Texas

Sober Living Homes

Colorado

Sober Living Homes

Philadelphia

Sober Living Homes

Sober Living Colorado Springs: Safe, Structured Housing for Recovery

Modern single-story sober living home in Colorado Springs with snow-capped Pikes Peak in the distance.
Written by

Table of Contents

Key Takeaways

Why Choose Sober Living in Colorado Springs?

Colorado Springs offers a recovery‑friendly community with access to meetings, nature, work, and school—everything you need to rebuild routines. Sober living in Colorado Springs provides a safe, structured home base where residents practice accountability, attend meetings, and ease back into independence after treatment. If you’ve completed rehab or detox and want stability without losing support, this city’s mix of housing options and outpatient resources can help you make a confident next step.

The Eudaimonia Difference in Colorado

Our homes emphasize consistency, peer support, and clear expectations so daily life feels manageable. Residents get structure, life‑skills coaching, and a community that reinforces healthy choices. You can pair housing with nearby therapy and community meetings, and our team helps you align schedules so recovery and real life work together.

What You Can Expect Day to Day

  • Substance‑free living with routine testing and curfews
  • Peer accountability through house meetings and check‑ins
  • Support with employment, education, and time management
  • Quiet hours, chore systems, and a stable daily rhythm

Women’s and Men’s Options that Fit Your Needs

If you’re comparing choices, start with women’s sober living homes in Colorado Springs and men’s sober living in Colorado Springs to see rules, staffing, and availability side by side. Gender‑specific housing helps you focus on recovery with peers who share similar goals and routines. If a home shows full today, ask admissions about the waitlist and upcoming openings—availability changes often.

For Women

  • Privacy‑minded routines and supportive house culture
  • Staff trained to address women’s recovery concerns
  • Structure that complements therapy and work or school

For Men

  • Daily structure with goal tracking and peer leadership
  • Clear rules for meetings, chores, and screen time
  • Mentorship, job‑readiness, and steady accountability

Pair Housing with Care: IOP as Your Bridge

Many residents benefit from continuing therapy while living independently. An Intensive Outpatient Program blends groups, individual sessions, and monitoring several days each week without 24/7 care. Use FindTreatment.gov to compare local schedules, and plan housing along the same commute so curfews and testing won’t conflict with sessions.

Weekly Rhythm That Works

  1. Aim for therapy three days per week and consistent meeting times
  2. Keep a steady sleep schedule that fits curfew and work hours
  3. Batch errands on non‑therapy days; review goals each week

Costs, Budget, and Commute Planning

  • Tally monthly rent or program fees, deposit, groceries, transit, and a small emergency fund
  • Compare semi‑private versus shared rooms for cost and privacy balance
  • Choose a neighborhood that shortens your daily commute and supports attendance at meetings and therapy

Quality, Rules, and Standards to Check

Look for transparent rules, trained staff, written relapse policies, and alignment with NARR standards. Ask about guest policies, safety practices, and how staff coordinate with your therapist. Tour the property (or request a virtual walk‑through) and speak with current residents to confirm cultural fit.

Your Future is Waiting—And It’s Beautiful.

Quick Vetting Checklist

  1. Read house rules, curfew, and testing schedule
  2. Confirm staffing and coverage hours
  3. Review relapse response and step‑up care options
  4. Ask how the home coordinates with your therapist or IOP
  5. Verify transportation and proximity to meetings and work

Evidence and Outcomes: Why Structure Matters

NIDA treatment statistics show that relapse can occur after treatment, which is why aftercare and recovery housing are so important. SAMHSA data and national standards emphasize ongoing support, structure, and community as core elements of long‑term recovery. Use this evidence to plan a realistic timeline: most residents benefit from at least 90 days, then reassess with your care team.

Admissions, Availability, and Next Steps

If a listing appears full, ask admissions about waitlist timing and sister properties in the area. Keep documents handy, stay reachable, and continue meetings and therapy so you’re ready to move quickly. For deeper local context, scan our sober living in Colorado Springs guide and Colorado Springs sober living houses: costs, rules, and CARR levels, then compare homes against your schedule, budget, and goals.

Your future is waiting.

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

Resources and Crisis Support

Use NARR standards to understand what quality looks like. If you need help locating care, search FindTreatment.gov by ZIP code, hours, and payment options. For confidential emotional support any time, the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7.

Medical Disclaimer

The information on this page is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Decisions about housing, treatment, or medications should be made with a qualified healthcare or behavioral health professional. Never start, stop, or change any medication or treatment plan without consulting your doctor or licensed provider. If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 in the United States. For free and confidential support at any time, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (call, text, or chat), available 24/7.

