How to Become an Addiction Therapist: Steps & Licensure
How to Become an Addiction Therapist Through an MFT Pathway
A step-by-step guide to earning your license, specializing in addiction, and launching a rewarding clinical career.
By Emily CarterReviewed by Editorial & Advisory TeamUpdated May 22, 202610+ min read
In Brief
Becoming an addiction therapist typically takes seven to nine years from your first college class to independent practice.
A master's degree in marriage and family therapy provides the clinical foundation, with electives and practica focused on substance use disorders.
Dual certification as an LMFT and a credentialed addiction specialist (such as CADC or MAC) widens referral networks and strengthens hiring prospects.
Addiction therapists differ from addiction counselors in education level, clinical scope, and degree of independent practice authority.
An addiction therapist is a master's-level, licensed clinician qualified to diagnose and treat substance use disorders, process addictions, and co-occurring mental health conditions. The role requires independent clinical judgment, including the authority to develop treatment plans, conduct psychotherapy, and coordinate care across providers. That clinical scope separates an addiction therapist from an addiction counselor, a distinction rooted in education level, licensure type, and degree of autonomy.
For marriage and family therapists, addiction work is a natural specialization. The systemic training at the core of every COAMFTE-accredited program equips LMFTs to treat not just the person using substances but the relational patterns sustaining the cycle. Demand reflects that value: the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 15 percent job growth for MFTs through 2033, and clinicians who pair LMFT licensure with a recognized addiction credential routinely command higher reimbursement rates and broader referral networks.
Addiction Therapist vs. Addiction Counselor: Key Differences
The terms "addiction therapist" and "addiction counselor" are sometimes used interchangeably in casual conversation, but they represent distinct professional roles with different education requirements, scopes of practice, and levels of clinical autonomy. Understanding where each role begins and ends will help you choose the right career path and avoid costly missteps.
Education and Licensure
Addiction therapists typically hold a master's degree or higher in marriage and family therapy, clinical social work, professional counseling, or psychology. They pursue clinical licenses such as LMFT, LCSW, or LPC, which authorize independent practice and the ability to diagnose mental health disorders. Addiction counselors, by contrast, often enter the field with a bachelor's degree or even an associate degree, then earn a credential such as CADC (Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor) in California, CASAC (Credentialed Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Counselor) in New York, or LAC (Licensed Addiction Counselor) in Illinois and Florida. These counselor credentials focus specifically on substance use intervention rather than broad clinical mental health practice.
Scope of Practice and Diagnostic Authority
The most consequential difference is diagnostic authority. In most states, licensed therapists (LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCs) can independently diagnose co-occurring mental health conditions, design comprehensive treatment plans, and practice without ongoing supervision once fully licensed. Addiction counselors generally cannot diagnose and must work under the supervision of a licensed clinician when treatment involves co-occurring disorders. For example, California's Board of Behavioral Sciences grants LMFTs full diagnostic and treatment privileges, while its CADC holders operate under a narrower scope defined by the Department of Health Care Services. New York draws a similar line between its LMFT/LCSW licenses and the CASAC credential administered by the Office of Addiction Services and Supports. For a deeper look at how these clinical licenses compare, see our breakdown of LMFT vs. LPC differences.
How to Verify the Rules in Your State
Because title protection and scope of practice vary so much from state to state, you should always confirm the specifics before committing to a degree program.
State licensing board websites: Check sources like the California Board of Behavioral Sciences or the New York State Office of Addiction Services for official scope-of-practice language, supervision mandates, and title protection statutes.
BLS.gov: Use the Bureau of Labor Statistics for broad education and salary benchmarks, but recognize that it does not capture state-level nuances around diagnostic authority or clinical autonomy.
Professional associations: Organizations like NAADAC (the Association for Addiction Professionals) and the American Counseling Association publish state-by-state licensure summaries that compare counselor and therapist tracks side by side.
University program pages: Graduate programs in addiction studies and marriage and family therapy often map their curricula to specific licensure tracks, clarifying whether their graduates qualify for an LMFT/LCSW or a CADC/CASAC.
