Monthly cost
$200 a month for most patients.
MyStreetHealth is a self-pay practice.
The monthly fee is $200 for most patients once stable in care.
Earlier in treatment, care is often more frequent while medication is being started or adjusted. During that phase, total monthly cost may be higher.
Fees are discussed clearly at the start of care so there are no surprises.
What's included
What's included.
Physician evaluation, ongoing medication management, and direct access to your physician between appointments for clinical questions.
Care is physician-led and continuous. You see the same physician over time, and decisions are made with an understanding of your response to treatment and what has changed from one appointment to the next.
This fee applies to buprenorphine (Suboxone) treatment for opioid use disorder.
When other conditions — such as depression, anxiety, ADHD, or alcohol use disorder — are addressed within that same ongoing care relationship, overall cost may be higher depending on what is being treated.
Co-occurring conditions are common in substance use treatment. SAMHSA data on co-occurring mental illness and substance use disorder →
ADHD is also overrepresented in substance use treatment populations. Meta-analysis of ADHD prevalence in substance use disorder populations →
Medication cost
Medication is a separate cost — and is typically low.
Your buprenorphine prescription is filled at a pharmacy of your choice.
Generic buprenorphine and Suboxone are widely available and are often low cost. Many patients use pharmacy discount programs rather than insurance.
No insurance required
Self-pay means no delays.
Insurance-based treatment requires prior authorization, coverage verification, and in some cases limits on visit frequency or medication. Self-pay removes those barriers entirely — care starts when you call, not when an insurer approves.
This is particularly relevant in buprenorphine treatment, where timing matters. Delays in starting care — even short ones — can prevent treatment from beginning at all.
Self-pay removes that step, so the decision to start care and the ability to start care happen at the same time.
For patients seeking Suboxone treatment without insurance or looking for a Suboxone doctor, this means care can begin when they are ready rather than when administrative steps are completed.
Starting buprenorphine treatment is often time-sensitive. Withdrawal, risk of return to use, and access to medication all affect outcomes. Removing delays increases the likelihood that care actually begins and continues.
This applies whether care is delivered in person or through telehealth Suboxone treatment.
Pay what you can
A reduced fee is available for some patients.
MyStreetHealth offers a pay-what-you-can option for patients already on buprenorphine who face an urgent gap in care.
This is a safety net for specific circumstances — not a general sliding scale. Ask your physician.
Pay what you can — details →Related
More information.
Where we practice
Virginia · Maryland · Washington DC · West Virginia · Ohio
Related pages
Full pricing page · Pay what you can · Suboxone without insurance · How do you start Suboxone treatment? · Services · How does same-day Suboxone work? · How long does buprenorphine take to work? · How do you start Suboxone treatment?
