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RecoveryEugene and Lane CountySober living and recovery support

Eugene Sober Living and Recovery Guide

Practical next steps for recovery meetings, detox, sober living searches, and behavioral health support.

Quick answer

Where should I start for sober living or recovery support in Eugene?

A short answer first, followed by practical local next steps.

For sober living or recovery support in Eugene, start with recovery meetings and support resources, then add detox or behavioral health care if the situation is urgent or medical.

Sober living availability and admission rules vary by provider, so LaneHelp links should be treated as starting points to confirm directly.

If withdrawal or immediate safety is involved, use detox, crisis, or emergency resources rather than waiting on housing leads.

Start here

Recommended starting points

These links point into existing LaneHelp pages, tools, searches, or official sources when official records are required.

Start 1

Recovery support

Helps with

Meetings, peer support, and recovery resource paths

Best for

People seeking ongoing recovery connection

Open starting point

Start 2

Recovery resources

Helps with

LaneHelp recovery-related directory results

Best for

People comparing meetings and support programs

Open starting point

Start 3

Detox resources

Helps with

Medical detox and withdrawal-related starting points

Best for

People who may need clinical support

Open starting point

Start 4

Events and meetings

Helps with

Recovery-related events and meetings when listed

Best for

People looking for a meeting or group

Open starting point

Start 5

Sober living search

Helps with

Directory search for sober living and recovery housing terms

Best for

People looking for housing plus recovery support

Open starting point

Common situations

What to do next

Use the situation that best matches the person in front of you, then move to the linked resource or tool.

I need help today

  1. 1Use detox, crisis, or recovery support based on urgency.
  2. 2Call before traveling when admission or meeting status matters.
  3. 3If safety or severe withdrawal is involved, use emergency care or crisis support.

I need sober housing

  1. 1Search sober living and recovery housing terms.
  2. 2Ask about waitlists, fees, house rules, medication policies, and referral requirements.
  3. 3Keep shelter and housing tools open if sober living is not immediately available.

I need transportation

  1. 1Use transit route help before choosing a meeting or intake.
  2. 2Ask programs about remote meetings, rides, or bus pass support.
  3. 3Pick consistent meeting locations when possible.

It is after hours

  1. 1Use crisis, detox, and meeting directories for immediate support paths.
  2. 2Save sober living contacts for daytime follow-up.
  3. 3Avoid relying on unconfirmed old meeting times.

What to bring / what to know

What to ask or bring for recovery support

Not every provider requires every item, but this list helps prevent wasted trips.

  • Photo ID if available
  • Insurance or OHP information if relevant
  • Medication list
  • Referral or discharge paperwork if any
  • Preferred meeting type or recovery pathway
  • Transportation plan

Related LaneHelp tools

Keep going from here

Move from the guide into the directory, maps, quick sheets, shelter, housing, jobs, events, or transit tools.

FAQ

Short answers

Extra clarification for search engines, AI answer systems, and people scanning quickly.

Does LaneHelp certify sober living homes?

No. LaneHelp organizes public information and links; confirm standards, costs, and requirements directly.

What if withdrawal symptoms are severe?

Seek medical or emergency help. Do not wait for a directory listing if safety is at risk.

Need something more specific?

Search the full LaneHelp directory or build a quick sheet if you are helping someone choose a short list of next steps.