A Guide to Relapse Prevention

Recovery from addiction doesn’t end when rehab finishes. It continues through the weeks, months, and years that follow. Once you complete treatment and return, the focus becomes relapse prevention. The best rehab programmes include relapse prevention planning and ongoing support to protect you from the challenges that come with early recovery.

This guide offers practical information on recognising relapse warning signs, identifying your personal triggers, and building strategies that support long-term recovery.

Person suffering a relapse

Why relapse happens

Addiction changes the brain, affecting decision-making, impulse control, and how you respond to stress and setbacks. Recovery involves learning or relearning healthier patterns of thinking and behaviour, and this takes longer than a few weeks in rehab.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse reports that relapse rates for addiction sit between 40 and 60 percent. Rather than being evidence that treatment doesn’t work, this figure reflects that addiction is a chronic condition with similar relapse rates to hypertension and asthma.

When someone with high blood pressure stops taking their medication, and their blood pressure rises, doctors don’t say their treatment has failed. They adjust the approach and try again. The same principle applies to addiction.

The three stages of relapse

Research has identified that relapse rarely happens suddenly or without warning. It typically unfolds in three stages, and each provides opportunities for intervention:

1. Emotional relapse

At first, you may not consciously be thinking about using drugs or drinking after drug rehab or alcohol rehab, but your behaviour and emotional state set the stage for future struggles. Early warning signs include:

  • Poor sleep
  • Skipping meals
  • Isolating yourself from others
  • Bottling up your emotions
  • Neglecting your new post-rehab routines

The common thread here is poor self-care. When you stop looking after yourself, you can become uncomfortable in your own skin and start looking for relief or escape.

2. Mental relapse

This is when an internal conflict begins, as part of you wants to use substances, but another part doesn’t. Signs of this conflict include:

  • Thinking about people you drink or use drugs with
  • Romanticising or downplaying past use
  • Telling yourself you could handle just one drink or hit
  • Believing you are “cured”
  • Losing motivation or belief in recovery

At this stage, the window for intervention is narrowing, but it’s still open.

3. Physical relapse

This is the actual return to substance use, and once someone reaches this point, the opportunity for prevention has passed. You can still take action to prevent one relapse from becoming a complete return to addiction, but you need to act fast. We cover what to do if you relapse below.

Identifying your triggers

Triggers are the situations, emotions, or circumstances that increase your risk of relapse. Research has found that negative emotional states are linked to more than half of all relapses, with feelings like anger and loneliness particularly common.

But triggers can also include people you used drugs or drank with, places associated with past substance use or addictive behaviour, certain times of year, social pressure, celebrations, boredom, or physical pain. Identifying your personal triggers requires honest self-reflection. Ask yourself:

  • What situations have led to cravings in the past?
  • What feelings tend to come before thoughts about using drugs or drinking?
  • What environments make recovery feel harder?

Writing these down and discussing them with a counsellor or sponsor can help you develop specific strategies for managing each one. At the Sanctuary Lodge, these conversations are a crucial part of relapse prevention planning. We believe the better you understand your own patterns, the better equipped you will be to cope.

Group therapy embrace

Practical strategies for staying in recovery

Relapse prevention is partly about willpower, but also means building a life that supports sobriety and developing skills to manage high-risk situations. Some of the most important strategies in an effective relapse prevention plan include:

Practising self-care
This means taking care of the basics like regular sleep, proper nutrition, physical exercise, and time for rest. Many people find that maintaining the structure of residential rehab after leaving helps them stay grounded. Waking up and eating at the same time, going to work or school, and building in time for hobbies can all help keep you stable.
Staying connected
Isolation is one of the biggest causes of relapse. Attending support groups, staying in touch with a sponsor or recovery mentor, and spending time with friends and family can all provide accountability and give you someone to talk to when you’re struggling.
Knowing your warning signs
This means creating a personal list of the thoughts, feelings, and behaviours that indicate you’re drifting toward relapse. You can also share this list with someone you trust and ask them to tell you if they notice these signs appearing. Sometimes others can see what you can’t, so they can catch a problem before it develops.
Developing coping strategies for cravings
Even the most overwhelming cravings are temporary, and there are many possible coping strategies that you will learn in rehab. These include urge surfing, where you observe the craving without acting on it, distracting yourself with a hobby or activity, meditation, breathing exercises, or just taking a cold shower. The best course is to experiment with different approaches and find which ones work for you.
Having a plan for high-risk situations
If you know a particular event, person, or circumstance poses a threat to your recovery, think through how you will handle it in advance. This might mean having an exit strategy, bringing a supportive person with you, or choosing not to attend at all. Planning ahead means you don’t need to make a difficult decision in the moment, when your defenses may be lower.

What to do if you relapse

Despite your best efforts, a relapse may occur, but it doesn’t have to erase everything you have achieved. The most important thing is to get back on track as quickly as possible. Here is what to do if you slip up:

Reach out immediately
Contact your counsellor, sponsor, or treatment provider, and be honest about what happened. The shame that often accompanies relapse can make people want to hide, but isolation only makes things worse. The people who support your recovery have seen this before and will not judge you for it.
Try to understand what led to the relapse
What warning signs did you miss? What could you do differently next time? This isn’t about blame, but about learning. Many people find that relapse, when examined honestly, teaches them something essential about their recovery that they couldn’t have learned any other way.
Adjust your recovery plan based on what you’ve learned
Perhaps you need more support, a different living situation, treatment for a co-occurring mental health condition, or simply a renewed commitment to the basics. Returning to treatment isn’t a sign of weakness or failure, but a practical response to a chronic condition that sometimes requires multiple rounds of care.

For families and loved ones

If someone you care about is in recovery, your support matters enormously. But supporting someone in recovery, especially if they relapse, requires patience and understanding.

Learn about addiction and relapse so you understand what your loved one is facing. Avoid blame if they struggle, but also avoid enabling behaviours that might make it easier for them to use. Encourage them to stay connected with their support network and to seek help quickly if warning signs appear.

Take care of yourself, too. Supporting someone through recovery can be draining, and a relapse can take a huge toll. Consider attending a support group for families, such as Al-Anon or Nar-Anon, where you can share experiences with others who understand.

How to get help with recovery or relapse

Recovery is possible, and millions of people demonstrate that every day. The path isn’t always smooth, but setbacks don’t define your future. What matters is how you respond to challenges, the support you build around yourself, and your willingness to keep going.

If you’re looking for professional support to strengthen your recovery, Sanctuary Lodge can help. Our team provides ongoing guidance for people at every stage of the recovery process, including aftercare, as well as our alumni programme that ensures you are supported throughout your recovery journey.

Frequently asked questions

What is the addiction relapse cycle?
Addiction is a chronic disease that often follows a relapsing-remitting course. This means that people who struggle with addiction will often experience periods of sobriety followed by periods of relapse. For some people, one round of treatment will be enough to achieve permanent sobriety. However, for others, it may take multiple attempts before they are finally able to achieve lasting recovery. Relapse is not a disaster as long as you learn something each time and implement it into your recovery plan. With each attempt, you get one step closer to achieving lasting sobriety.

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UK Addiction Treatment Group.

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