SAMHSA has already awarded $88 million in supplemental funding for young adult recovery housing through existing State Opioid Response programs, but no dedicated "Young Adult Recovery Housing Grants" appear in the 2026 forecast.
The funding reality is messier than the headline suggests. According to SAMHSA, the agency announced $43 million in supplemental funding in August 2025, followed by another $45 million in September. Both went to existing State Opioid Response (SOR) program recipients to expand recovery housing for young adults ages 18-24 with opioid or stimulant use disorders.
States received between $500,000 and $2.96 million under the SOR formula. U.S. territories got $100,000 each. The need is stark: 75% of young adults lack stable housing when they first engage with SOR programs.
But there's no standalone "Young Adult Recovery Housing Grant" program listed in SAMHSA's 2026 forecast. The agency is offering a broader $1.09 million grant called "Treatment and Recovery Services for Youth, Young Adults, and Families" instead. Just two awards of $545,000 each are available, with applications due Tuesday, July 15, 2025 (this deadline has passed, but the program may inform 2026 planning).
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says President Trump has made recovery housing "a key public health and public safety priority." Whether that creates dedicated grant programs in 2026 is anyone's guess.

Cara writes for the people sober living is actually built for: individuals in recovery and the families supporting them. Her background is in community health, and she covers what the process actually looks like from the other side of the front door. Based in Austin.
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