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Pacific Shores

By State · SAMHSA-verified directory

Addiction treatment in Tennessee

540 verified treatment centers across Tennessee. Overdose rate 56.6 per 100,000 (CDC 2023) · Medicaid not expanded.

540

Centers

20

Cities

Not expanded

Medicaid

24/7

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Understanding treatment in Tennessee

On any given week in Tennessee, several hundred residents are hospitalized for overdose. The treatment infrastructure that could prevent most of the deaths behind those hospitalizations is distributed unevenly — 540 facilities concentrated in specific metros, thinning as you move toward the Mid-South geography. This is an editorial look at who that serves and who it fails.

The Medicaid question

Tennessee has not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. This single policy decision shapes access more than any other single factor. Typically falls into the eligibility gap — income too high for traditional Medicaid, too low to qualify for substantial Marketplace subsidies. The states that expanded tend to see meaningfully higher treatment engagement; the states that did not tend to push low-income adults into the state-funded margin, where capacity runs out faster than demand.

The overdose-mortality context

The CDC puts Tennessee's 2023 overdose mortality at 56.6 per 100,000. Whether that number is going up or down week-to-week matters less than where it concentrates, which is uneven: among the highest overdose rates in the country without Medicaid expansion as backstop

How access actually works in Tennessee

The 540 facilities in Tennessee are not interchangeable. Ownership structure, clinical framework, payer mix, and MAT availability vary enough that "any rehab" and "a good rehab for this person" are materially different propositions. among the highest overdose rates in the country without Medicaid expansion as backstop — so the search is less about proximity than about fit.

What to do next

In Tennessee, the most underused resource is the PCP. Primary care has expanded its role in addiction treatment substantially since 2020 — buprenorphine prescribing, naltrexone administration, referrals into the evidence-based portion of the network — and a 30-minute PCP appointment often produces more useful direction than a 30-minute call with a treatment-center admissions counselor whose incentives are commercial.

Last updated April 2026. Sources: SAMHSA Treatment Locator, CDC WONDER (overdose mortality 2023), KFF Medicaid Tracker, ASAM Criteria 4e. See our editorial policy.