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Rehab Centers That Take Kaiser Permanente for Teens and Young Adults

Kaiser Permanente is an integrated HMO, so members usually receive substance use care — detox, residential, and outpatient — inside Kaiser's own facilities and provider network, with referrals and authorization arranged through Kaiser. Under the Affordable Care Act, mental health and substance use care is one of ten essential health benefits, and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires Kaiser to cover it on par with medical care. Young adults can stay on a parent's Kaiser plan until age 26 — confirm benefits at kp.org or with member services before treatment.

Kaiser Permanente delivers care in the regions it serves — California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, the Mid-Atlantic (Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C.), and the Northwest (Oregon and Washington). The centers below sit within Kaiser's service area and accept private health insurance; call the facility and ask Kaiser about authorized options for your teen or young adult before you commit.
Updated: July 13, 2026
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Rehab Centers That Take Kaiser Permanente

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What Kaiser Permanente Covers for Addiction Treatment

Kaiser Permanente runs as an integrated health system, so your family usually receives substance use care inside Kaiser's own facilities and provider network. Kaiser covers medically necessary addiction care for members across the regions it serves — and under the Affordable Care Act, mental health and substance use treatment is one of ten essential health benefits.

Integrated Care Model

Kaiser's integrated model means your child's addiction treatment is coordinated with their primary care and mental health services inside one system. Medical records, prescriptions, and treatment plans stay accessible to every provider on the team, which helps keep a young person's care connected instead of scattered across separate offices.

Levels of Care

Kaiser covers medical detox, inpatient rehabilitation, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient, standard outpatient, and ongoing counseling and therapy. Many Kaiser regions run their own chemical dependency programs with staff experienced in treating adolescents and young adults.

External Treatment Options

When Kaiser's own programs are full or cannot meet a young person's specific needs, Kaiser contracts with outside treatment facilities. If your child needs care beyond the Kaiser system, talk with their Kaiser behavioral health provider about obtaining a referral and confirming the program is authorized.

How to Verify Your Kaiser Permanente Benefits

Checking your Kaiser Permanente benefits for substance use treatment is straightforward through kp.org or Kaiser member services.

How to Check Coverage

Sign in to kp.org to review your plan's behavioral health benefits, or call Kaiser member services. Your plan's Evidence of Coverage document spells out the benefit details for substance use treatment at each level of care, so you know what to expect before your child starts.

Understanding Kaiser Costs

  • Copays for outpatient behavioral health visits
  • Inpatient or residential admission costs and any daily copays
  • The plan-year out-of-pocket maximum, after which Kaiser pays 100% of covered in-network care
  • Referral and authorization requirements before using an outside facility

Using Kaiser Permanente to Pay for Rehab

Getting addiction care through Kaiser usually starts by contacting your local Kaiser facility's behavioral health department, and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires these benefits be covered on par with medical care.

How to Access Treatment

Reach out to Kaiser's appointment center or the behavioral health department at your local facility. You can also visit an urgent care center for immediate help, or call Kaiser's 24/7 advice line if you're unsure where your teen or young adult should begin.

Assessment Process

Kaiser typically starts with a thorough assessment to match your child to the right level of care. It usually includes a clinical interview, substance use history, medical evaluation, and a mental health screening, which together shape a personalized treatment plan.

Treatment Outside Kaiser

If your family prefers a program that isn't part of Kaiser, ask your Kaiser behavioral health provider for a referral first. Out-of-network coverage is limited under Kaiser's HMO structure, though exceptions can apply — and consent rules for treating a minor vary by state.

Kaiser Permanente Coverage: Common Questions

Yes. Kaiser Permanente typically covers medically necessary substance use care for adolescents and young adults across levels of care — medical detox, residential, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient, standard outpatient, and counseling. Under the Affordable Care Act this is one of ten essential health benefits, and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires Kaiser to cover it on par with medical care.

Kaiser Permanente is an integrated HMO, so your family usually receives care inside Kaiser's own facilities and provider network rather than at any center you choose. Treatment is coordinated with your child's primary care and mental health team in one system, and referrals plus authorization for substance use care are arranged through Kaiser instead of an outside insurer.

It can still be possible. Because Kaiser operates as an HMO, out-of-network coverage is limited, but Kaiser contracts with outside programs when its own facilities can't meet a young person's specific needs. Ask your child's Kaiser behavioral health provider about authorized options and a referral before enrolling anywhere outside the Kaiser system, so the care is approved.

Usually, yes. Kaiser typically asks for a referral from one of its behavioral health providers, plus authorization confirming the care is medically necessary, before residential or inpatient treatment begins. Keep in mind that consent rules for treating a minor vary by state, so your child's Kaiser team can explain what parent or guardian involvement your state requires.

Costs depend on your specific Kaiser plan, including copays and the deductible you still owe. Once your family reaches the plan-year out-of-pocket maximum, Kaiser pays 100% of covered in-network care for the rest of the year. A young adult can stay on a parent's Kaiser plan until age 26 — confirm the details at kp.org or with member services.

If your family needs help before Kaiser coverage is arranged, call the SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-4357. It is free, confidential, and available 24/7, with treatment referrals and information offered in English and Spanish. When you are ready, sign in to kp.org or call Kaiser member services to set up your teen or young adult's care.