Skip to product information
1 of 4

Full Guide & Launch Toolkit (PDF Download)

How to Open a Sober Living Home in Texas

How to Open a Sober Living Home in Texas

Format
Regular price $54.99
Regular price Sale price $54.99
Sale Sold out

Opening a recovery home in Texas involves navigating diverse local zoning environments. How to Open a Recovery Home in Texas provides state-focused guidance on compliance, operations, and housing protections. It equips you to build recovery homes that are resilient and mission-driven.

View full details

What You'll Learn About Starting a Sober Living Home in Texas

Opening a sober living home in Texas requires more than finding a property and filling beds. New operators need to understand recovery housing terminology, TROHN certification expectations, Texas zoning and Fair Housing considerations, property layout, referral development, and the practical business steps required before opening day. This guide is designed to help aspiring sober living operators, real estate investors, behavioral health professionals, and community leaders understand the major issues involved in launching a compliant, sustainable recovery home in Texas.

Texas Recovery Housing Basics

Learn how sober living homes, recovery homes, and recovery residences fit into the broader continuum of care, and understand the role these homes play in supporting long-term recovery.

Texas Certification and Standards

Understand how Texas Recovery Oriented Housing Network certification, documentation, policies, inspections, and sober living standards may affect the launch process in Texas.

Zoning and Fair Housing Considerations

Learn how to think about zoning, reasonable accommodations, neighborhood concerns, and local approval issues before choosing a property.

Property Search and Home Layout

Evaluate whether a property can function as a safe, practical, and financially sustainable sober living home before moving forward with a lease or purchase.

Texas Business Setup and Financial Planning

Use startup checklists, entity planning, and pro forma tools to understand your launch costs, operating model, and financial assumptions.

Referral Outreach and Occupancy

Build a Texas sober living referral network with treatment providers, courts, recovery organizations, community partners, and other sources of resident referrals.

Included: Your Texas Sober Living Launch Toolkit

Legal Entity Formation Checklist

A step-by-step guide to forming a compliant legal entity in Texas, such as a corporation or LLC.

Property Search Memo

A ready-to-share memo you can provide to real estate agents or landlords to clearly explain recovery housing use, needs, and expectations.

FHA Zoning Exemption Request

A professionally structured template for requesting zoning or policy accommodations under the Fair Housing Act.

VSL's 7-Step Outreach Checklist

A practical framework for building a resident referral network with treatment providers, courts, and community partners.

Pro Forma Income Statement

A financial analysis tool used to project revenue, expenses, and model the operational sustainability of a potential home before launch.

Texas Sober Living Certification

TROHN Certification is one of the most important parts of preparing to open a sober living home in Texas. This guide introduces the certification process, explains the types of documentation and standards new operators should expect, and helps you understand how Texas Recovery Oriented Housing Network requirements may affect your launch plan.

Inside the book, you’ll learn how to think through policies, procedures, property readiness, resident expectations, documentation, inspections, and other practical steps that may be involved in preparing for certification through TROHN.

Texas Recovery Oriented Housing Network

About Dr. Hunter Foote

About the Author

Dr. Hunter T. Foote is a multifaceted leader, author, and entrepreneur whose work spans real estate, social enterprise, law, and education. As the founder of Vanderburgh Sober Living (VSL), he pioneered a national network of recovery homes using a social franchising model that blends business discipline with compassionate care. Learn more →

  • Your Roadmap to Sober Living Success

    This book provides a clear, step-by-step roadmap for starting a sober house in Texas with confidence. It translates a complex process into practical, actionable guidance—helping you avoid common mistakes and move efficiently from planning to operation using proven checklists and real-world templates.

  • Clarity, Confidence, and Compliance

    Navigating Texas's legal and regulatory requirements can be one of the biggest barriers to getting started. This guide cuts through the uncertainty by clearly explaining what compliance looks like and how to achieve it, giving you the confidence to move forward knowing your recovery home is built on a solid, defensible foundation.

  • Impact That Lasts

    Beyond simply opening the recovery home, this book equips you to build something that endures. You’ll learn how to create a safe, supportive recovery environment while balancing mission with sustainability—allowing you to strengthen communities, support long-term recovery, and maintain a profitable operation.

Ready to Start a Sober House in Texas?

Access a step-by-step guide to confidently plan, launch, and operate a compliant sober living home in Texas.

Start building your sober living home in Texas today!

