Methadone Treatment Centers Near You
Methadone is a long-acting opioid medication used to treat opioid addiction by reducing withdrawal symptoms and cravings without producing a high. Dispensed through federally certified clinics known as Opioid Treatment Programs, methadone maintenance is one of the most effective and well-studied treatments for opioid use disorder. Browse our directory to find methadone clinics and treatment centers in your area.
Found 1,485 treatment centers offering methadone across the United States.
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Browse All CentersFrequently Asked Questions
What is methadone and how does it treat opioid addiction?
How do methadone clinics work?
What are common methadone side effects?
How does methadone compare to Suboxone?
What does methadone withdrawal feel like and how long does it last?
What is methadone maintenance treatment?
Is methadone used for pain management as well as addiction?
Does insurance cover methadone treatment?
About Methadone
Methadone is a full opioid agonist that binds to and fully activates the mu-opioid receptors in the brain. However, its pharmacological profile differs from drugs like heroin or fentanyl — it is absorbed slowly when taken orally, reaches peak levels over several hours, and has a long half-life of 24 to 36 hours. At a properly calibrated dose, methadone prevents withdrawal symptoms and suppresses cravings without producing significant euphoria or sedation.
How Methadone Works
Methadone develops cross-tolerance with other opioids, meaning patients on a stable dose are far less likely to feel the effects of illicit opioids if they relapse. This pharmacological blockade reduces the risk of overdose. As part of medication-assisted treatment (MAT), methadone has been used for over 50 years and remains one of the most extensively studied interventions for opioid use disorder.
Methadone Clinic: How Clinic-Based Treatment Works
Methadone for opioid addiction can only be dispensed through federally certified Opioid Treatment Programs (OTPs), commonly called methadone clinics. These operate under strict SAMHSA and DEA regulations. New patients undergo comprehensive assessment and receive an initial dose (usually 20–30 mg) under observation. The dose is gradually increased until it controls withdrawal and cravings for a full 24 hours, typically 60–120 mg.
During early treatment, patients visit the clinic daily for observed dosing. This creates regular touchpoints for monitoring and counseling. Over time, stable patients earn take-home doses — up to one per week in the first 90 days, increasing to a 30-day supply after two years of demonstrated stability. The daily visit requirement is the most commonly cited barrier, which is why take-home policies are a key milestone.
Methadone Side Effects
Common side effects include:
- Constipation — often the most persistent side effect
- Excessive sweating, particularly at night
- Drowsiness or sedation
- Nausea or vomiting
- Weight gain and dry mouth
- Decreased libido or sexual dysfunction
Serious side effects requiring immediate attention include difficulty breathing, severe dizziness, chest pain or irregular heartbeat (methadone can affect the QT interval), and signs of allergic reaction. Patients should avoid combining methadone with alcohol, benzodiazepines, or other CNS depressants. Providers typically perform an EKG before starting treatment and periodically during care.
Methadone vs Suboxone: Which Is Right?
Methadone is a full agonist providing stronger receptor activation, which can be more effective for severe physical dependence. Buprenorphine (Suboxone) is a partial agonist with a ceiling effect on respiratory depression, offering a wider safety margin. Suboxone can be prescribed in office settings and taken at home, while methadone requires daily clinic visits. Neither is universally superior — the choice depends on severity of dependence, treatment history, and practical factors.
Methadone Withdrawal
Methadone withdrawal is more prolonged than withdrawal from shorter-acting opioids:
- Days 1–3: Anxiety, restlessness, muscle aches, yawning, tearing eyes, insomnia
- Days 3–10: Peak intensity — nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, goosebumps
- Weeks 2–4: Gradual improvement but fatigue, irritability, depression persist
- Weeks 4+: Some experience protracted withdrawal (PAWS) — low energy, mood instability, intermittent cravings
Medical guidelines strongly recommend a gradual taper — typically reducing by no more than 5–10% every one to two weeks, slowing further below 30 mg. A complete taper may take six months to a year. Patients who taper slowly have significantly better outcomes than those who stop abruptly.
Methadone Maintenance Treatment
Methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) is one of the most well-researched interventions in addiction medicine. Decades of studies show that MMT reduces illicit opioid use, decreases overdose mortality by 50–70%, lowers HIV and hepatitis C transmission, reduces criminal activity, and improves employment. Current consensus from the WHO and ASAM holds that there is no maximum recommended duration — decisions about discontinuation should be individualized and patient-driven.
Methadone for Pain vs Addiction
Methadone is FDA-approved for both chronic pain and opioid use disorder, but the regulatory framework differs substantially. For addiction, methadone can only be dispensed through certified OTPs, typically in liquid form at 60–120 mg daily. For pain, any physician with a DEA license can prescribe tablets filled at a retail pharmacy, usually at lower doses (2.5–10 mg, two to three times daily). A significant number of overdose deaths have occurred in the pain management context when doses were increased too rapidly.
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