Why the Distinction Matters for Your Career
If your goal is to treat the full spectrum of addiction and co-occurring mental health issues, including diagnosing conditions, leading treatment teams, and eventually practicing independently, the therapist pathway through an LMFT or similar clinical license is the stronger choice. Our guide to becoming an MFT walks you through each step of that process. The counselor route can be a faster entry point into the field, but it comes with a narrower scope and typically requires supervision for the duration of your career. Many professionals start as addiction counselors and later pursue a master's degree and clinical licensure to expand their capabilities.
Steps to Become an Addiction Therapist
The path from first classroom to independent practice as an addiction therapist follows a clear credentialing ladder. Each stage builds on the last, so planning ahead can save you time and keep your options open.
How Long Does It Take to Become an Addiction Therapist?
The full path from your first college class to independent, specialized practice as an addiction therapist typically spans seven to nine years. That range may sound daunting, but each phase builds directly on the last, and several factors can shorten the timeline considerably.
Phase-by-Phase Breakdown
Bachelor's degree (4 years): A four-year undergraduate degree in psychology, social work, human development, or a related behavioral science provides the foundation. Candidates who already hold a qualifying bachelor's can move straight into a master's program without additional prerequisite coursework, effectively cutting the overall timeline.
Master's degree (2 to 3 years): A master's in marriage and family therapy or a closely related clinical field is required for licensure. Most COAMFTE-accredited MFT programs run two to three years and include both didactic coursework and hands-on practicum training.
Post-graduation supervised experience (1 to 2 years): After earning your master's, you will complete supervised clinical hours before qualifying for full LMFT licensure. The exact requirement depends on your state.
Specialty certification (varies): Earning an addiction-specific credential such as the Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor (CADC) designation adds additional supervised hours and exam preparation, though much of this work can overlap with your licensure supervision.
How Practicum Hours Accelerate the Timeline
Many MFT programs let students begin accumulating practicum hours with substance-use populations during the degree itself. If you select a practicum site at an MFT clinical internship, those hours often count toward both your degree requirements and your post-graduation supervised experience total. Choosing an addiction treatment center or a community mental health agency with a strong substance-use caseload is ideal. This overlap can trim a full year or more off your post-graduation runway.
State-by-State Variation
Supervised-hour requirements differ significantly from state to state, which directly affects how long the journey takes. For a comprehensive look at each state's rules, review our guide to becoming an MFT.
In California, candidates must complete 3,000 hours of supervised experience, a process that generally takes two years of full-time work after graduation.
In Texas, the requirement is 3,000 hours as well but includes more flexibility in how those hours are structured, sometimes allowing completion in about 18 months.
In New York, candidates need only 1,500 hours of post-master's supervised experience, making it possible to reach full licensure roughly one year after finishing a master's program.
Because of these differences, prospective students should research the specific requirements in the state where they plan to practice. Choosing a program in a state with a shorter post-graduation supervision period, or one that maximizes practicum hours during the degree, can meaningfully compress your overall timeline.
Questions to Ask Yourself
Do you want to diagnose conditions and build treatment plans independently?
If yes, the therapist path, which requires a master's degree and full clinical licensure such as the LMFT, is the right fit. If you prefer providing direct support under another clinician's supervision, a counselor credential may be sufficient.
Are you drawn to treating addiction within couples and family systems, not just in individuals?
The MFT route uniquely trains you to address how substance use disorders ripple through relationships. Other clinical paths tend to focus on individual recovery, so your answer here shapes which degree program to pursue.
Are you prepared to invest five or more years in education and supervised practice before practicing independently?
Becoming a licensed addiction therapist typically requires a master's degree plus two to three years of post-graduate supervised hours. If a shorter timeline matters more, a certification-level counselor role offers a faster entry point.
Do you see yourself eventually holding dual credentials, such as an LMFT paired with a substance abuse certification?
Dual certification broadens your scope and employability, but it also means additional exams, fees, and continuing education. Deciding now helps you choose electives and practicum sites that serve both goals simultaneously.
Degree and Coursework for Addiction Specialization
A master's degree in marriage and family therapy is the academic foundation for every aspiring addiction therapist. The key is choosing a program whose curriculum, electives, and practicum placements give you meaningful exposure to substance use disorders and addictive behaviors. Not every MFT program advertises an addiction track, so you will need to do some targeted research to find the right fit.
