About Clear Bed Recovery
Clear Bed Recovery helps people find addiction and mental-health treatment that fits their situation, insurance, and region — with real-time bed availability. We are a connector: we help you reach the right treatment facilities, but we do not provide treatment or give medical advice ourselves. Using Clear Bed Recovery is free, private, and requires no account to start.
How we build the directory
Our listings start from the SAMHSA National Directory of Drug and Alcohol Use Treatment Facilities — the federal government's authoritative source — and are enriched with each program's own published information: levels of care, services, accepted insurance, and contact details. A federal review (HHS OIG, 2025) found that public treatment directories can contain out-of-date information, so we treat the government data as a starting point, not the final word.
Before a program appears publicly, it is reviewed and matched against multiple sources. Programs can claim their listing to verify and keep it current, and verified and accredited programs (such as CARF- or Joint Commission-accredited facilities) are labeled as such so you can weigh the source of every detail.
Bed availability you can trust
Most directories tell you a program exists; they can't tell you whether it has space today. Every Clear Bed Recoverylisting shows live bed availability with a freshness indicator, so you can see who can actually take an admission now instead of calling down a stale list. Outpatient programs, which don't use beds, show whether they're accepting clients.
Private by design
You can search and get matched anonymously — no account, no insurance member ID, no commitment. When you choose to share your information with a specific program, you control that, and we record your consent with a timestamp. We never sell personal information, and we follow strict privacy rules for any health-related data (HIPAA and 42 CFR Part 2).
Contact
Questions, corrections, or a listing to claim? Email hello@clearbedrecovery.com. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, call 911 or the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or reach SAMHSA's free, confidential helpline at 1-800-662-4357.