By State · SAMHSA-verified directory
Addiction treatment in Nebraska
138 verified treatment centers across Nebraska. Overdose rate 11.4 per 100,000 (CDC 2023) · Medicaid expanded.
138
Centers
20
Cities
Expanded
Medicaid
24/7
Helpline
Treatment centers in Nebraska
Every listing sourced from SAMHSA Treatment Services Locator.
Lincoln Medical Education Partnership Stepping Stones
Lincoln, NE
BAART Programs Lincoln
Lincoln, NE
BAART Programs Omaha South
Omaha, NE
Lutheran Family Services of Nebraska Bellevue
North Platte, NE
Brain Balance Omaha
Omaha, NE
Blue Valley Behavioral Health Falls City Office
Falls City, NE
Valley Hope of Omaha, Nebraska
Omaha, NE
Valley Hope of O'Neill
O'Neill, NE
Lutheran Family Services of Nebraska Health 360
North Platte, NE
Two Chairs Santa Monica
Omaha, NE
Odyssey Sober Living
Seattle, NE
Good Neighbor Community Health Center
Columbus, NE
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Cities in Nebraska with verified facilities
20 cities. Click through for city-specific listings.
Omaha
40 centers
Lincoln
20 centers
North Platte
7 centers
McCook
4 centers
Grand Island
4 centers
O'Neill
3 centers
Norfolk
3 centers
Columbus
3 centers
Boys Town
3 centers
Okeechobee
2 centers
Jensen Beach
2 centers
Hastings
2 centers
Fremont
2 centers
Beatrice
2 centers
Auburn
2 centers
Alliance
2 centers
York
1 centers
Washington
1 centers
Wahoo
1 centers
Vancouver
1 centers
Understanding treatment in Nebraska
The 138 licensed addiction-treatment facilities in Nebraska operate within a regulatory framework defined by state law, federal parity requirements (MHPAEA, as strengthened by the 2024 final rule), and the clinical criteria each facility elects to adopt. This document evaluates that landscape systematically.
The Medicaid question
Regarding Medicaid: Nebraska expanded Medicaid in 2020 under the Affordable Care Act. Has realistic access to Medicaid coverage for addiction treatment once enrolled. The policy distinction is particularly salient because it determines whether the state's uninsured low-income adult population has a reliable pathway into the treatment system or must navigate non-Medicaid options (county funds, sliding scale, charity care).
The overdose-mortality context
Drug-overdose mortality in Nebraska: 11.4 deaths per 100,000 residents (CDC final 2023 data). This places the state within a specific cluster of the national distribution and carries implications for treatment prioritization — particularly around fentanyl test-strip distribution, naloxone availability, and MAT induction capacity at emergency-department and community-treatment points of entry. The specific context: western counties have among the lowest provider densities in the country.
How access actually works in Nebraska
The 138 licensed facilities in Nebraska include a mix of hospital-system, private-equity-owned, nonprofit, and state-funded programs. Outcome research consistently finds more variation within categories than across them, which means the clinical-framework question (ASAM-aligned? MAT-offered? evidence-based programming?) is a more productive filter than the ownership-structure question. The specific context: western counties have among the lowest provider densities in the country.
What to do next
Three institutional documents should be obtained before facility admission in Nebraska: (1) a current Summary of Benefits and Coverage from the insurer; (2) the plan's behavioral-health medical-necessity criteria (disclosable under 2024 parity rule); (3) a verification-of-benefits letter from the proposed facility's utilization-review team. Admission without these three risks a post-admission cost-sharing dispute that is administratively expensive to resolve.
Last updated April 2026. Sources: SAMHSA Treatment Locator, CDC WONDER (overdose mortality 2023), KFF Medicaid Tracker, ASAM Criteria 4e. See our editorial policy.