How to Find Programs With an Addiction Focus
Start with the program directory maintained by the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education (COAMFTE).1 You can filter by accreditation status and then visit each program's page to search for terms like "addiction," "substance abuse," or "concentration" in the curriculum description. You can also browse COAMFTE-accredited programs on our directory to compare options side by side. Your state's MFT licensing board may maintain a list of accredited programs known for offering addiction-focused coursework or dual-track options.
If those searches come up short, go directly to university websites and try queries such as "MFT addiction concentration," "substance abuse track MFT," or "dual degree MFT and CADC." Some programs do not advertise broadly but still offer relevant electives or practicum partnerships with treatment centers. Confirm online availability through each program's distance learning page if you need that flexibility.
Program Examples Worth Exploring
Several COAMFTE-accredited programs stand out for prospective addiction therapists:
Capella University: Offers a fully online MFT program, making it accessible to working adults who need scheduling flexibility while building addiction-related competencies through elective coursework.
Northcentral University: Another COAMFTE-accredited, fully online option that allows students to tailor electives and clinical experiences toward substance use populations.
Drexel University: A primarily in-person program with a documented focus on couples and families impacted by trauma and addiction, giving students direct clinical training at this intersection.3
University of San Diego: A COAMFTE-accredited program worth contacting directly to ask about addiction electives or practicum site partnerships with local treatment facilities.1
Budget-conscious applicants should also review affordable online MFT programs, since several lower-cost schools still offer strong addiction-related electives.
Coursework That Builds the Specialty
Regardless of the program you choose, look for courses that cover the following areas:
Psychopharmacology and the neuroscience of addiction
Assessment and diagnosis of substance use disorders
Evidence-based treatment models such as motivational interviewing, cognitive-behavioral therapy for substance abuse, and multidimensional family therapy
Co-occurring disorders (the overlap between mental health diagnoses and addiction)
Family systems theory applied to addictive behaviors
Ethics and cultural competence in addiction treatment
Practicum and internship placements matter just as much as classroom hours. Seek sites such as residential treatment centers, intensive outpatient programs, medication-assisted treatment clinics, or community mental health agencies with dedicated addiction caseloads. These placements let you accumulate the supervised clinical hours that licensing boards require while building genuine competence with this population.
Reaching out to the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) or your state licensing board early in your search can save time. Both can clarify whether certain programs align with dual-credential pathways, such as earning your LMFT alongside a Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor (CADC) designation, a combination that significantly broadens your MFT career paths.
Specialty Certifications and Credentials for Addiction Therapists
Earning your LMFT license establishes your clinical foundation, but a recognized addiction credential signals focused expertise to employers, insurers, and clients. Several post-licensure certifications exist, and the right choice depends on your state, career goals, and how broadly you want your credential to be recognized.
State-Level CADC Credentials
The Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor (CADC) designation is one of the most widely pursued addiction credentials, though requirements vary by state. In California, candidates must complete 315 education hours and 255 practicum hours, then pass the IC&RC ADC examination.1 California's tiered system illustrates an important distinction for master's-level therapists:
CADC-I: Requires a minimum of a high school diploma and 3,000 supervised hours. Designed for entry-level practitioners.1
CADC-II: Also accessible at the high school level with 6,000 supervised hours, reflecting deeper clinical experience.1
CADC-III: Requires at least a bachelor's degree and 4,000 supervised hours, positioning it as the more advanced tier.1
If you already hold an LMFT, you likely exceed the education minimums for all tiers. Targeting a CADC-II or CADC-III (depending on your state's structure) aligns better with your graduate training. In New York, the equivalent credential is the CASAC (Credentialed Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Counselor), which follows its own state-specific pathway. For a full overview of the LMFT license requirements by state, consult our step-by-step guide.
Nationally Portable Credentials
For therapists who want flexibility across state lines, two credentials stand out:
The IC&RC's Advanced Alcohol and Drug Counselor (AADC) credential carries reciprocity across more than 40 member states through the IC&RC network.2 This portability is a major advantage if you anticipate relocating or building a telehealth practice that crosses borders.
NAADAC's Master Addiction Counselor (MAC) is explicitly designed for master's-level clinicians. It validates advanced competency in addiction treatment and is well respected in both clinical and administrative settings. Both the AADC and MAC require graduate-level education and substantial supervised clinical experience, making them the natural fit for licensed marriage and family therapists who want their addiction expertise formally recognized.