Select Our 124 N Corona St, Colorado Springs, CO Location

Visit Our 1602 Grant Ave, Colorado Springs, CO Location

Choose Our 7211 Northeast Dr, Austin, TX Location

Eudaimonia's Success Stories – Real People, Real Freedom

How Eudaimonia Supports Sober Living

Eudaimonia Recovery Homes makes sober living in Colorado Springs practical by combining safe, structured housing with a supportive community and clear expectations. Our homes are designed for daily consistency—routine drug and alcohol testing, curfews, and house meetings—so you can focus on work, school, and wellness without chaos.

For residents who need continued therapy, our team helps you align housing with an Intensive Outpatient Program, ensuring schedules and curfews support your sessions. Admissions specialists guide you through availability, waitlists, and room options, so you can move quickly when a space opens. We emphasize life skills like budgeting, time management, and communication to help you build independence that lasts.

Neighborhoods are chosen for access to transit, meetings, nature, and employment hubs, making daily logistics easier. With mentorship from experienced staff and a peer community that understands recovery, you’ll have accountability and encouragement on the days you need it most. When it’s time to step down, we’ll help you plan a smooth transition so structure tapers gradually and your progress continues.

Frequently Asked Questions

Sober living is substance‑free, structured housing for people leaving treatment or seeking more accountability. It’s ideal if you want independence with daily support.

Plan for at least 90 days and reassess with your care team. Many residents stay 3–12 months, depending on stability, work or school, and progress.

Typical rules include curfews, testing, chore systems, meeting attendance, guest policies, and written relapse procedures.

Both are abstinence‑based, but women’s homes often emphasize privacy and trauma‑informed routines; men’s homes may focus on peer leadership and employment readiness.

Most insurance does not cover housing fees. If you attend outpatient treatment, your plan may cover clinical services separately.

Yes. Choose a home and IOP schedule that fit your commute and curfew, and confirm testing times won’t conflict with work or classes.

Include rent or program fees, deposit, groceries, transportation, phone, and a small emergency fund. Ask whether Wi‑Fi and testing fees are included.

Look for trained staff, clear rules, relapse response, safety practices, resident feedback, and alignment with recognized standards.

Join the waitlist, ask about expected openings, and see whether a sister property can hold your place. Keep your documents ready and stay reachable.

Requirements vary by house. Many homes encourage regular mutual‑help meetings; confirm expectations before you move in.

Policies vary; ask about parking and transit access. Many residents carpool to meetings, therapy, and work.

Most homes require immediate disclosure and may use a step‑up plan or temporary discharge for safety. Ask for written policies before signing.

IOP provides multi‑day therapy while you live in a sober home, creating structure and accountability during step‑down care.

Use a national locator to search by ZIP code, hours, and payment options, then call programs to confirm availability and schedules.

Contact Us

Our Locations

Gender Specific Homes

Recent Blogs

Alcoholics Anonymous Big Book with blue cover on a wooden desk beside an AA handbook, smartphone displaying a big book app, notebook, glasses, and coffee mug in a sober living environment.
Alcoholics Anonymous

AA Handbook and Big Book Apps: Covers and Access

Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) literature usually falls into two categories. The Big Book is the core text that describes A.A.’s program for recovery from alcoholism, and an AA handbook (often a service or group handbook) supports how groups run and how members carry the message through service. This post looks at AA big book covers, how the AA handbook is used, and what to expect from an aa big book app or other big book app. It also addresses common searches such as free AA books and they stopped in time aa. The focus is practical and neutral, not promotional.

Read More »
Four adults preparing a healthy meal together in a sober living home while focusing on alcohol recovery and rebuilding healthy routines.
Alcoholics Anonymous

How Long Does Alcohol Stay on Your Breath?

People often ask how long does alcohol stay on your breath because the answer affects decisions like driving and workplace testing. A related concern is how long does alcohol stay in your system when a test is possible the next day. Alcohol does not simply sit in the mouth. Ethanol moves from the stomach and intestines into the bloodstream, then reaches the lungs. As blood passes through the lungs, some ethanol transfers into the air that is exhaled, which is why breath alcohol testing works. The key point is that “alcohol on your breath” can mean two different things, and those two timelines do not always match.

Read More »
Person writing a relapse prevention plan in a notebook with checklist items and recovery tools on a wooden desk.
Exercise for Recovery

Relapse Prevention Plan: Strategies and Example

A relapse prevention plan is a written, personal guide for staying in recovery when cravings, stress, or pressure show up. It brings together your warning signs, your relapse prevention strategies, and the support you will use. It is meant to help you act early, before a slip turns into a return to regular use. Many people create a plan near discharge from treatment, but it can also be built in outpatient care and updated over time.

Read More »
Call Now Button