Recovery pathways

Find recovery support that fits the person.

Most visitors still use Sober Network for AA, NA, sober living, detox, and treatment. This hub organizes established peer-support options by fit, format, belief style, and access.

Familiar first step

The main city directory still prioritizes AA, NA, sober living, detox, and treatment paths most visitors ask for.

Official locators

Each pathway links to official meeting finders or official program resources when available.

Not medical advice

These pages explain options. Treatment decisions belong with licensed professionals.

Careful moderation

Reduced drinking can reduce harm for many people, but moderation is not safe for everyone.

How to choose

Start with fit, safety, and access

Good recovery design is practical: it helps someone narrow the next step without pretending every path works for every person.

Belief fit

Compare secular, spiritual, Christian, Buddhist, or culturally grounded communities.

Medical fit

MAT-friendly support matters for people using prescribed recovery medications.

Format fit

Online meetings can bridge privacy, transportation, disability, and scheduling barriers.

Risk fit

Withdrawal, severe AUD, pregnancy, or repeated loss of control call for medical guidance.

Filters

Browse by fit

Filters describe orientation and access. They are not clinical recommendations.

No pathways match that filter yet.
First build

Core pathways

The first set makes Sober Network more useful immediately while keeping AA and NA as the familiar front door.

Core pathway

SMART Recovery

A secular, self-empowering recovery approach using practical tools for motivation, urges, thoughts, feelings, behaviors, and balanced living.

SecularOnlineIn-personYoung adults
Core pathway

Celebrate Recovery

A Christ-centered recovery program used by churches and groups for addiction, compulsive behaviors, grief, trauma, and related struggles.

Faith-basedOnlineIn-person
Core pathway

The Phoenix

A sober community built around fitness, arts, music, social connection, mindfulness, and other substance-free events.

Sober activitiesOnlineIn-personYoung adults
Core pathway

Women for Sobriety

A peer-led recovery community built around the New Life Program for women seeking recovery from alcohol or other drugs.

Women-focusedSecularOnlineIn-person
Core pathway

SHE RECOVERS

A women-focused recovery movement with online gatherings, community groups, education, and holistic recovery support.

Women-focusedOnlineIn-personLGBTQ+
Core pathway

MARA

A peer recovery community designed to support people using medication-assisted treatment or medication-assisted recovery.

MAT-friendlyOnlineIn-person
Core pathway

Wellbriety

A culturally grounded recovery and wellness movement connected with White Bison and Wellbriety circles.

Indigenous/culturalOnlineIn-person
Core pathway

Sober Activities

A guide to sober social options, recovery-friendly fitness, volunteer events, creative groups, and activity-based connection.

Sober activitiesOnlineIn-personYoung adults

A practical guide to online recovery meetings across secular, faith-based, Buddhist/mindfulness, women-focused, MAT-friendly, 12-step, and harm-reduction paths.

OnlineSecularFaith-basedBuddhist/mindfulness
Additional pathways

More support options

These broaden coverage across substance-specific, family, food, gambling, secular, and moderation-oriented support.

Expanded pathway

HAMS

A free peer support and information group for people who want safer drinking, reduced drinking, or abstinence.

Harm-reductionOnline
Expanded pathway

CoDA

A 12-step fellowship for people seeking healthier and more loving relationships.

OnlineIn-person
Source-backed safety note: SAMHSA's National Helpline provides free, confidential treatment referral information 24/7. NIAAA describes reduced heavy drinking and reduced alcohol-related consequences as harm-reduction goals that can help many individuals, but this does not mean moderation is safe for everyone.