The Dual-Certification Advantage
Holding both an LMFT and a credential like the CADC or MAC does more than add letters after your name. The combination signals to treatment facilities that you can address the relational dynamics surrounding addiction, not just the substance use itself. This dual expertise can expand your billable services, since many insurers and managed care organizations recognize addiction-specific credentials for reimbursement. It can also position you for clinical director roles in residential treatment centers and intensive outpatient programs, where leadership increasingly requires both relational therapy skills and addiction treatment fluency.
Maintaining Your Credential
Nearly every addiction certification requires ongoing continuing education units focused specifically on substance use and co-occurring disorders. CADC-I holders in California, for example, must complete 50 CEU hours per renewal cycle.3 Other credentials follow similar patterns. Plan to integrate addiction-focused CEUs into your professional development schedule from the start, since these hours often overlap with LMFT renewal requirements, making dual maintenance more manageable than it might seem.
Earning both an LMFT license and a recognized addiction credential such as a CADC or MAC sets you apart in a field where few clinicians can treat the entire family system around substance use. This dual certification widens your referral base, qualifies you for specialized roles in more treatment settings, and often translates to higher earning potential.
Where Addiction Therapists Work and What They Do
Addiction therapists who hold an LMFT credential bring a distinctive advantage to substance use treatment: the ability to treat the individual and the family system simultaneously. This dual focus opens doors across a wide range of clinical settings, and understanding where these professionals practice can help you plan your career trajectory more strategically.
Common Practice Settings
Licensed marriage and family therapists specializing in addiction work in diverse environments, each shaping day-to-day responsibilities in different ways.
Residential treatment centers: Therapists facilitate individual sessions, family therapy, and psychoeducation groups within 30-, 60-, or 90-day inpatient programs.
Outpatient behavioral health clinics: Clinicians manage ongoing caseloads of clients in recovery, often co-treating mood disorders, trauma, and relational conflict alongside substance use.
Hospital-based detox and stabilization units: Brief, crisis-oriented work focuses on motivational interviewing, safety planning, and warm handoffs to longer-term care.
Private practice: Therapists build niche caseloads around couples affected by addiction, families navigating a loved one's recovery, or adults in sustained sobriety who need relapse prevention support.
Community mental health agencies and federally qualified health centers: These settings serve high-need populations and often accept Medicaid, giving therapists exposure to complex, co-occurring cases.
Employee assistance programs and corporate wellness: Some addiction therapists consult with organizations on substance use policy and provide short-term counseling to employees.
Evidence-Based Approaches MFTs Use in Addiction Treatment
What sets an LMFT apart in addiction work is training in family-systems modalities with strong research support. Brief Strategic Family Therapy (BSFT) targets maladaptive family interactions that maintain substance use, particularly among adolescents, and has demonstrated efficacy in federally funded clinical trials. Multisystemic Therapy (MST) addresses substance use within the broader ecology of a young person's life, including peer groups, school, and neighborhood factors, and is supported by decades of outcome research. Many LMFTs also integrate relapse prevention frameworks informed by family-systems theory, helping couples and families identify interpersonal triggers and build communication patterns that sustain recovery.
How to Research Settings and Opportunities
Before committing to a specialty track, explore the landscape yourself. The Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes employment data broken down by industry, which can show you where marriage and family therapists concentrate and how compensation varies by setting. Professional associations such as the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) and the National Association for Addiction Professionals (NAADAC) maintain career resources, job boards, and practice guidelines that reflect current industry standards. For a broader look at what you can do with an MFT degree, our careers hub breaks down common specializations and employment trends. Individual program websites often list clinical placement sites, so reviewing those rosters can reveal which treatment settings partner with your prospective school. If you are still weighing the foundational steps, our guide to becoming an MFT outlines the full licensure timeline. Taking the time to cross-reference these sources gives you a realistic picture of where addiction therapists are needed most and what the work actually looks like on the ground.
Addiction Therapist Salary and Job Outlook
Addiction therapists who hold LMFT licensure can draw on salary data for marriage and family therapists as a baseline, while those working primarily in substance abuse roles may fall under a broader counseling category. Both occupational groups are projected to grow significantly faster than average through 2034, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The table below compares national wage benchmarks and employment projections for the two most relevant occupational categories.
