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What Is Intensive Outpatient (IOP) Treatment?

Published: March 1, 2026 Author: Reddoor Category: Uncategorized

What Is Intensive Outpatient (IOP) Treatment?

Structured care. Real life. Both at the same time.

Levels of CareIOPRed Door Education
Key takeaway: Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP) provide 9-20 hours per week of group and individual therapy while you continue living at home, working, or caring for family.

How IOP Works

IOP typically runs 3-5 days per week, 3-4 hours per session. Sessions include group therapy, individual counseling, psychoeducation, and relapse prevention planning. Many programs offer morning, afternoon, or evening tracks to accommodate work schedules.

Who Is IOP For?

  • People stepping down from residential or PHP who need continued structure
  • People with stable housing and some support system
  • People whose substance use disorder does not require 24-hour medical supervision
  • People who need treatment but cannot leave work, school, or family responsibilities

What IOP Includes

  • Group therapy (cognitive behavioral, dialectical behavioral, motivational)
  • Individual counseling sessions
  • Drug and alcohol education
  • Relapse prevention planning
  • Family involvement when appropriate
  • Connection to peer support and recovery community

According to SAMHSA, IOP is one of the most effective levels of care for sustaining long-term recovery when properly matched to the individual’s needs.

IOP vs. Other Levels of Care

IOP sits between PHP (partial hospitalization, 20+ hours/week) and standard outpatient (1-2 sessions/week). For a full comparison, see Levels of Care Explained.

Need help now? If you or someone else is in immediate danger, call 911. For 24/7 crisis support, call or text 988.

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