A little about why we’re here…

Who We Are

Doc’s Recovery House is a grassroots nonprofit recovery community organization that provides supportive housing and peer support to those pursuing a life of recovery from substance use disorder. We were built and sustained by the generous support of donors, community members and those with lived experience of recovery.

We exist to treat the human being and the human condition, first and foremost. We operate from a baseline of dignity, empowerment, and a person-centric ethos. We’re a cog in the wheel of recovery and sobriety. We appreciate all that it takes to attend to this very real-life experience - regardless of where we are able to show up in the process. Our method is not the only method, but we know it’s damn good. We will continue to learn, grow, use real-life experiences combined with medical research to bring the best of what we have to those we serve

Our Mission

Doc’s Recovery House is an organization intent on reigniting the light in each person by treating them with dignity and respect while walking alongside their path to recovery. 

Our Vision

We emphasize the human being in the process of recovery. We focus on the person, rather than the disease, and empower others to do the same. We work to eradicate the stigma of addiction through the hope of our stories, the importance of connection, and the dignity of recovery.

Our Culture

At Doc’s Recovery House, people are the most important thing to us. We value the human experience and the incredible experiences that come with recovery. We value the glimmer of hope that each resident sees and we value the process of getting your life back.


We believe in laughter, good meals, quiet times, ordinary life, special moments and doing the hard work of recovery together. We’re about real life and real relationships. If you’re here, you’re family. We operate from a place of mutual respect, dignity and a deep sense of caring.

 
 
“The joy of living we really have, even under pressure and difficulty. There is scarcely any form of trouble and misery which has not been overcome among us.”
— Bill W.