Professional Interventionists in Vermont

How to hire a certified interventionist in Vermont, what it costs, which model fits, and precisely what state law lets you do if the answer is no.

Editorial Team
Updated: 2026
14 min read
Contents

Vermont, in one paragraph

Hire an interventionist who holds a current CIP credential, verify it before you pay, and ask whether they take any money from the facility they recommend. Expect $2,500 to $3,500, more with travel.

If he refuses, Vermont does have a legal route: 18 V.S.A. chapter 197 (Mentally Ill Users of Alcohol or Drugs), sections 8401 to 8451. It is a court process with a real evidence standard, not a phone call.

And before any of it, book the bed. Vermont has 49 SAMHSA-listed facilities, of which 8 report medical detox. An intervention with nowhere to go the same day is just an argument.

Hiring an Interventionist in Vermont

No state, Vermont included, licenses interventionists. The title is unprotected, which means the only thing standing between a professional and a confident stranger is a certification you have to check yourself.

The credential to look for is the Certified Intervention Professional (CIP), issued by the Pennsylvania Certification Board. It is a national credential, not a Pennsylvania-only one, and it requires the holder to have facilitated at least 10 interventions in the previous three years and completed 100 hours of supervised work. Interventionists frequently travel to the family, so do not rule out a certified professional simply because they are not based in Vermont. Rule out an uncertified one who happens to be local.

The full vetting checklist, including the seven questions to ask before you pay anyone, is in the main intervention guide.

What It Costs in Vermont

Typical cost of hiring a professional interventionist in Vermont
Line itemTypical range
Interventionist fee, straightforward case$2,500 to $3,500
Complex case, travel, or co-occurring illnessup to about $7,500
Travel and lodging, if the interventionist flies in$150 to $250 a night, plus mileage
The treatment itselfbilled separately

Insurance almost never pays for the intervention. It pays for the treatment that follows. Check what your policy covers and whether Medicaid applies before the meeting, not after. Cost figures via ISSUP.

Which Model Fits Your Family

The Johnson Model

The one people picture: a single, planned, surprise meeting.

Best for: Acute danger, a short window of opportunity, or a person who has refused every direct conversation so far.

ARISE

Invitational. No surprise, no ambush.

Best for: Families who want to preserve the relationship, and situations where an ambush would likely blow up.

CRAFT

Trains the family, not the addicted person. No meeting at all.

Best for: Families with time, and for the very common case where the person will not attend any meeting at all. It also measurably improves the family member's own mental health, which the other two models do not claim.

Full comparison, including what the published trials actually show, is in the model breakdown. If your family member will not attend a meeting under any circumstances, CRAFT is the model that still applies, because it works with you rather than with them.

If They Refuse: Vermont's Commitment Law

The statute

18 V.S.A. chapter 197 (Mentally Ill Users of Alcohol or Drugs), sections 8401 to 8451

Involuntary commitment for substance use in Vermont: statute, who may petition, the legal standard, and duration
What it coversVermont is the unusual one. Chapter 197 lets an interested party seek the commitment of a person the statute calls a drug addict, defined as someone who shows signs of mental illness because of their use of drugs, hallucinogens, stimulants or sedatives, or who has an uncontrollable desire for them. Vermont does not provide a separate commitment statute aimed at alcoholism, which makes it the only state that permits substance-related commitment without an alcohol-specific route.
How the state defines itBecause Vermont's route runs through a mental-illness finding rather than a standalone addiction statute, an alcohol-only case is materially harder to bring here than in Alaska, Oklahoma or North Dakota. Vermont families in that position should get legal advice early rather than assume the route exists.
Who may petitionAn interested party, by filing a written application. Vermont defines interested party broadly, and proceedings are commenced in the Family Division of the Superior Court.
The standard you must meetThe application runs through Vermont's judicial process for involuntary treatment. Because the statutory definition is tied to signs of mental illness arising from drug use, the evidence you assemble should speak to that, not only to the addiction itself.
How long it lastsSet by the court under Vermont's involuntary treatment provisions rather than by a single fixed figure in the addiction chapter.

This is legal information, not legal advice. Commitment statutes are amended, and how a statute is applied varies by county and by judge. Confirm the current text with the linked official source and speak to an attorney or your local legal aid office before you file anything.

Where an Intervention Actually Leads in Vermont

The model only works if a bed is booked before the conversation starts. Here is what exists in Vermont, computed from the SAMHSA treatment locator rather than copied from a brochure.

816%

Offer medical detox

510%

Residential / inpatient

4592%

Outpatient programs

4796%

Accept Medicaid

Computed from 49 SAMHSA-listed facilities across 24 Vermont cities. Percentages reflect facilities that report each service to SAMHSA.

Where the facilities are

Browse all 49 Vermont facilities

The Next 24 Hours

  1. 1

    Call the SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-4357. It is free, confidential, staffed around the clock, and it costs you nothing to start there before you spend thousands.

  2. 2

    Verify insurance coverage before you contact any interventionist, so you know which of Vermont's 49 facilities are actually reachable for you.

  3. 3

    Shortlist two certified interventionists and check both credentials with the Pennsylvania Certification Board yourself. Do not take a website's word for it.

  4. 4

    Ask each of them, directly, whether they receive any payment from the facility they recommend.

  5. 5

    Read Vermont's commitment statute above, so you know what your fallback is before you need it, not after.

  6. 6

    Decide, as a family, what the consequence is if the answer is no. Then decide whether you will actually enforce it. If you will not, choose a different consequence.

Vermont: Frequently Asked Questions

Can you force someone into rehab in Vermont?+

Vermont permits involuntary commitment for substance use under 18 V.S.A. chapter 197 (Mentally Ill Users of Alcohol or Drugs), sections 8401 to 8451. An interested party, by filing a written application. Vermont defines interested party broadly, and proceedings are commenced in the Family Division of the Superior Court. Set by the court under Vermont's involuntary treatment provisions rather than by a single fixed figure in the addiction chapter. The standard is demanding and the process runs through the courts, so it is not a fast alternative to persuading the person to accept treatment voluntarily.

Who can petition for involuntary commitment in Vermont?+

An interested party, by filing a written application. Vermont defines interested party broadly, and proceedings are commenced in the Family Division of the Superior Court.

How much does an interventionist cost in Vermont?+

Expect $2,500 to $3,500 for a straightforward case, and up to roughly $7,500 where travel or complexity is involved. Vermont is not a state where you should assume a local interventionist is available in every town, so budget for travel and lodging on top of the fee. The intervention fee does not include the treatment itself.

How many treatment facilities are there in Vermont?+

Vermont has 49 SAMHSA-listed treatment facilities across 24 cities. Of those, 8 report offering medical detox, 5 offer residential or inpatient care, and 47 accept Medicaid. Knowing this before the intervention matters, because the model depends on a bed being booked in advance.

If this is an emergency

If someone is in immediate danger, call 911. If there is a risk of suicide, call or text 988. For treatment options at any hour, the SAMHSA National Helpline is 1-800-662-4357, free and confidential.

Intervention Guides for Other States

Back to the full intervention guide

SAMHSA Helpline Available 24/7

Find a Vermont Facility Before the Conversation

An intervention only works if there is a bed waiting. Browse 49 licensed Vermont facilities, filter by detox and by the insurance you hold, and have the answer ready before you sit down.

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1-800-487-4889
Last Updated: 2026

About This Guide

This Professional Intervention in Vermont guide was written using evidence-based information from the public health sources listed below. Our goal is to provide accurate, accessible information to help people and families make informed decisions about addiction treatment. It is informational only and is not medical advice — talk to a licensed clinician about your situation.