Medical detox
3 to 7 daysAround-the-clock medical supervision through the most physically demanding phase of recovery. Comfort-focused, evidence-based protocols.
Published by Pinnacle Peak Recovery — a licensed addiction treatment facility in Scottsdale, AZ. Calls answered by Pinnacle Peak Recovery admissions staff.
About this site →Arizona · Medical detox
Around-the-clock medical supervision through alcohol, opioid, benzodiazepine, and stimulant withdrawal. Detox is stabilization, not treatment, but for some substances unsupervised quitting carries real health risk. Pinnacle Peak Recovery's detox program is the medical runway treatment uses.
When professional detox actually matters
Detox is stabilization, not the whole treatment.
Alcohol and benzodiazepine withdrawal can carry serious medical risk if attempted at home. Opioid withdrawal is rarely dangerous, but unmanaged it has one of the highest relapse rates of any substance. Pinnacle Peak Recovery's detox program covers the medical piece so the work that follows has a foundation.
Continuum of care
Around-the-clock medical supervision through the most physically demanding phase of recovery. Comfort-focused, evidence-based protocols.
Live on campus with structured therapy, group sessions, and clinical care. Time and space to do the work.
Day-program intensity with evening reintegration. The bridge between residential and outpatient life.
Continued therapy and accountability while you return to work, school, and family. Built for long-term success.
Insurance verification
Pinnacle Peak Recovery admissions runs a full benefits check before any commitment. We work with most major commercial carriers, including those listed below. Out-of-network reimbursement is also available on many other plans.
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Or call (480) 660-9900. Confidential, 24/7. Calls answered by Pinnacle Peak Recovery.
What detox looks like at Pinnacle Peak
Withdrawal supervision
24/7 nursing presence, vital-sign monitoring, and clinical staff on site. The goal is to make withdrawal medically safe and as physically tolerable as evidence-based protocols allow.
Medical management
Comfort medications appropriate to the substance and clinical picture, used to prevent the medical complications that make unsupervised withdrawal risky for alcohol and benzodiazepine cases.
What stabilization feels like
Most patients sleep more in the first 48 hours than they have in months. Hydration, nutrition, and rest. Clinical conversations stay light until the body has caught up.
Common questions
For alcohol and benzodiazepines, often no. Withdrawal from heavy use of either can produce seizures and, rarely, a syndrome (delirium tremens for alcohol) that is medically dangerous. For opioids and stimulants, at-home detox is rarely physically dangerous, but the relapse rate without medical management is very high. The first phone call walks through what your situation looks like.
Typically 3 to 7 days, depending on substance, dose history, and clinical picture. Alcohol and short-acting opioids tend to clear faster. Long-acting benzodiazepines and methadone can require longer protocols. Admissions can give you a more specific estimate after the assessment call.
Step-down into residential treatment is the standard path. Detox stabilizes the body. Residential begins the actual behavioral work. Pinnacle Peak Recovery runs both at the same campus, so the handoff is internal rather than discharge-and-rebook.
Most patients are in a shared bedroom with one other person in detox. Common areas, dining, and clinical staff are accessible throughout. Social isolation in early withdrawal is the wrong design for most people.
We're in-network with Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Tricare, Ambetter, Humana, ComPsych, Mines & Associates, Connected Care Intel, and a handful of smaller plans. Admissions runs a full benefits check before you commit to anything. Out-of-network reimbursement is also available on many other plans.
Yes. Substance use treatment is protected by federal 42 CFR Part 2 confidentiality rules in addition to HIPAA. Admissions can walk through what that means in practice on the first call.
Local context
If you are reading this, the question you are probably trying to answer is some version of "do I actually need medical detox, or can I quit at home." The answer depends on what you are quitting, how long you have been using, and what your body has adapted to. For some substances the honest answer is that unsupervised quitting is genuinely dangerous. For others it is mostly miserable rather than medically risky, but the relapse rate without medical management is high enough that supervision matters anyway.
