Addiction recovery coaching is one-on-one professional support that helps a person build and protect their recovery in daily life: structure, accountability, skill building, and a steady ally between therapy sessions and after treatment ends. In Houston, coaching quality varies enormously because the field is unregulated. The version we provide at Heights Mentoring is clinician-led, which means every coaching relationship is designed and supervised by licensed professionals.

People find this page two ways. Either someone recommended a recovery coach and you are trying to figure out what that actually means, or you have watched therapy alone not be enough and you are looking for the missing layer. Both paths end at the same question: what does a recovery coach actually do, and is it worth it?
After 37 years of clinical work in Houston, here is my honest answer: good coaching is often the difference between a recovery that survives contact with real life and one that does not. And bad coaching, of which there is plenty, is an expensive friend. This guide will help you tell the difference.

What a Recovery Coach Actually Does

  • Builds the weekly structure. Wake times, work, meetings, movement, and recovery practices, designed together and adjusted as life changes.
  • Holds daily accountability. Check-ins that catch drift early: the skipped meeting, the short answers, the slipping sleep, the warning signs we map in our relapse prevention plan guide.
  • Coaches through high-risk moments. The work trip, the wedding, the first date in sobriety. Planned before, debriefed after.
  • Coordinates with the clinical team. With consent, the coach works alongside your therapist, psychiatrist, or treatment program rather than around them.
  • Takes the family out of the enforcement role. Spouses and parents go back to being spouses and parents, which usually improves both the relationship and the recovery.

Coach, Mentor, Sponsor: The Houston Buyer’s Guide

You will see all three words used loosely. A sponsor is a volunteer peer inside a 12-step fellowship. Coach and mentor are professional roles, and in everyday Houston usage they overlap almost completely; we compared the labels in Recovery Mentor vs. Recovery Coach, and our full explainer on what a recovery mentor does applies to coaching as well.
What matters is not the title. It is the answers to five questions:

  1. Who supervises the coaching? Look for licensed clinicians (LCSW, LPC, LMFT) behind the program, not just a personal recovery story.
  2. What training does the coach have? Lived experience is valuable; lived experience plus training and supervision is professional.
  3. How do they handle things beyond coaching? A trustworthy coach names the moment you need treatment or therapy instead, and helps you get there.
  4. What does the structure look like? Frequency, goals, reviews, and how intensity tapers as you stabilize.
  5. How is the family involved? Clear communication agreements, in writing, that protect your autonomy and keep loved ones appropriately informed.

Comparing recovery coaches in Houston?

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Who Coaching Helps Most

  • People leaving treatment. The six months after a program are the highest-risk window there is; coaching is the bridge. Our guide to what to do after rehab maps that window month by month.
  • People in therapy who keep slipping. When insight is present but follow-through is not, the gap is structural, not motivational.
  • Professionals who need discretion. Flexible, private, schedule-built support; see our executive recovery coaching guide.
  • Young adults who have stopped listening to their parents. An ally who is not the parent changes the physics; see our failure-to-launch guide.
  • People not ready for treatment. Coaching is often the first professional help an ambivalent person will accept, and a skilled coach builds readiness for more when it is needed.

What Recovery Coaching Costs in Houston

Coaching is private pay, and pricing follows intensity: how many contacts per week, in-person versus virtual, and whether high-risk event coverage or travel is involved. In the first call we scope what your situation actually requires and quote it plainly, because families deserve numbers before commitments. Two honest framing points: coaching costs a fraction of a treatment episode, and the most expensive option in this field is usually the relapse that structure would have caught.

When Coaching Is Not Enough

Coaching is support, not treatment. Active physical dependence, escalating use, or significant mental health symptoms need clinical care first, and we will say so on the first call. If a higher level of care is needed, Heights Behavioral Health offers licensed clinical PHP and IOP treatment for adults in Houston, and coaching picks the recovery up from there.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a recovery coach the same as a recovery mentor?
In practice at Heights Mentoring, yes: one clinician-led service, two labels people search for. Coaching language emphasizes goals and performance; mentoring language emphasizes the relationship over time. The structure, supervision, and standards behind them are identical here.
Do recovery coaches need a license in Texas?
No, and that is exactly the problem. Anyone can use the title. Texas offers peer specialist certifications, but no license is required to sell coaching, which is why the supervision question matters more than the title on the card.
How often do coach and client meet?
Early on, expect daily or near-daily contact with one or more in-person meetings weekly. As stability builds, intensity tapers by design. The goal of good coaching is to make itself unnecessary.
Can coaching work alongside AA or SMART Recovery?
Yes, and it should. Coaching is pathway-neutral: it strengthens whatever recovery program you work, 12-step, SMART, faith-based, or still deciding, rather than replacing it.
Does insurance cover recovery coaching?
Generally no; coaching is not a clinical service billed under a diagnosis. Families often pair private-pay coaching with insurance-covered therapy or treatment, which keeps the clinical costs covered and the support layer private.

Coaching Built by Clinicians, Not Business Cards

If you are comparing addiction recovery coaching in Houston, compare on supervision, structure, and honesty about limits. One confidential call and you will know exactly what working with us looks like, and whether it is the right layer for your situation.

Call (713) 337-5063 for a Confidential Consultation

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Joni Ogle, LCSW, CSAT

Joni Ogle is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) and Certified Sex Addiction Therapist (CSAT) with over 37 years of clinical experience in mental health and addiction recovery, dual diagnosis treatment, behavioral addictions, and family intervention. She is the founder of Heights Behavioral Health and Heights Mentoring in Houston, Texas, where she leads a team of licensed clinicians providing recovery mentoring, professional intervention services, and structured support for individuals and families. Joni specializes in complex presentations including co-occurring mental health disorders, high-functioning addiction, and young adult failure-to-launch patterns. Her clinical writing is informed by direct client care, evidence-based practice, and her commitment to making professional-quality recovery support accessible in the Houston community.

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