Drug Rehab for Staten Island Residents
Staten Island saw the largest overdose death reduction of any NYC borough in 2024 — approximately 49%, following years of dedicated city investment in buprenorphine access, community services, and treatment expansion. Despite the progress, fentanyl-driven overdose deaths continue, and Staten Island's opioid crisis has deep roots in prescription painkiller overprescribing that began in the 1990s. Source: NYC Mayor's Office, October 2025.
Addiction Treatment for Staten Island Residents
Staten Island residents face somewhat different access challenges than other borough populations — the relative geographic isolation of the borough means fewer inpatient programs within the borough itself, but strong subway and ferry connections make Manhattan-based programs accessible. We identify programs with experience treating Staten Island communities and clear pathways for post-discharge support.
Staten Island's Drug Landscape
Staten Island was one of the first areas in New York City to experience the opioid crisis at scale, driven by aggressive prescription painkiller prescribing in the 1990s and 2000s. The path from prescription opioids to heroin to fentanyl tracks closely with national patterns. Alcohol use disorder is the most prevalent substance issue across the borough. Fentanyl is now the dominant street opioid, and xylazine co-contamination has reached Staten Island as it has every other borough.
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Free insurance verification in about 15 minutes. Most private insurance accepted. Private and confidential.
Staten Island Neighborhoods Served
We serve all Staten Island neighborhoods including St. George, Stapleton, Tompkinsville, New Brighton, West Brighton, Port Richmond, Mariners Harbor, Bayview, Eltingville, Great Kills, New Dorp, Richmond Valley, Tottenville, and Annadale.
Getting to The Summit from Staten Island
By ferry: Staten Island Ferry from St. George to Whitehall Terminal in Lower Manhattan (free, 25 minutes, runs 24 hours), then 1 train north to 34th St-Penn Station, walk east to 5th Ave. Total time: approximately 50 minutes. By car: Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge to Brooklyn-Queens Expressway to Brooklyn Bridge, then north through Manhattan; or Bayonne/Goethals Bridge to Lincoln Tunnel. 40–55 minutes off-peak.
Does Insurance Cover Rehab for Staten Island Residents?
Yes. New York's no-preauth rule applies throughout all five boroughs including Staten Island. Staten Island residents with commercial insurance can access inpatient rehab without prior authorization. Call us to verify your specific plan.
Directions from Staten Island
🚇 By Transit
Take the Staten Island Ferry from St. George Terminal to Whitehall/South Ferry Terminal in Lower Manhattan (~25 minutes). From South Ferry subway station, take the 1 train to 34th St-Penn Station (~12 minutes), then walk east on 34th St to 5th Ave (~7 minutes). Total transit time: approximately 45–55 minutes. Ferry runs 24 hours — no fare required.
🚗 By Car
Take the Goethals Bridge, Bayonne Bridge, or Outerbridge Crossing to New Jersey, then cross via the Lincoln Tunnel to Midtown Manhattan OR take the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge to Brooklyn and proceed via the Brooklyn Bridge to Manhattan. From the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge: take the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (I-278) to the Brooklyn Bridge, then north to 34th St. Estimated 40–55 minutes in off-peak traffic. Alternatively, take the Staten Island Ferry (free) and arrive directly in Lower Manhattan.
Who Calls From Staten Island
Staten Island has a large Italian-American and Irish-American working-class population with a strong cultural identity around resilience and self-sufficiency — which can make asking for help feel like admitting defeat. The borough's opioid crisis has clear roots in prescription opioid overprescribing in construction and manual labor industries. Families often bear significant burden before a loved one accepts treatment. The 49% decline in 2024 reflects the success of community-based buprenorphine programs, but gaps remain in access to inpatient care for people who need a higher level of service.