Heroin
Addiction Signs, Overdose Risk, Withdrawal & Treatment Help
Heroin is a highly addictive illicit opioid that acts rapidly on the brain’s opioid receptors, producing intense reinforcement, dependence, and a high risk of fatal overdose — especially as the illicit drug supply is increasingly contaminated with fentanyl.
Heroin addiction (heroin use disorder) is a recognized medical condition under opioid use disorder (OUD). It responds to evidence-based treatment including medication-assisted treatment (MAT), behavioral therapy, and structured support.
This guide explains overdose response, naloxone, withdrawal, MAT, treatment options, and how to support a loved one — built around safety first.
Heroin: Quick Facts
The Recover is an educational publisher and referral network. We do not offer treatment ourselves — we refer to licensed centers.
In an Emergency
Call or text 988 for suicidal or mental health crisis support.
Call 911 Immediately
If overdose is suspected or breathing is impaired.
Give Naloxone If Available
Administer per package instructions and stay with the person.
Do Not Leave the Person Alone
Stay until emergency responders arrive.
What Is Heroin?
Heroin (diacetylmorphine) is an illicit opioid derived from morphine. It binds to opioid receptors in the brain, producing rapid pain relief, sedation, and euphoria — and powerful reinforcement that drives the cycle of addiction.
Heroin is typically injected, smoked, or snorted. Each route of use carries its own health risks, but all forms can cause overdose and physical dependence. In today’s illicit supply, heroin is frequently mixed with fentanyl, dramatically increasing overdose risk.
Heroin addiction is classified clinically as a form of opioid use disorder (OUD) — a treatable medical condition, not a moral failing.
Heroin, Opioid Receptors & OUD
Heroin’s effect on mu-opioid receptors explains tolerance, dependence, and the high risk of relapse — and why MAT works.
Heroin Addiction vs. Heroin Use Disorder vs. OUD
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Heroin Use | Any use of heroin |
| Heroin Addiction | Compulsive heroin use despite consequences |
| Heroin Use Disorder | Problematic heroin use under OUD |
| Opioid Use Disorder | Clinical opioid diagnosis spectrum |
| Physical Dependence | Withdrawal when opioid use stops |
| Psychological Dependence | Cravings and emotional reliance |
Signs of Heroin Use or Addiction
Behavioral Signs
Physical Signs
Emotional & Mental Health Signs
Relationship Signs
Signs of Heroin Addiction Checklist
If several signs apply to you or a loved one, talk to a licensed clinician or call SAMHSA at 1-800-662-HELP for a confidential referral.
Why Heroin Can Become Addictive
(888) 510-3898
Heroin and Fentanyl Risk
Fentanyl contamination of the illicit heroin supply is now the leading driver of opioid overdose deaths.
Anyone using heroin should treat overdose prevention as essential.
Heroin may contain fentanyl
Most illicit heroin in the U.S. is contaminated with fentanyl.
Fentanyl may not be visible
It cannot be seen, smelled, or tasted in heroin.
Greatly increases overdose risk
Even tiny amounts can cause fatal respiratory depression.
Naloxone access is critical
Keep naloxone on hand and know how to use it.
Heroin Overdose Warning Signs
Warning Signs
Action Steps
Naloxone can temporarily reverse a heroin overdose, but emergency medical care is still needed.
Naloxone and Heroin Overdose Prevention
Temporarily reverses opioid overdose
Restores breathing by blocking opioid receptors.
Should be given quickly
Administer as soon as overdose is suspected.
Does not replace 911
Always call emergency services — effects may wear off.
Heroin Withdrawal
| Physical Symptoms | Emotional / Other Symptoms |
|---|---|
| Muscle aches | Anxiety |
| Sweating | Insomnia |
| Runny nose / watery eyes | Restlessness |
| Nausea / vomiting | Cravings |
| Diarrhea | Depression |
| Chills / dilated pupils | Difficulty concentrating |
Heroin & Mental Health
Heroin use frequently co-occurs with depression, anxiety, PTSD, and trauma. Many people first use opioids to cope with emotional pain — and untreated mental health conditions are a major driver of relapse.
Integrated treatment that addresses both heroin use and underlying mental health is more effective than treating either alone.
Integrated treatment addresses heroin use and mental health together.
