What Is Cocaine Addiction?
Cocaine is a powerful stimulant derived from coca leaves that creates intense but short-lived euphoria. Crack cocaine — the freebase form smoked rather than snorted — produces a faster and more intense but shorter high, with correspondingly higher addiction potential. Cocaine use disorder is prevalent throughout Southeast urban areas including Atlanta, Miami, Charlotte, Nashville, and New Orleans. Like methamphetamine, cocaine increasingly appears in the illicit drug supply contaminated with fentanyl, dramatically increasing overdose risk.
Signs and Symptoms
Signs of cocaine use disorder include strong cravings, using more than intended, spending significant time obtaining cocaine, failing to meet responsibilities, continuing despite interpersonal problems, risky use, and inability to reduce use despite wanting to. Physical signs include frequent nosebleeds or nasal damage (powder cocaine), burned lips or fingers (crack), significant weight loss, paranoia, irregular heartbeat, and in severe cases, cardiovascular complications.
How Treatment Works
Like methamphetamine, there are no FDA-approved medications specifically for cocaine use disorder, though multiple medications are being studied. Behavioral treatment is the cornerstone, with contingency management and CBT having the strongest evidence base. Residential treatment, particularly for severe addiction with co-occurring conditions, provides structure and removes access to triggers. IOP programs using the Matrix Model have shown effectiveness for cocaine addiction as well.
📞 Need Help Now?
If you or a loved one needs immediate help, call or text 988 — the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline — available 24/7, free and confidential. For substance use crisis support, call SAMHSA's National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357.
What to Look for in a Treatment Center
Look for programs experienced with stimulant use disorders, contingency management programs, and integrated treatment for any co-occurring mental health conditions — cocaine use has high overlap with mood disorders and ADHD.
Levels of Care
Treatment spans from residential through IOP and outpatient levels. Length of treatment matters — longer engagement consistently produces better outcomes for stimulant addiction.
| Level of Care | Intensity | Typical Duration | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox | Highest | 3–10 days | Physical withdrawal management |
| Residential (Inpatient) | Very High | 28–90 days | Severe addiction, unstable environment |
| Partial Hospitalization (PHP) | High | 2–6 weeks | Step-down from residential, high support |
| Intensive Outpatient (IOP) | Moderate | 6–12 weeks | Work/family obligations, strong home support |
| Medication-Assisted Treatment | Ongoing | Months to years | Opioid and alcohol use disorders |
| Sober Living | Low | 3–12+ months | Transition support, peer community |
Insurance and Cost
Cocaine addiction treatment is fully covered under mental health parity requirements. All levels of care from residential through outpatient should be accessible with appropriate insurance.
Find Cocaine Addiction Programs Near You
Use the directory below to search for facilities in your state that offer cocaine addiction treatment. Filter by insurance, level of care, and city.
Related Treatment Information
Medical Detox
Safe, supervised withdrawal management from substances.
Residential Treatment
24/7 structured inpatient care for serious addiction.
Intensive Outpatient
Flexible intensive treatment while living at home.
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