Inpatient Drug Rehab for Bronx Residents

Serving: Bronx

Call placement advisors 24/7

Free verification of your private PPO benefits. We match you with licensed OASAS-certified programs that accept your plan.

Inpatient rehab options for Bronx residents

Bronx callers access placement into standard PPO residential programs, dual-diagnosis-heavy programs for co-occurring psychiatric conditions (common in populations with long-duration opioid use), and programs with specific fentanyl/xylazine protocols. The Bronx carries the longest-duration opioid use cohort in NYC and the highest exposure to today's contaminated supply — clinical matches often prioritize programs with significant MAT (buprenorphine, methadone) experience and post-discharge harm reduction planning.

Neighborhoods served in the Bronx

South Bronx, Mott Haven, Melrose, Port Morris, Hunts Point, Longwood, Morrisania, Crotona Park East, Tremont, Fordham, University Heights, Kingsbridge, Riverdale, Spuyten Duyvil, Marble Hill, Belmont, Bathgate, West Farms, Soundview, Parkchester, Castle Hill, Westchester Square, Throgs Neck, Co-op City, Pelham Bay, Country Club, Wakefield, Woodlawn, Williamsbridge, Eastchester, Baychester.

Getting to our office from the Bronx

The 4, 5, and 6 Lexington Ave lines connect most of the Bronx directly to Fulton Street in 35–45 minutes. For Bronx residents, transit is almost always faster than driving during weekday hours.

Getting to 165 Broadway from Bronx

By subway / PATH

From South Bronx: 4, 5, or 6 Lexington Ave lines directly to Fulton Street — 35–45 minutes. From Fordham Road / Grand Concourse: 4 express to Fulton (~45 min) or B/D to Broadway-Lafayette then 6 downtown. From Riverdale / Kingsbridge: 1 train to Rector Street (~50 min). From Pelham Bay / Co-op City: 6 to Fulton. From Hunts Point: 6 Pelham Bay local to Fulton (~45 min).

By car

From the Bronx, typical car routes to 165 Broadway are 45–60 minutes off-peak. From South Bronx / Mott Haven: Major Deegan Expressway south → FDR Drive south → exit 1 (Broad/South St) → north on Water Street → west on Fulton Street → south on Broadway. From Riverdale / Kingsbridge: Henry Hudson Parkway south → West Side Highway → Battery Place → north on Broadway. From Throgs Neck / Co-op City: Hutchinson River Parkway → RFK Bridge → FDR south. Traffic on the FDR and Deegan is heavy on weekday mornings — transit is usually faster.

Office: 165 Broadway, 23rd Floor, New York, NY 10006

Frequently asked questions

Why does the Bronx consistently have the highest overdose rate?

Concentrated poverty, an older long-duration drug-using cohort, the geography of the 2010s opioid crisis, and historically less treatment infrastructure all contribute. The 24% decline in 2024 was the largest single-year improvement in over a decade.

Are there inpatient programs located in the Bronx?

Yes — several OASAS-certified facilities. Clinical match may route elsewhere depending on specific needs.

What's the difference between the OPCs and inpatient rehab?

OPCs (overdose prevention centers) are harm-reduction sites where people can use drugs under medical supervision and connect to services — not treatment. Inpatient rehab is 28+ days of residential treatment. OPCs are appropriate for people not yet ready for treatment; inpatient is the next clinical step when ready.

When you're ready, placement advisors are 24/7

Free insurance verification. OASAS-certified partner programs. Private & confidential.

(347) 329-2331