Meth Addiction Treatment Program in Beverly Hills, CA
Methamphetamine addiction affects health, relationships, and safety. If you or a loved one is taking methamphetamine and finding it hard to stop, you are not alone. At Safe Haven Recovery in Beverly Hills, CA, we provide discreet, evidence-based treatment for methamphetamine use disorder and co-occurring mental disorders so that you can reclaim your life with dignity and care. Start our meth addiction treatment program and get back your life today.

What is meth addiction?
Methamphetamine is a powerful stimulant and a Schedule II substance under the U.S. controlled substances laws. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) notes that meth appears as a pill or powder, and “crystal meth” or crystalline methamphetamine looks like glass fragments. A prescription form, Desoxyn, exists for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, but misuse of illicit crystal methamphetamine is common and dangerous.
Clinically, addiction to meth is diagnosed as methamphetamine use disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-5). It falls under the broader category of substance use disorders. People may smoke, snort, swallow, or inject methamphetamine. Methamphetamine users often describe intense euphoria and stimulant effects, such as increased energy and focus, that can quickly shift into anxiety, agitation, and stimulant psychosis. The National Institute on Drug Abuse explains that methamphetamine use can raise blood pressure, body temperature, and heart rate, and it can trigger violent behavior, confusion, and severe dental problems known as meth mouth.
Why meth addiction is so dangerous
Short-term risks: Methamphetamine intoxication can cause dangerously increased blood pressure, elevated body temperature, irregular heartbeat, and seizures. People may experience paranoia, hallucinations, or aggression. If these symptoms appear, seek immediate medical attention in an emergency department.
Long-term risks: Chronic methamphetamine exposure is linked with mood disturbance, memory problems, movement disorders, and withdrawal symptoms that include fatigue, depression, and sleep disruption. Repeated use and binge patterns raise the odds of overdose deaths, especially when meth is mixed with other drugs such as opioids. National disease control data show stimulant-involved overdose death rates, driven in large part by meth, rose sharply from 2018 to 2023 and often co-involved opioids.
Polysubstance risks: Using meth with alcohol, benzodiazepines, or opioids increases the risk for respiratory or cardiac complications. When people inject methamphetamine, there is an added danger of infections and blood-borne viruses.

Who Is The Meth Addiction Treatment Program For?
This program is designed for people who want to stop meth use and regain stability in daily life. You will learn how meth changes brain chemistry, how tolerance and intense cravings develop, and how meth can affect sleep, appetite, mood, focus, and mental health. Treatment includes a personalized plan with evidence-based therapies such as cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational enhancement, contingency management, and trauma-informed counseling when needed.
We focus on practical skills for managing cravings, coping with triggers, stabilizing mood, and preventing relapse. Depending on your needs, you may have access to inpatient or outpatient care, group support, family involvement, and structured aftercare. All services are confidential and tailored to your goals so you can rebuild routines, repair relationships, and work toward long-term recovery from meth addiction.
Call Now for Program Availability
Get a confidential consultation and explore your options.
Our friendly support team is here to help.
Who is affected?
Methamphetamine use occurs across communities and age groups. Research and surveillance have identified high-risk patterns in several populations, including gay and bisexual men, where meth use has been associated with sexual risk and worse HIV outcomes. Tailored prevention and treatment services are essential for these communities.
National snapshots also show that past-year methamphetamine use trends fluctuate across regions. Law enforcement threat assessments indicate that most methamphetamine trafficked in the U.S. originates from large-scale manufacturing outside the country, with very high purity that can yield methamphetamine with potent effects.
The Drug Enforcement Administration’s 2025 National Drug Threat Assessment documents the ongoing, significant methamphetamine threat to U.S. communities and provides the current context for policy and treatment planning.

