Skip to main content

CINCINNATI · OHIO

Luxury Drug and Alcohol Detox Center in Cincinnati, Ohio

Joint Commission–accredited private residential treatment on a private 51-acre estate, twenty minutes east of Cincinnati. Physician-led, 24/7 nursing, full continuum of care.

THE ESTATE

51 acres. Two historic residences. One private world.

Most people are surprised by The Ridge. The 51-acre estate, the restored historic residences, the private suites — none of it matches what they expected. That’s by design. An environment that feels like a retreat, not a facility, is part of what makes our addiction treatment programs work.

Tour Our Luxury Cincinnati Inpatient Alcohol Rehab Facility

I came here expecting a facility. I found something closer to a second home.

Former attorney, Ohio
READY WHEN YOU ARE

Talk with a Ridge admissions counselor today.

Confidential, no obligation. Most major insurance accepted. Available 24/7 to answer your questions about treatment, cost, and the next step.

Our Three-Phase Medical Detox Process

Detox at The Ridge follows three clinical phases. Each one has a different goal, a different cadence, and a different conversation about what comes next.

1

Evaluate

Medical and psychosocial intake. We map substances, history, co-occurring conditions, and risk.
2

Stabilize

Medication, monitoring, and rest while withdrawal moves through its acute phase.
3

Transition

Move into inpatient or step-down care on the same campus, with the same team.
We Accept Most Major Private Insurance
We Accept Cigna Insurance
We accept anthem blue cross blue shield insurance
We accept Medical Mutual Insurance
We Accept Geha Insurance
We accept custom design benefits insurance
We Accept Ohio Healthy Insurance

Where Medical Detox Fits in Our Continuum of Care

The Ridge Levels of Care
1
Detox
2
Residential
3
PHP
4
IOP
5
Aftercare
Every level happens on the same Cincinnati-area campus. No transfer between facilities, no new intake teams.
Joint Commission Accredited
Newsweek Top Center 2025
24/7 On-Site Medical
4:1 Staff Ratio
The Ridge Ohio
The Ridge Ohio

Common Hesitations About Medical Detox

Detox is the step most people delay the longest. These are the four hesitations we hear most often from people who eventually walk through our door.

I’ll just stop on my own.

For some substances that’s possible. For alcohol and benzodiazepines, stopping cold can trigger seizures or delirium tremens, both of which can be fatal. Detoxing under medical supervision takes a few days. The recovery from a complication can take months — or doesn’t happen at all.

I can’t take a week off work.

Most detoxes run 3 to 10 days. That’s less time than people lose to a bad cold drawn out across the year, or a flare-up of the problem that put them here. Federal law (FMLA) protects job-protected leave for treatment in most cases. Confidentiality is governed by 42 CFR Part 2 — your employer doesn’t get told you were here unless you tell them.

Will my employer or colleagues find out?

Federal law (42 CFR Part 2) governs the confidentiality of addiction treatment records — stricter than HIPAA. We don’t release information without your written consent, and we work with professionals in roles where discretion isn’t optional. Most of our clients are people you’d recognize as your colleagues, your neighbors, or your patients.

WHEN YOU’RE READY

Not sure if this is the right time?

Most people aren’t sure when they first reach out. That’s why every conversation starts on your terms — confidential, with no pressure and no obligation.

Confidential. No obligation. Most PPO insurance plans accepted.

Why Patients Choose The Ridge

Thousands of Lives Transformed
Will W.
16 Nov 2025

“The Ridge provided an excellent setting for the recovery of a loved one. All of the staff was highly professional and the chef even catered to a vegetarian diet. I can’t say enough about the importance the Ridge played in my loved one’s recovery!”

Robbie H.
2 May 2025

“The medical and clinical staff are extremely knowledgeable, professional and attentive. They truly care about their clients and their families.”

Matt P.
8 Apr 2025

“I made valuable connections there that I will keep in the years to come; in just 30 days, I made lasting friendships with the people in my group.”

Laura P.
22 Jan 2025

“Wonderful place for treatment! I really like the one year of aftercare. The family sessions were very helpful and I really appreciate their support during a tough time.”

Tyler H.
21 Aug 2024

“The Ridge for me was life changing. I was very nervous entering rehab and I had absolutely no clue what to expect. The place is completely magical.”

Detox at The Ridge FAQ

  • How long does drug and alcohol detox take?

    Most detoxes run 3 to 10 days, depending on the substance, how long you’ve been using, and your overall health. Alcohol and short-acting opioids tend toward the shorter end; benzodiazepines and methadone usually run longer because the taper is slower. Your medical team gives you a specific estimate during the initial evaluation.
  • Can I detox at home instead?

    For alcohol and benzodiazepines, no — stopping abruptly can trigger seizures or delirium tremens, both of which can be fatal. For opioids and stimulants, home detox is physically survivable but uncomfortable, and relapse rates are high without medical and clinical support during the worst window. More on the difference between supervised detox and quitting cold turkey.

  • What medications are used during detox?

    Alcohol withdrawal is typically managed with benzodiazepines on a tapering schedule, plus thiamine and other vitamins. Opioid withdrawal often uses buprenorphine (Suboxone) or comparable medication-assisted treatment. Benzodiazepine detox uses a slow taper of the medication itself. The medical team prescribes based on substance, severity, and your medical history. More detail on the medications used in alcohol detox.

  • What does a private detox room actually look like?

    Single-occupancy bedroom with en-suite bathroom, real furniture, natural light. Not a hospital floor. The clinical part — vitals, medication, monitoring — happens in the room or with staff who come to you. The space is designed so that the worst few days of physical withdrawal happen somewhere quiet and dignified.

  • What should I bring to detox?

    Comfortable clothes, basic toiletries, any prescription medications in their original containers (our medical team reviews everything before administration), and a list of phone numbers you might need. Don’t bring valuables, alcohol, drugs, or anything sharp. Our admissions team sends a full packing list — here’s what most clients pack.

  • What happens after detox?

    Most clients move directly from detox into our inpatient program on the same campus, with the same medical and clinical team. Some step into PHP if their clinical assessment supports it. Detox is the medical foundation; the work of recovery happens in what comes next. We don’t send you home from detox and hope.