If you've been watching the headlines this year, you've seen the change. HUD is moving massive amounts of funding toward transitional and recovery housing. SAMHSA is dropping $500,000 grants for recovery residences. On paper, it's a gold rush for operators.
But there's a catch that's currently leaving hundreds of good programs in the dust: the gatekeepers have stopped caring about your "vibes." It used to be enough to describe your program, show you had beds, and talk about your mission. Now, every major funder (HUD, SAMHSA, and state opioid settlement programs) wants numbers. Not just "we help people recover," but how many, for how long, and what happened after they left.
This isn't a trend. It's the new baseline. And it's only going to get sharper in 2026.
Two things are moving the needle right now.
First, fraud. High-profile investigations into sober living schemes (especially billing fraud in states like California and Florida) made funders skeptical. California is auditing programs for "unproven outcomes." Alabama and New Jersey are tightening oversight. Funders need to distinguish real programs from paper ones, and data is how they do that.
Second, the money got bigger. HUD is redirecting a significant chunk of Continuum of Care funding toward transitional and recovery housing. It's being called one of the biggest opportunities for our space in recent memory. SAMHSA continues to invest tens of millions in expansion. When the dollars go up, so does the scrutiny. Funders need to justify where the money went, which means you need to justify what you did with it.
Every RFP and NOFO is slightly different, but the same core metrics keep showing up. If you can report on these cleanly, you're ahead of most applicants:
Pro Tip: If you can frame housing stability as systemic cost savings (showing how much money your house saved the taxpayer by keeping people out of a $95,000-a-year prison cell) that's what turns a good application into a funded one.
Most recovery housing operators are doing good work. The outcomes are real. But the data isn't being captured in a way that's usable for grant applications.
It's in spreadsheets that haven't been updated in months. It's in a house manager's head. It's in paper intake forms that never get digitized. And discharge? Most programs capture it as a single field (maybe a dropdown with "completed" or "left early") which tells a funder almost nothing.
The programs that win funding in 2026 won't necessarily be the "best" programs. They'll be the ones that can prove they're good programs, on a deadline, with clean data.
We didn't want to just give you a place to store names. We wanted to give you a tool to win grants. That's why we completely rebuilt how Sobriety Hub captures the resident journey, and the Core Data Model Update is officially live.
We collaborated with experts like the Fletcher Group to ensure our data fields map directly to the PAR (Program Assessment and Reporting) standards that federal funders look for.
Capturing the data is step one. Step two is making it look professional enough to hand to a parole officer or a grant committee.
We're building one-click outcomes reports. These will be professional, stakeholder-ready PDFs you can generate straight from your dashboard. Resident counts, discharge breakdowns, intake-to-discharge comparisons, UA summaries, and bed occupancy will all be formatted and ready to go. Instead of you spending a weekend doing math in a spreadsheet, you click one button and generate a branded report that includes:
The recovery housing industry is professionalizing fast. There's more funding available than there has been in years, but that funding is going to flow toward operators who can demonstrate impact.
This is actually great news for anyone running a legitimate program. The bar isn't "be perfect." The bar is "show your work." If you're capturing this data now (structured and consistent from day one) you'll be ready when the next RFP drops.
If you are a Sobriety Hub Customer, the data model update is in your account right now. Take a look at the new intake and discharge workflows. They're the foundation for the reports that are going to fund your next three houses.