This page is for that question. It covers when professional detox is medically necessary, what detox actually is and is not, what the program looks like at Pinnacle Peak Recovery's Scottsdale facility, and what tends to happen after stabilization. Medical detox is the first step for many patients, not the whole treatment. The distinction between those two things is the most useful framework you can carry into the first call.

There are two substances where unsupervised withdrawal carries meaningful medical risk, and they are the ones most people underestimate.
The first is alcohol. Heavy daily drinking changes the brain's GABA system, and abrupt cessation can produce a withdrawal syndrome that ranges from uncomfortable shaking and anxiety at the mild end to seizures and delirium tremens at the severe end. Delirium tremens is rare, but it has a real mortality rate when untreated. If you have been drinking heavily every day for months or years, the calculation is not whether withdrawal will be uncomfortable but whether it will be medically safe.
The second is benzodiazepines. The withdrawal pattern is similar to alcohol because they act on the same receptor system. Long-term users coming off Xanax, Klonopin, Valium, or Ativan can experience seizures and protracted withdrawal that lasts weeks. Tapering safely requires medical management. Sudden cessation, especially after long-term high-dose use, is the substance class where at-home detox most often goes wrong.
Opioid withdrawal is rarely physically dangerous in otherwise healthy adults. It is, by all accounts of patients and clinicians, miserable. The relapse rate from unsupervised opioid detox is very high, and most relapses happen during or immediately after the worst of withdrawal because the brain has had its tolerance reset and the original dose is now potentially fatal. The medical case for supervised opioid detox is less about preventing seizures and more about preventing the overdose that follows an attempted at-home quit.
Stimulant withdrawal (cocaine, methamphetamine) is mostly psychological. There is no acute medical danger from the withdrawal itself, but the depressive crash and intense cravings make unsupervised stimulant detox another setting where relapse rates are punishing.
Detox is stabilization. The point is to get the body through withdrawal safely and to bring the patient to a clinical baseline where the actual treatment work becomes possible. It is not the treatment.
This distinction matters because patients sometimes finish detox feeling significantly better than they did walking in, and conclude that they have completed treatment. They have not. The substance is out of the system. The patterns, the underlying mental health context, the social environment, and the behaviors that built the use over months or years are all still there. Discharging from detox and going home is one of the highest-risk transitions in addiction medicine. The 30-day relapse rate after detox-only treatment is high enough that most clinical guidelines do not recommend it as a standalone intervention.
What detox does well is the medical piece. Vital-sign monitoring, medication management, hydration, nutrition, rest, and clinical staff on hand for whatever the body does as it adjusts. For alcohol and benzodiazepines that medical piece is structurally important. For opioids and stimulants it is comfort-focused, with the secondary goal of keeping the patient in the building long enough that the next step in care is realistic.
The detox program is staffed around the clock with nursing presence. Vital signs are monitored on a schedule that adjusts based on what the patient is withdrawing from. Medical staff are on site or on call. Patients arrive, get assessed, and are placed in a shared bedroom with one other person.

The bedroom matters in a way that is easy to underestimate. Withdrawal is uncomfortable enough that physical comfort is part of the clinical picture, not separate from it. Sleep, hydration, food, and a calm environment are the non-medication parts of stabilization. The space is intentionally not hospital-like. The reasoning is straightforward. Most patients have been to a hospital at some point during their use, and that environment is associated with the worst moments of their addiction rather than the start of recovery.
Common areas, kitchen access, and outdoor space are open during detox. Most patients spend the first 48 hours sleeping more than they have in months. The clinical conversations stay light during that period. Medical staff are checking in, but the program does not push group therapy or heavy clinical work until the body has caught up enough that the patient can engage. That is usually somewhere between day three and day five.
Comfort medications are used appropriately to the substance. The protocols are evidence-based and adjusted to the individual clinical picture. The clinical team will walk through what is being prescribed and why. Patients are not expected to know in advance.