Signs you or a loved one might need help now
- Using crystal meth daily or in repeated binges, or feeling unable to cut down
- Neglecting responsibilities, isolating, or legal and financial problems tied to drug use
- Physical changes: rapid weight loss, dental decay (meth mouth), skin sores, persistent insomnia
- Psychological changes: anxiety, paranoia, or stimulant psychosis
- Risky behaviors: driving under the influence, injecting methamphetamine, sharing equipment
- Experiencing withdrawal symptoms such as fatigue, intense cravings, depression, or sleep changes
Evidence-based treatment at Safe Haven Recovery
Medical detox and stabilization
Stopping meth suddenly can trigger severe mood changes, sleep disruption, and intense cravings, so we recommend medically supervised detox. During detox, our medical team monitors vital signs, manages methamphetamine withdrawal symptoms, and helps keep you as safe and comfortable as possible. If someone arrives in methamphetamine intoxication with unstable vital signs or a suspected overdose, we coordinate urgent transfer for immediate medical care.
Residential treatment
Our private residential program provides structure, therapy, and rest from triggers. Care plans address substance abuse, mental disorders such as anxiety or trauma, and the health effects of drug and alcohol misuse. At our luxury rehab, you receive round-the-clock support in a calm, healing environment.
Outpatient Treatment
Our outpatient treatment offers flexible care for methamphetamine use disorder, combining CBT, contingency management, and dual-diagnosis support with weekly check-ins and monitoring, coordination after emergencies, while living at home.
Individual and family therapies
We use Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, and trauma-informed care to help you understand triggers, build coping skills, and repair relationships. If you live with opioid use disorder or amphetamine addiction histories alongside meth use, your plan addresses both.
Dual Diagnosis Treatment
Integrated care for co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders, combining psychiatry, therapy, and medical coordination, with careful monitoring and same-week follow-up after emergency department visits to maintain continuity.
Aftercare and relapse prevention
Recovery continues after formal treatment. You will leave with a practical plan, alumni support, and referrals that reduce the risk of recurrence, including connections to community resources aligned with national disease control and public health recommendations.

When to seek help immediately
Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department if someone has chest pain, a seizure, severe agitation, very high body temperature, loss of consciousness, or signs of stroke after meth use. These are medical emergencies.
Start confidential help today
You deserve compassionate, expert care. Safe Haven Recovery provides medical detox, residential treatment, and flexible outpatient options for methamphetamine addiction. Call or message us for a same-day conversation with our admissions team. If you are unsure where to begin, we will walk you through the next step and explain your options clearly.
We're an Expert High-End Top-Rated Addiction Treatment Center
Thousands of Client Success Stories
8+ Years of Trusted Substance Abuse Treatment
Methamphetamine Addiction Treatment FAQs
Is meth treatment effective?
Do I need medical detox?
If you have severe cravings, cannot cut down, or experience significant withdrawal symptoms, medically supervised detox is safer than trying to stop at home.
How does Safe Haven Recovery address co-occurring problems?
We provide dual diagnosis treatment that addresses substance use disorders and mental health concerns together. Care plans can target drug and alcohol dependence, sleep disturbances, and related medical issues.
What if I used meth with opioids or fentanyl?
Will my insurance cover meth addiction treatment?
Many plans include benefits for the treatment of methamphetamine use disorder. We offer a quick, confidential benefits check. A team member will review your coverage, costs, and any authorizations with you privately
We Accept Most Insurance
We Are Here To Help You Begin Your Journey
Our friendly counselors are standing by to provide you an unbiased recommendation for treatment. No strings or obligations.
It only takes a few minutes to learn about how we can help you conquer drugs & alcohol, and reclaim control over your life.
Call now.
Complete this Form for a
Confidential Consultation
All calls and messages are 100% confidential.
Scientific References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2025, August 28). Drug overdose deaths involving stimulants — United States, 2018–2023. MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 74(32). https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/74/wr/mm7432a1.htm
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2025, January). Using SAMHSA funds to implement evidence-based contingency management services (PEP24-06-001). https://library.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/contingency-management-advisory-pep24-06-001.pdf
- U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. (n.d.). Methamphetamine. https://www.dea.gov/factsheets/methamphetamine
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2024, November 20). Methamphetamine research and facts. https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/methamphetamine
- U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. (2025, July). 2025 National Drug Threat Assessment. https://www.dea.gov/sites/default/files/2025-07/2025NationalDrugThreatAssessment.pdf




