Better Place Recovery Services is an outpatient addiction treatment clinic in Oklahoma City that specializes in medication-assisted therapy (MAT) for opioid and alcohol dependence, alongside individual and group counseling. Located within the city's growing network of recovery-focused providers, it operates on a model that does not require residential admission, making it suited to people who need to maintain employment or family routines while receiving structured care.
Better Place is a standalone outpatient treatment center, not part of a hospital system or large regional chain. It focuses on opioid and alcohol addiction using FDA-approved medications (such as buprenorphine and naltrexone) combined with behavioral therapy. The clinic serves adults and does not provide detoxification, psychiatric hospitalization, or residential services; clients must be medically stable or complete acute detox elsewhere before intake. It functions within Oklahoma's existing web of recovery resources, including facilities like Integris Health's addiction services and OU Health's substance use treatment programs, but offers a more specialized and medication-forward approach than some general counseling centers.
Better Place offers medication-assisted treatment (buprenorphine and naltrexone injections), individual therapy, group counseling, and urine drug screening. Weekly visit structures are common for new clients; frequency decreases as stability improves. Pricing follows a sliding-scale model based on household income; confirm specific rates directly, as they are reviewed annually. Initial intake typically costs between $150 and $300 for uninsured patients; monthly medication and therapy packages range from $400 to $800 depending on insurance coverage and income level. Most major insurance plans are accepted, including Oklahoma Health Insurance and Medicaid. Without insurance, monthly costs can run $600 to $1,200. The clinic does not offer payment plans beyond insurance or sliding scale, so out-of-pocket commitment is expected upfront or weekly.
Oklahoma City's addiction treatment landscape is split between residential programs (like renewal and recovery facilities offering 28-day inpatient stays), general outpatient counseling centers (often talk-therapy only), and MAT-focused clinics. Better Place's advantage is its outpatient-only model paired with medication; clients avoid disruption to work and family but receive pharmacological support. Integris Health's addiction services include both inpatient and outpatient tracks but tend toward broader mental health integration and longer waitlists. OU Health's substance use disorder clinics offer comparable MAT but within a large academic medical system, meaning higher overhead and potential scheduling inflexibility. Community centers like Council on Recovery provide sliding-scale counseling but rarely include medication management. Choose Better Place if you need MAT and flexible outpatient scheduling; choose inpatient programs if detoxification or acute crisis management is necessary; choose larger health systems if concurrent psychiatric care is critical.
Better Place suits employed or student adults with opioid or alcohol dependency who are medically stable, motivated for treatment, and able to attend weekly or twice-weekly appointments. It also suits people for whom residential treatment is not feasible due to childcare, housing, or financial constraints. It does not suit people in acute withdrawal (they need medical detoxification first), those with untreated severe mental illness requiring psychiatric hospitalization, pregnant women (complex dosing issues requiring obstetric coordination), or adolescents (the clinic does not treat minors). People seeking purely talk-based recovery without medication will find no-medication options elsewhere; those in crisis needing immediate shelter should contact Oklahoma City Crisis services or inpatient providers.
Intake appointments typically last 60 to 90 minutes. The process includes a comprehensive addiction and medical history, assessment of withdrawal risk and current substance use, urine screening, and physical vitals. A clinician discusses medication options (buprenorphine is most common for opioid use; naltrexone or acamprosate for alcohol). The first prescription (if appropriate) may be issued same-day or after a brief waiting period for bloodwork results. Clients then schedule their first counseling session, usually within one week, and receive instructions on weekly visit expectations and emergency contact protocols.
Better Place operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited evening slots available; verify current hours as they may shift seasonally. The clinic is located in a standard medical office building with surface parking; no special accommodation is required. Parking is free and typically available same-day. Public transit access depends on the specific neighborhood location; confirm the exact address and nearby METRO bus routes when calling to schedule. No wheelchair accessibility barriers are typical for outpatient clinics, but verify on booking.
Better Place fills a practical gap in Oklahoma City's recovery infrastructure: it removes the residential requirement that deters employed adults while maintaining pharmacological intervention that talk-therapy alone cannot provide.