Most detox stays run three to seven days. The exact length depends on what is being withdrawn from, dose history, and the patient's clinical picture.
Alcohol detox is typically the shorter end of that range, three to five days for most patients without complications. Short-acting opioids like heroin or oxycodone are similar. Long-acting opioids like methadone can take longer. Benzodiazepines often require a slower medical taper that can extend the stay or transition into a longer outpatient taper protocol. Stimulant detox is mostly about the depressive crash, which is shorter physically but where the psychological piece needs more time.
The clinical team will give a more specific estimate after the initial assessment. The estimate is not a contract. If withdrawal is more or less complicated than expected, the protocol adjusts.

The strongest predictor of long-term outcomes after detox is whether the patient steps directly into continuing care, rather than discharging home and trying to schedule something later.
For most patients, the next step is residential treatment. The body is stable. The patient has slept. The substance is out of the system. That is the moment when behavioral and clinical work becomes possible in a way it was not at intake. Residential typically runs 30 to 90 days, depending on the clinical picture, and most of the durable behavior change happens here.
Pinnacle Peak Recovery runs detox and residential at the same campus. The handoff is internal. The patient is not discharged from detox and asked to find a residential program; they walk down the hall to the next phase of their care plan. The clinical team that managed the medical piece is in conversation with the team that will run the residential work. Records do not have to be re-faxed. The patient does not have to start over telling their story.
For some patients, the right next step is partial hospitalization (PHP) or intensive outpatient (IOP), particularly when the home environment is recovery-supportive and family or work obligations make residential difficult. The clinical team builds the step-down sequence with the patient during detox. The shape of the plan depends on the picture, not a fixed sequence.
Going home directly from detox is sometimes the right call, but it is the highest-risk transition in addiction care. If that is what the discharge looks like, the conversation about aftercare, follow-up appointments, sober support, and the specific plan for the first 30 days happens carefully and in detail.
Severity of withdrawal. Most patients are worried that it will be worse than it actually is, or that they will feel like they are dying without medical help. The medical piece is structurally there for a reason. Comfort medications are part of the protocol for every substance class where they are appropriate. Withdrawal is not pleasant, but it is medically managed.
Cost. Most major commercial insurance is in network. Admissions runs the verification before you commit to anything, and the number you get back is your real out-of-pocket exposure. If you do not have insurance, that conversation happens openly on the call rather than after you arrive.
Work. Detox is a five-day window for most patients. FMLA covers most patients in employer-sponsored situations. Admissions can walk through what your situation looks like, including how to communicate the absence to an employer in a way that protects your privacy.
Privacy. Substance use treatment is protected by federal 42 CFR Part 2 confidentiality rules in addition to HIPAA. Treatment records cannot be released to most third parties, including most employers, without explicit written consent. Admissions can walk through what that means in practice on the first call.
Whether you really need medical supervision. This is the question this page exists to answer. If you are withdrawing from heavy daily alcohol use or long-term benzodiazepine use, the medical case is clear. For opioids and stimulants, the case is more about relapse prevention than acute medical risk, and for many patients the clinical case for medical detox over an at-home attempt is decisive even when the medical risk is lower. The intake call walks through your specific situation.
Whether this is even bad enough to warrant a call. The honest answer is that if you are reading a page like this, you are already evaluating that question. The call is not a commitment. It is a conversation that ends with a clearer picture of what your options actually are.
For the clinical fundamentals at the level most families want before the first call, see the following guides:
And the related treatment topics:
Alumni voices
“The clinical team treated me like a person with a problem, not a problem with a person attached. That changed how I showed up.”
“I had tried to quit on my own twice. The medical piece on the front end made the difference, then the work after detox made it stick.”
“Continuity mattered more than I expected. Same people through detox, residential, and PHP. I never had to start over telling my story.”
Quotes shown are illustrative, pending alumni releases or verified Google review citations specific to medical detox. Real reviews replace these before the page is promoted to status: published.
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