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What is the curfew at Eudaimonia Recovery Homes

What Is the Curfew at Eudaimonia Recovery Homes?

If you’re looking at sober living, you’ve probably got a very normal question: “What’s the curfew?” Because life doesn’t stop when recovery starts—jobs run late, families call at weird hours, and sometimes you simply need a quiet night drive to clear your head.

At Eudaimonia Recovery Homes, curfew is typically phase-based—meaning it’s earlier at first, then gets later as you build consistency. That structure can feel strict… and honestly, it kind of is. But it’s strict for the same reason seatbelts are strict: safety first, freedom second.

Eudaimonia’s curfew times (By phase)

While details can vary a bit by location/house and can change over time, Eudaimonia’s curfew schedule is based on the three-phase sober living curfew schedule:

Program phaseSunday–ThursdayFriday–Saturday
Phase 110:30 PM12:00 AM
Phase 212:00 AM1:00 AM
Phase 312:00 AM2:00 AM

A couple quick notes:

  • Curfew and “curfew extensions” are often tied to progress in the phase program.

  • Exceptions typically require site manager approval and depend on your progress and milestones.

  • If you want the most accurate answer for your situation and your house, confirm current curfew details with admissions (especially if you’re moving cities or have a job schedule that isn’t 9-to-5).

Your Future is Waiting—And It’s Beautiful.

Why do sober living homes have a curfew?

A sober living curfew isn’t about treating adults like kids. It’s more like… training wheels. You’re still steering the bike, but you’ve got a little stability while the wobbles calm down.

Curfew usually helps with:

  • Sleep and routine (because exhaustion is a relapse risk—no one makes great choices at 1:30 AM on three hours of sleep)

  • Reducing late-night triggers (people, places, and “harmless” detours tend to get riskier after midnight)

  • Building predictability at home (roommates can relax when the house feels steady)

And there’s a relationship piece people don’t talk about enough: when everyone shares expectations, there’s less drama. Less tension. More room to breathe.

Curfew isn’t the same as “quiet time”

This trips people up.

  • Curfew = when you need to be back for the night.

  • Quiet hours = how the house stays calm so people can sleep, work early shifts, or simply have a nervous system that isn’t constantly on edge.

So you might be home before curfew, but still expected to keep things low-key later in the evening. It’s not about being uptight—it’s about shared space and basic respect.

Your future is waiting.

Let’s start building it today—reach out now!

Eudaimonia Recovery Homes

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How curfew works in real life at Eudaimonia

If you work late (or your commute is unpredictable)

You know what? A lot of people in recovery work normal jobs… and a lot don’t. Hospitality, healthcare, construction, rideshare—late shifts happen.

Our approach is typically structure first, then flexibility with approval. If something comes up, the cleanest move is to communicate early instead of trying to explain it after the fact.

If you’re in PHP or IOP

If you’re doing IOP or PHP, that schedule can count toward “full-time” expectations in some settings, which can take pressure off while you’re still actively in treatment. (It’s one of those practical details that matters more than people admit.)

If you’re thinking about overnight jobs

This is where it gets a little “policy-ish,” so I’ll keep it plain:

Some tracks (like Back on Track) may not allow overnight shifts, and other situations may be reviewed case-by-case with management approval—especially once you have more sobriety time. If overnight work is part of your plan, bring it up early with admissions so you’re not surprised later.

Passes and exceptions

Overnight passes and curfew flexibility are commonly tied to phase level, and exceptions generally require management approval. Translation: it’s possible, but it’s not automatic.

Next step: call or text admissions (and get the exact current curfew for your house)

Curfew is a big deal—so don’t rely on guesswork.

Call or text admissions at (713) 818-2361 to confirm:

  • your location’s current curfew schedule

  • which phase you’d start in

  • how work/IOP schedules are handled

  • what’s needed for exceptions (if any)

If you’d rather start online, you can also apply and have admissions follow up.

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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Often the phase-based schedule is consistent, but details can vary by city, house type, or program track. Admissions can confirm the current curfew for the exact home you’re considering.

Typically, yes. Curfew is usually tied to your phase level, and later curfews are earned through steady follow-through (meetings, work/school, rules, accountability).

The best move is to communicate early. Many sober living programs treat curfew as a safety and accountability issue, not a “gotcha.” If you’re worried about how a situation will be handled, ask admissions what the current process looks like.

Sometimes. Exceptions and additional flexibility usually require management approval and depend on your progress and milestones.

You can review Eudaimonia’s community rules and expectations, and then confirm any house-specific details with admissions.

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