A recovery residence for men ready to rebuild their lives with structure, brotherhood, accountability, and fun in sobriety.
Without structure, every day blurs together. Wake up late, drift, repeat. Old habits slide back in when there’s no plan. Recovery stalls before it even begins.
Nobody’s checking in. Nobody’s calling you out. Without accountability, discipline fades — and slips in quietly.
Recovery isn’t meant to be done alone. In isolation, small problems grow into monsters. Connection shrinks them back down. Together, recovery feels possible.
We keep it simple — because the hardest part shouldn’t be the paperwork. Here’s how you take your next step toward structure, brotherhood, and purpose.
See the house. Walk the grounds. Meet the men. Feel the difference.
They came in broken. They left rebuilt. These are their stories.
"When I walked into Warriors Haven, all I had was an ID and a desire to change. I left with so much more. The structure and brotherhood here gave me a foundation to rebuild my life. Today, I own my own truck, I drive 18-wheelers for a living, and I carry a new outlook on life. Warriors Haven didn’t just help me get sober—it gave me my future back."
"I came in with nothing—not even an ID—just a desire to be sober. Warriors Haven gave me the start I needed. I found a tribe that believed in me when I didn’t believe in myself."
“It took me several tries to get it right, but Warriors Haven never gave up on me. They held me accountable until it finally stuck. Today, I’m back with my wife, working full-time, and living a sober life.”
The next testimonial could be yours. Warriors Haven is where broken men rebuild their lives — with structure, accountability, and brotherhood.
After 24 years in the Army as a Psychological Operations Sergeant First Class, I came home carrying scars you couldn’t see. Like many veterans, I felt lost without my mission. I lost friends to addiction and suicide—and I almost lost myself.
I’ve also seen firsthand how addiction and recovery can destroy relationships—families, marriages, trust. Not from a distance, but in my own life. The damage is real, and if it’s not addressed, it repeats.
That’s why I built Warriors Haven: a structured, accountable, brotherhood-driven recovery residence I wish had when I needed it most. As a Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW) and someone who’s lived this fight, I created a place for men ready to rebuild—veterans, first responders, law enforcement, and others who fit the culture.
This isn’t about talk. It’s about structure, accountability, and learning how to live again—without escaping into alcohol or anything else, without chaos, and without burning down the people and things that matter most.
This is where you reset—and launch your next mission: sobriety.

Most men relapse because they don’t build this one thing: resiliency.
👉 Discover How on the Blog