The admissions process can feel intimidating, especially for someone reaching out for the first time. Knowing what typically happens ahead of time can make the process feel more manageable.
Step 1: Initial Contact
This usually starts with a phone call or online form, either to a specific treatment center or through a referral resource like this one. At this stage, you will typically be asked general questions — what kind of help is needed, timeline, and insurance status. This conversation is generally low-pressure and focused on understanding your situation well enough to point you toward the right next step.
Step 2: Insurance Verification (If Applicable)
If insurance will be used, the facility or referral partner usually verifies benefits before moving forward, so you understand potential out-of-pocket costs ahead of time. This step can sometimes be completed the same day, though it occasionally takes longer depending on how quickly the insurance company responds.
Step 3: Clinical or Medical Assessment
A brief assessment — sometimes by phone, sometimes in person — helps determine the appropriate level of care, whether detox is needed first, and any specific clinical considerations (such as co-occurring mental health conditions). This assessment is typically what determines whether inpatient rehab, detox first, or a different level of care entirely is recommended.
Step 4: Scheduling Admission
Once a program and level of care are confirmed, an admission date is scheduled. Depending on urgency and bed availability, this can happen quickly or take some planning. Some facilities can accommodate same-day or next-day admission for urgent situations, while others may have a short waitlist depending on capacity.
Step 5: Arrival and Intake
On arrival, most facilities complete a more detailed intake process, including a physical health review, personal belongings check (for safety reasons), and orientation to the program’s schedule and expectations. This is also typically when you’ll meet your primary therapist or case manager for the first time and begin building an individualized treatment plan.
What to Prepare Beforehand
- Insurance card and identification, if applicable
- A list of current medications
- Comfortable clothing appropriate for the length of stay
- Contact information for a support person or family member
- Any relevant medical or psychiatric history that may affect treatment planning
What Family Members Can Expect During This Process
If you’re helping a loved one through admissions, many facilities will loop in a designated family contact once the person in treatment has provided consent to share information. Policies on communication frequency and content vary by facility, so it’s worth asking directly what to expect during the specific program’s admissions call.
What Happens If a Program Is Full
If your first-choice facility does not have immediate availability, most admissions teams can either offer a waitlist position or suggest a comparable alternative within their network or a partner network. Depending on urgency, it is often worth pursuing both a waitlist spot and a backup option simultaneously, rather than waiting to hear back before exploring anything else.
Common Questions to Ask During the Admissions Call
- What is the estimated timeline from initial contact to actual admission?
- What specifically happens during the intake assessment?
- How is family communication handled once treatment begins?
- What is the process if the recommended length of stay needs to change?
How Admissions Differs for Urgent vs. Planned Situations
When there is significant urgency — such as an immediate safety concern — many facilities can expedite the admissions process considerably, sometimes admitting someone within a day. For less urgent situations, taking a bit more time to complete insurance verification, compare a couple of options, and prepare logistically often leads to a smoother start once treatment actually begins, since fewer details are left unresolved.
What Happens on the First Few Days
The first few days of an inpatient stay are typically focused on stabilization, orientation to the program’s routines, and building the initial relationship with a primary therapist or case manager. It’s common for this period to feel disorienting, which most programs anticipate and build extra support into, rather than expecting someone to immediately settle into full participation on day one.
How Admissions Coordinators Can Help Beyond Just Scheduling
A good admissions coordinator does more than schedule an intake date — they can often help you understand insurance implications, coordinate travel logistics if needed, and answer questions about what to expect before you ever set foot in the facility. Treating this initial contact as a genuine resource, rather than just a scheduling formality, can make the entire process feel less overwhelming.
Official source: substance use treatment options