Alcohol Recovery Support, Atlanta

Alcohol recovery support in Atlanta helps people stay connected to sober support, relapse prevention, and recovery guidance during periods when maintaining sobriety becomes harder to manage alone. Many adults throughout North Atlanta seek continued support after outpatient treatment, relapse concerns, or periods when stress, isolation, or familiar routines begin affecting recovery again. Some families also seek guidance before a loved one agrees to treatment, especially when alcohol use begins affecting emotional health, relationships, or stability at home. 

Our alcoholism treatment program in Atlanta provides recovery coaching, peer recovery groups, family support, neurotherapy services, and continued recovery guidance based on each person’s needs. Recovery services are available for adults, teens, young adults, families, and people throughout Atlanta, not just Caron patients. 

Alcohol recovery support helps people stay connected to recovery after treatment 

Recovery is often more difficult after structured treatment ends and daily responsibilities resume. Some people feel stable during outpatient care but struggle later when work pressure, isolation, emotional stress, or familiar drinking environments begin affecting sobriety again. Others seek recovery support after relapse concerns or periods when cravings become harder to manage alone.

Alcohol recovery support helps people stay connected to sober routines, peer support, relapse prevention strategies, and structured recovery guidance after treatment. Many adults throughout North Atlanta seek continued recovery support while balancing demanding careers, family responsibilities, rebuilding trust, or adjusting to life without alcohol.

Recovery support services are available to all Atlantans, not only current patients 

Many recovery programs only provide aftercare services for people who have completed treatment through their own center. Caron Atlanta offers recovery support services to adults, teens, young adults, families, and people throughout Atlanta, including those who have never received treatment through our program. Open-access recovery services give people a way to reconnect with sober support before alcohol use creates greater disruption at home, work, or relationships.

Services are available to people throughout Midtown, Decatur, and surrounding Atlanta communities who need recovery guidance, sober connection, or additional support without entering a full outpatient program. Many families also seek support before a loved one agrees to formal treatment so they can better respond to alcohol-related concerns at home.


Caron Treatment Centers

5901 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd NE Building C - Suite 50, Atlanta, GA 30328, United States

Mon: 8 AM - 8 PM
Tues: 8 AM - 8 PM
Wed: 8 AM - 8 PM
Thurs: 8 AM - 8 PM
Fri: 8 AM - 8 PM
Sat: Closed
Sun: Closed

Please call (877) 548-1290 to check for availability and schedule an appointment


Age-specific recovery support programs help teens, young adults, and adults 

Alcohol recovery support often works better when people connect with peers facing similar life pressures and recovery challenges. We offer age-specific recovery support programs for teens, young adults, and adults, so counseling and peer support better reflect different stages of life. Structured peer groups often help people feel less isolated and more connected during recovery.

Teen recovery support programs help adolescents ages 14 to 18 who are struggling with alcohol use, emotional stress, peer pressure, family conflict, or early substance use patterns. Young adult recovery support often focuses on college environments, emotional health concerns, social pressure, or difficulty maintaining stability during early adulthood. Adult recovery programs may support professionals, parents, and adults rebuilding routines while balancing careers, family responsibilities, and long-term sobriety goals outside of residential treatment.

Family recovery support helps loved ones respond more effectively to alcohol addiction

Alcohol addiction often affects communication, trust, emotional stability, and daily routines throughout the household. Many families feel unsure how to support recovery without increasing conflict, enabling unhealthy behavior, or repeating unhealthy patterns connected to alcohol use. Family recovery support helps loved ones improve communication, boundaries, and support during recovery.

Family support may include counseling sessions, parent support meetings, recovery education, communication guidance, and healthier ways to respond to alcohol-related conflict or relapse concerns. Many families throughout Sandy Springs and Dunwoody seek family recovery support while balancing caregiving stress, parenting responsibilities, or ongoing concerns about a loved one’s drinking. Family involvement is often especially helpful for teens and young adults because recovery continues within the home environment after treatment sessions end.

Recovery support combines evidence-based counseling with neurotherapy and relapse prevention 

Alcohol recovery support often works best when treatment addresses both emotional health and the behavioral patterns connected to drinking. We combine evidence-based counseling approaches with relapse prevention planning, recovery coaching, and brain-based support services focused on helping people maintain long-term sobriety. Recovery support is adjusted based on each person’s alcohol use history, emotional health needs, relapse risks, and recovery goals.

Recovery support may include:

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

  • Motivational interviewing

  • Relapse prevention counseling

  • Recovery coaching

  • Neurofeedback

  • Alpha-Stim therapy

CBT helps many people recognize thoughts, behaviors, and situations connected to alcohol use, while motivational interviewing helps people stay engaged in recovery during difficult periods. Neurofeedback and Alpha-Stim therapy may also help support emotional regulation, stress reduction, sleep, focus, and nervous system regulation during recovery. 

Many adults throughout Buckhead and Brookhaven seek structured recovery support while balancing demanding careers, emotional pressure, family responsibilities, or relapse concerns.


Driving Directions to Our Atlanta Addiction Treatment Center

Our Atlanta addiction treatment center is located near the Perimeter area with convenient access from I-285, GA-400, and nearby North Atlanta roads. On-site parking is available, including a wheelchair-accessible car park and entrance.

Driving Directions from Downtown Atlanta:

  • Head northwest on Martin Luther King Jr Dr SW

  • Turn right onto Central Ave SW / Shirley C. Franklin Blvd

  • Continue onto Peachtree Center Ave SE

  • Turn right onto Ellis St NE

  • Take the I-75 N / I-85 N ramp

  • Merge onto I-75 N / I-85 N

  • Take Exit 251B toward I-85 N / GA-400 / Greenville

  • Continue onto I-85 N

  • Take Exit 87 for GA-400 N toward Buckhead / Cumming

  • Continue onto GA-400 N

  • Take Exit 4A for Glenridge Connector toward Peachtree Dunwoody Rd / Johnson Ferry Rd

  • Slight right onto the ramp to Peachtree Dunwoody Rd

  • Turn right onto Glenridge Connector

  • Turn left onto Peachtree Dunwoody Rd NE

  • Continue straight; our center will be on your right


Questions People Ask About Alcohol Recovery Support in Atlanta

How often you should attend depends on your recovery stage, relapse risks, and level of support needed. Some people attend alcohol recovery support several times each week during early recovery, while others participate weekly or as needed during longer-term sobriety. 

A relapse does not mean that recovery has failed or that treatment needs to start over completely. Caron Atlanta helps people rebuild recovery structure, identify triggers that contributed to the relapse, and reconnect with support services quickly. 

Yes. Outpatient treatment focuses on active alcohol addiction through structured clinical care, while recovery support helps people maintain sobriety, prevent relapse, and stay connected to sober support after treatment ends. 

No. Many people begin alcohol recovery support while struggling with cravings, relapse concerns, or difficulty maintaining sobriety consistently. Recovery support helps people rebuild structure, reconnect with support, and strengthen recovery habits at different stages of sobriety. 

Yes. Many adults continue recovery support after residential or outpatient treatment to stay connected to sober routines, relapse prevention, and peer support while adjusting back to daily life. Continued support can be especially helpful during work stress, family changes, or periods when cravings start returning. 

Take the next step:

Start with an online form

Contact us