
Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center — New York, NY
ABLE Halfway House/SA • 168 East 107th Street • New York, NY 10029
SAMHSA 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-662-4357
Mailing Address
168 East 107th Street
New York, New York 10029
Phone Lines
Front desk: 212-348-4660
Hours of Operation
Hours not posted — call the facility to confirm availability
Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
168 East 107th Street, New York, NY 10029

Inside Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center — Residential Care
Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center operates the ABLE Halfway House/SA in New York, NY, holding long-term residential and 24-hour residential space for adults and young adults working through substance use. The clinical work draws on 12-step facilitation, anger management, brief intervention, cognitive behavioral therapy, and motivational interviewing shaped to where each client is in the process. Distinct tracks stay open for adult men, adult women, and clients carrying intimate partner violence, domestic violence, sexual abuse, or wider trauma histories. As a long-standing Harlem-rooted nonprofit, Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center keeps outreach, screenings, hepatitis-B and hepatitis-C testing, HIV and STD testing, mental health work, social-skills development, and suicide prevention on the same plan.
Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
168 East 107th Street, New York, NY 10029
SAMHSA 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-662-4357
Residential Tracks Offered at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
| Care Levels | Substance use treatment |
| Treatment Setting | Long-term residential, Residential/24-hour residential |
CBT & Allied Therapies at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
Conditions Addressed at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center — Alcoholism & More
Veterans Program at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
Counseling at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center — Family-Inclusive Sessions
On-Site Testing & Screening at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
Wraparound Supports & Accommodations at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
House Rules at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center — Smoke-Free Campus
Paying for Care at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
Other Payment Pathways
Plan coverage depends on your individual benefits. Call admissions to confirm what your policy covers and any cost-share before you commit.
Adult Intake at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
Ages Served
Gender Tracks
Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center — New York Licensed Recovery Center
Full Credential List
Matching Care Programs
Want to compare options beyond Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center? Browse the full directory of vetted centers in New York or explore care by specialty.
Common Questions About Care at Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center
When detox is clinically indicated but not delivered in-house, this site coordinates a referral to a partner detox provider and arranges the hand-off into primary treatment. The admissions coordinator can explain how the referral works and how continuity of care is preserved between levels.
Residential days follow a predictable rhythm: morning wellness and grounding activities, individual therapy, group counseling blocks, educational workshops, and evening peer-recovery meetings. Meals, medication times, and rest periods are built into the schedule. That steady routine helps clients rebuild healthy daily structure — a quiet but important piece of sustained recovery.
The young-adult track focuses on the challenges specific to this stage of life — peer dynamics, identity formation, and the move into independent living. Programming usually pairs traditional addiction therapy with career counseling and practical life-skills work.
A dedicated veterans track addresses combat-related trauma, PTSD, moral injury, and the specific stressors that follow service members into civilian life. Staff who understand military culture deliver the care, and admissions can help coordinate with VA benefits when applicable — call to confirm eligibility specifics.
LGBTQ+-affirming care is part of how this program operates. Clinical work attends to the realities of minority stress, family rejection, and discrimination that frequently sit alongside substance use. Staff training emphasizes culturally responsive, respectful care across every level of the program.
Gender-responsive programming gives women space to work on trauma, relationships, and parenting in a setting tailored to their needs. Some sites coordinate childcare or family housing alongside treatment. If pregnancy or postpartum care is part of the picture, ask admissions about pregnancy-safe protocols.
Family participation tends to strengthen long-term recovery outcomes. This program may run family therapy sessions, educational workshops, scheduled visitation, family weekends, or multi-family groups. The specifics differ by site, so admissions can describe the exact family programming and how relatives can plug in.
Aftercare planning starts well before discharge. Typical paths include step-down to outpatient services, referrals to sober-living homes, alumni group meetings, and warm hand-offs to community recovery resources. Many programs maintain alumni networks so peer support and accountability continue once formal treatment is complete.
Yes — both family counseling and marital or couples counseling are offered. Sessions are sequenced through the program and continue into aftercare. Working with relatives helps rebuild trust, name healthy boundaries, and prepare the home environment so it can hold up the recovery work after discharge.
Total cost depends on program length, level of care, and the specific services involved. Most sites can set up payment plans or point to outside financing partners. A confidential call to admissions gets you a tailored cost estimate for your situation rather than a guess based on a generic price sheet.
This site offers general information about addiction treatment centers. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. In a mental health crisis, call 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or 911 right away. For substance use guidance, SAMHSA can be reached at 1-800-662-4357.
Records are drawn from the SAMHSA Treatment Locator, state licensing databases, and center submissions.