Table of Contents

Should You Open a Sober House in Texas? — p. 5
What Recovery Housing Makes Possible — p. 6
Why Texas Needs More Sober Living — p. 7
Is This Guide for You? — p. 14
About Vanderburgh Sober Living — p. 15
How This Guide Will Help You Get Started — p. 18

Chapter 1: Understanding the Opportunity — p. 20
What Is a Sober House? — p. 21
Key Roles: Operator, Owner, and Partner — p. 27
Do You Need a License or Certification? — p. 31
Can Sober Living Be a Passive Investment? — p. 37
Inside the Sober Living Business Model — p. 40

Chapter 2: Building Your Business Engine — p. 46
Building a Practical Business Plan — p. 47
Choosing Between LLC, Corporation, or Nonprofit — p. 52
Insurance Basics for Sober Living — p. 59
Fund Your Launch Without Losing Control — p. 64

Chapter 3: The Legal Reality in Texas — p. 67
Texas Laws That Govern Sober Living — p. 68
Using Federal Protections When Cities Push Back — p. 73
How to Request Reasonable Accommodation — p. 76
Solving Common Legal Challenges — p. 79

Chapter 4: Real Estate and Recovery Housing — p. 83
Sober Living Real Estate in Texas — p. 84
How to Find the Ideal Location — p. 89
Property Search Strategies That Actually Work — p. 93

Chapter 5: Opening Your First Home — p. 96
What Level of Care Should You Offer? — p. 97
How To Lay Out a Home That Works — p. 99
How to Fill Your Beds with the Right Residents — p. 103
Required Policies & Procedures in Texas — p. 107
Finding & Equipping Your House Mentors — p. 110

Your Next Step — p. 113
The Sober Living Launchpad — p. 114
Charter Membership — p. 117
A Word of Encouragement — p. 118
The Texas Sober Living Blueprint

Want the full training?

Take the next step and access the complete course with step-by-step instructions and NARR 3.0 templates.

View The Texas Sober Living Blueprint

Texas Sober Living: Key Resources & Context

Starting a Sober House in Texas

Texas is a vast, fast-growing recovery housing market with enormous aggregate demand spread across multiple major metros. The state has an established NARR affiliate and a large behavioral health system, though Texas generally takes a lighter-touch regulatory approach to non-clinical sober homes, making voluntary certification the main quality differentiator. Real estate costs are moderate and vary by metro.

Texas Recovery Oriented Housing Network Certification

The Texas Recovery Oriented Housing Network (TROHN) is the state's NARR affiliate, certifying recovery residences to national standards. TROHN certification is valued by Texas treatment providers, courts, and the Health and Human Services Commission for referrals. Because Texas does not broadly license non-clinical sober homes, TROHN certification is a primary credential for demonstrating legitimacy.

Sober House Startup Funding

Texas operators fund startup through private capital and real estate strategies, with moderate costs that vary across the major metros. Public resources flow through the Health and Human Services Commission, SAMHSA block grants, and growing opioid settlement allocations. TROHN-certified homes are better positioned for referrals and grants.

High-Demand Areas in Texas

Demand is highest across Texas's major metros—Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, and San Antonio—where population and treatment density drive substantial need for Level II recovery housing.

El Paso, the Rio Grande Valley, Lubbock, Corpus Christi, and Beaumont show meaningful demand, and many rural areas remain underserved. Operators can find strong opportunities both in competitive metros and in underserved smaller-city and rural markets—while maintaining TROHN certification.

Frequently Asked Questions About Opening a Sober Living Home in Texas

Do I need a license to open a sober living home in Texas?

Most sober living homes are not clinical treatment facilities, but requirements can vary depending on the services offered, the property, local rules, and certification expectations. This guide helps you understand the questions to ask before launching a sober living home in Texas.

What is the difference between a sober living home and a recovery home in Texas?

The terms are often used to describe substance-free, peer-supported housing for people in recovery. This guide uses both terms and explains how sober living homes, recovery homes, and recovery residences fit into the broader recovery housing field.

Does this guide explain TROHN certification?

Yes. This guide introduces the certification process and explains how Texas Recovery Oriented Housing Network standards may affect documentation, policies, procedures, property readiness, and launch planning for sober living homes in Texas.

Does this guide cover zoning and Fair Housing issues in Texas?

Yes. The guide introduces zoning considerations, Fair Housing Act protections, reasonable accommodation requests, neighborhood concerns, and property search issues that may arise when opening a sober living home in Texas.

Does How to Open a Sober Living Home in Texas include templates or tools?

Yes. The guide includes access to a Launch Toolkit with practical resources such as a legal entity formation checklist, property search memo, Fair Housing zoning exemption request template, outreach checklist, and pro forma income statement.

Who is this Texas sober living guide for?

This guide is designed for aspiring sober living operators, real estate investors, behavioral health professionals, recovery advocates, and community leaders who want to understand the process of opening a sober living home in Texas.