox and rehab is free at the point of access for Australian residents, though wait lists can range from days to several weeks. Private inpatient rehab typically costs $25,000–$45,000 for a 28-day program; some private health insurance funds cover a portion. We can help you understand your options on a free confidential call.

What's the difference between detox and rehab?

Detox (withdrawal management) is the short medical phase β€” usually 3–10 days β€” where the body adjusts to being without the substance. Rehab (rehabilitation) is the longer-term work that follows: counselling, group therapy, relapse prevention, and rebuilding daily life. Most people benefit from doing detox first, then rehab β€” going straight into therapy while still withdrawing rarely sticks.

Do I have to be 'rock bottom' to go to rehab?

No. People who seek help earlier β€” before losing housing, jobs, or custody β€” generally have shorter, easier recoveries. Waiting for rock bottom is one of the most damaging myths in addiction recovery. If your use is affecting any part of your life, that's enough.

Will my employer / family find out?

Treatment in Australia is bound by strict privacy laws (the Privacy Act 1988 and state-specific health records legislation). Clinics cannot disclose your attendance to employers without written consent, and Medicare records of mental health treatment are not visible to employers. Many people take leave under general medical grounds without disclosing the specific reason.

Can I keep working while in rehab?

It depends on the program. Outpatient programs let you continue work and family commitments, with sessions in the evenings or weekly. Residential (inpatient) programs require 28 days to several months away. Many Australians use accumulated annual leave, long service leave, or carer's leave. Some employers offer paid 'addiction leave' under EAP programs.

Get free, confidential help today

Tell us a bit about your situation and a recovery specialist will call you back β€” usually within an hour during business hours. No pressure, no judgement, no cost.

  • 100% confidential β€” covered by Australian privacy law.
  • No cost for the consultation. Public and private options available.
  • No judgement β€” you don't need to have it figured out before you call.

Prefer to call directly? Lifeline: 13 11 14 (24/7). Emergency: 000.

By submitting, you consent to be contacted by Relapse or a partner treatment provider about treatment options. We will never share your details with anyone outside that purpose. See our privacy policy.