Metric
Marriage and Family Therapists
Substance Abuse, Behavioral Disorder, and Mental Health Counselors
Total National Employment
65,870
Not separately reported in provided data
25th Percentile Annual Wage
$48,600
Not separately reported in provided data
Median Annual Wage
$63,780
Not separately reported in provided data
Mean Annual Wage
$72,720
Not separately reported in provided data
75th Percentile Annual Wage
$85,020
Not separately reported in provided data
Projected Job Growth (2024 to 2034)
15%
17%
Projected New Jobs (2024 to 2034)
10,300
81,100
Estimated Annual Openings
5,900
48,300
Highest-Paying States for Marriage and Family Therapists
Where you practice has a significant effect on your earning potential as a licensed marriage and family therapist specializing in addiction. The table below highlights the top-paying states based on the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data. States with higher median wages often reflect both elevated cost of living and strong demand for behavioral health services, including substance use treatment.
State
Total Employed
25th Percentile
Median Salary
75th Percentile
Mean Salary
New Jersey
3,940
$77,380
$89,030
$97,670
$91,980
Utah
1,980
$63,220
$81,170
$102,810
$85,550
Virginia
910
$54,010
$80,670
$95,120
$78,900
Oregon
1,080
$65,400
$79,890
$137,950
$94,520
Connecticut
390
$59,000
$76,930
$138,610
$94,830
Minnesota
3,780
$59,720
$72,370
$82,870
$72,900
Colorado
810
$54,960
$69,990
$104,990
$89,280
Nebraska
50
$46,040
$68,550
$79,710
$68,000
New Mexico
250
$57,800
$67,990
$76,070
$68,660
Kansas
160
$56,150
$66,620
$68,030
$63,480
Frequently Asked Questions About Becoming an Addiction Therapist
Choosing a career in addiction therapy raises practical questions about education, credentials, and earning potential. Below are answers to the most common questions prospective addiction therapists ask when planning their path.
What is the difference between an addiction counselor and an addiction therapist?
An addiction counselor typically holds a bachelor's degree or associate credential and focuses on psychoeducation, relapse prevention, and peer support. An addiction therapist holds a master's degree and a clinical license such as the LMFT, allowing them to diagnose co-occurring mental health disorders and deliver evidence-based psychotherapy. Therapists generally work with more complex cases and earn higher salaries.
What degree do you need to be an addiction therapist?
You need a master's degree in a clinical field. A Master of Science or Master of Arts in Marriage and Family Therapy is one of the most direct routes, especially when the program includes coursework in substance use disorders and a practicum placement in an addiction treatment setting. Programs in clinical mental health counseling or social work also qualify.
Can a marriage and family therapist specialize in addiction?
Yes. Licensed marriage and family therapists are well positioned for addiction work because substance use disorders frequently affect the entire family system. LMFTs can build this specialization by selecting addiction-focused electives, completing supervised hours with substance-using populations, earning a credential such as the CADC, and pursuing continuing education in evidence-based addiction treatments.
What certifications do addiction therapists need?
No single certification is universally required, but earning a recognized addiction credential strengthens your profile. The Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor (CADC) designation, offered by state boards, and the Master Addiction Counselor (MAC) credential from NAADAC are among the most respected. Holding both an LMFT license and an addiction certification signals dual competence and broadens employment opportunities.
How much do addiction therapists make?
Earnings vary by state, setting, and experience. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a median annual salary of roughly $58,510 for marriage and family therapists nationally. Addiction therapists in high-demand regions or private practice settings often earn above that median, particularly when they hold dual credentials and serve both individual clients and families dealing with substance use.
Is licensure as an addiction therapist portable across states?
LMFT licensure requirements differ from state to state, so a license earned in one state does not automatically transfer. However, most states accept equivalent graduate coursework and supervised clinical hours. Some states participate in reciprocity agreements or streamlined endorsement processes. Addiction-specific credentials like the MAC are nationally recognized, which can simplify part of the transition.
How long does it take to become an addiction therapist from start to finish?
Plan on roughly seven to nine years after high school. That includes four years for a bachelor's degree, two to three years for a master's in marriage and family therapy or a related field, and one to two years of post-graduate supervised clinical experience before full licensure. Adding an addiction certification may require additional supervised hours, though these often overlap with LMFT requirements.