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Recovery Facilities in New Mexico

Best Rehab Centers in New Mexico

Browse 138 verified rehab facilities across 46 cities in New Mexico

138 Facilities
46 Cities
32 Treatment Types

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All Facilities in New Mexico

Showing 1–15 of 136
Alamogordo, NM

Alamogordo Family Health Center in Alamogordo, New Mexico, offers integrative outpatient care for mental health & substance use disorders, including trauma-informed treatment.

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Albuquerque, NM

Susan's Legacy in Albuquerque, NM, offers private outpatient treatment for mental health and addiction, featuring comprehensive counseling and life skills.

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Albuquerque, NM

Aliviar Counseling in Albuquerque, New Mexico, offers private outpatient addiction services for adults, including trauma-related counseling and life skills.

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Rio Rancho, NM

Desert Mountain Healing IOP in Rio Rancho, New Mexico, offers comprehensive outpatient services, including detox, MAT, and therapies for co-occurring disorders.

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Hobbs, NM

Humphrey House in Hobbs, New Mexico, offers integrative outpatient care with a trauma-informed approach for co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders.

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Rio Rancho, NM

Icarus Behavioral Health provides comprehensive mental health and addiction services, including MAT and trauma therapy, in Rio Rancho, New Mexico.

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Las Cruces, NM

Inetmed Rx2 in Las Cruces, New Mexico, offers private outpatient mental health and SUD treatment for adults with trauma & co-occurring conditions.

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State Data

Addiction in New Mexico: Current Statistics, Trends, and Care Access

This state brief summarizes the most current, consistent state-level indicators available from CDC datasets covering overdose mortality, opioid dispensing, and binge drinking patterns.

Data years used: 2021-2024. Last updated February 28, 2026.

Key Statistics

New Mexico Addiction at a Glance

48.9
Drug overdose deaths per 100,000 in 2023 (-2.8% from 2022)
Source: CDC 2023
35.9
Opioid overdose deaths per 100,000 in 2023, the leading drug category
Source: CDC 2023
33.4
Opioid prescriptions per 100 persons in 2024 (ranked #28 of 50 states)
Source: CDC 2024
16.8%
Adult binge-drinking prevalence in 2021 (ranked #35 of 50 states)
Source: CDC 2021
Overdose Data

Overdose Burden in New Mexico

CDC age-adjusted drug overdose death rates show New Mexico went from 50.3 per 100,000 in 2022 to 48.9 per 100,000 in 2023, a year-over-year change of -2.8%. CDC classified this as no statistically significant change.

New Mexico ranked #6 of 50 states among all states for overdose mortality in 2023.

New Mexico ranks in the top 10 states for 2023 overdose mortality based on age-adjusted rates.

Drug Categories

Which Drug Categories Drive Overdose Deaths?

CDC 2023 state rates by drug category (per 100,000): any opioid at 35.9, synthetic opioids (excluding methadone) at 33.0, psychostimulants at 25.1, cocaine at 8.2.

The highest reported category in New Mexico is Any opioid.

These drug-specific categories overlap in CDC mortality reporting and should not be added together.

Prescribing

Opioid Prescribing Environment

CDC state dispensing data show that New Mexico had 33.4 opioid prescriptions per 100 persons in 2024. New Mexico is ranked #28 of 50 states among all states. The 50-state median is 35.5 prescriptions per 100 persons.

High prescribing rates indicate sustained opioid exposure in the population and reinforce the need for careful prescribing practices, patient education, PDMP use, and non-opioid pain options where clinically appropriate.

Alcohol

Alcohol Binge-Drinking Indicators

CDC alcohol data show an adult binge-drinking prevalence of 16.8% in 2021, ranking New Mexico #35 of 50 states among all states.

Among adults who binge drink, the median number of drinks per episode is 5.4, with the 75th percentile at 7.5 drinks (2022 data).

Alcohol indicators help quantify addiction risk beyond illicit and prescription drugs.

Priorities

Practical Priorities for New Mexico

Maintain strong naloxone distribution and rapid linkage to medication treatment after nonfatal overdose events.

Continue responsible prescribing safeguards while monitoring local pockets with higher opioid exposure risk.

Keep alcohol prevention and early intervention embedded in primary care and community programs.

Improve treatment navigation through 988, FindTreatment.gov, and local referral partnerships to reduce delays in care.

Frequently Asked

Common Questions About Addiction in New Mexico

How severe is overdose mortality in New Mexico right now?

In 2023, New Mexico's age-adjusted drug overdose death rate was 48.9 per 100,000, compared with 50.3 in 2022.

Did overdose mortality rise or fall from 2022 to 2023?

The rate changed by -2.8%, and CDC classified this as no statistically significant change.

Which substances are most associated with overdose deaths in New Mexico?

In 2023, the highest reported category was Any opioid at 35.9 deaths per 100,000, based on CDC selected drug categories.

Is opioid prescribing in New Mexico high compared with other states?

New Mexico is ranked #28 out of 50 states in 2024 opioid dispensing rate at 33.4 prescriptions per 100 people.

What do the alcohol indicators show for New Mexico?

CDC reports a 2021 adult binge-drinking prevalence of 16.8% in New Mexico, with a 2022 median intensity of 5.4 drinks per binge episode.

Why might some values be listed as "not reported"?

CDC suppresses some estimates when counts are too small to meet reliability criteria (shown as an asterisk in source tables).

What is the fastest way to get help in a crisis?

Call or text **988** for immediate, 24/7 mental health and substance-use crisis support.

Where can people in New Mexico find treatment options today?

Use **FindTreatment.gov** or call SAMHSA's National Helpline at **1-800-662-HELP (4357)** for confidential 24/7 referral support.

What if someone has no insurance or limited coverage?

SAMHSA's helpline can help connect people to state-funded or lower-cost treatment options and local referral pathways.

Are these the newest numbers available?

Yes for the cited datasets as of February 28, 2026, but indicator years differ by source (2021-2024).

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