Related Resources
Mental Health Hub
Anxiety, depression, PTSD
Dual Diagnosis
Integrated care for both
Co-Occurring Disorders
Address root causes together
Medication-Assisted Treatment for
Heroin Addiction
Buprenorphine
Partial opioid agonist; reduces cravings and withdrawal with lower overdose risk.
Methadone
Full opioid agonist dispensed through certified clinics; strong evidence for OUD.
Naltrexone
Opioid antagonist that blocks opioid effects; given after full detox.
MAT is not “replacing one drug with another.” It is evidence-based medical treatment for opioid use disorder, shown to reduce overdose deaths and improve recovery.
Heroin Addiction Treatment Options
Care levels and supports commonly used in heroin addiction recovery. The right
combination depends on medical needs, mental health, and life circumstances.
Medical Detox
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Heroin Detox
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Opioid Detox
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Medication-Assisted Treatment
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Residential Treatment
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Inpatient Rehab
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
PHP
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
IOP
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Outpatient Treatment
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Therapy and Counseling
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Family Therapy
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Group Therapy
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Telehealth
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Sober Living
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Peer Support
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Relapse Prevention
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Aftercare
Who it may help · what’s involved · when it’s appropriate.
Evidence-Based Therapies
| Therapy | How It Helps |
|---|---|
| CBT | Changes patterns linked to use |
| Motivational Interviewing | Builds motivation to change |
| Contingency Management | Reinforces recovery goals |
| DBT | Builds distress tolerance |
| Trauma-Informed Therapy | Addresses trauma safely |
| Family Therapy | Repairs relationships |
| Group Therapy | Builds peer connection |
| Relapse Prevention | Plans for triggers and overdose safety |
Helping Someone Using Heroin
Loving someone who uses heroin is frightening. The most powerful thing you can do is keep them alive — by ensuring naloxone is accessible, learning the signs of overdose, and approaching them with compassion rather than ultimatums.
Family involvement, when safe and supportive, is strongly linked to better outcomes in opioid use disorder.
For Family Members
Heroin-Related Crisis Response
If you see any of the following, treat it as a medical emergency.
Suspected Overdose
Slow or Stopped Breathing
Severe Sedation
Unresponsiveness
Suicidal Thoughts
Psychosis
Polysubstance Use
Immediate Danger
Emergency Services
Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
Give Naloxone if opioid overdose is suspected
Choosing a Heroin Treatment Program
Not all treatment programs have experience with stimulant use disorders. Ask these questions when evaluating options.
Heroin Addiction Recovery
Recovery from meth addiction is possible with the right support, evidence-based treatment, and time.
A return to use does not mean treatment failed. It may mean the treatment plan needs adjustment.
Public Health Context
Statistics summarized from CDC, NIDA, SAMHSA, NIH, and NCHS public data.
Source: CDC
~80,000+
U.S. opioid overdose deaths in a recent year
Source: NIDA
Majority
of opioid deaths now involve synthetic opioids like fentanyl
Source: SAMHSA
1-800-662-HELP
SAMHSA National Helpline — free, confidential, 24/7
Source: NIH / NIDA
Evidence-based
MAT reduces opioid overdose mortality by roughly half
Treatment by State
Explore licensed treatment options by state. We refer to centers — we do not provide treatment.
Related Resources
Opioid Addiction
Fentanyl
Prescription Opioid Addiction
Heroin Detox
Opioid Overdose
Naloxone
Stimulant Addiction
Drug Addiction
Drug Detox
Dual Diagnosis
Mental Health
Family Resources
Treatment Programs
State Rehab Guides
Why Trust The Recover
We are an independent educational publisher and referral network. We do not provide treatment
ourselves — we refer to licensed centers.
Medical Disclaimer
The content on this page is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider for questions regarding fentanyl use, overdose response, medication-assisted treatment, or any other medical condition. The Recover does not provide medical care.
Crisis Resources
If you or someone you know is experiencing a medical emergency or suspected fentanyl overdose, call 911 immediately. For mental health or suicidal crisis support, call or text 988. For substance use treatment referrals, call SAMHSA’s National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).
The Recover is an educational publisher and treatment referral network. We do not provide medical care or treatment ourselves — we refer readers to licensed treatment centers and trusted clinical resources.
Frequently Asked Questions
Editorial process, sourcing, transparency, and reader support — all in one place.
Trusted Sources
Information on this page is informed by leading public health authorities.
CDC Overdose Prevention
NIDA
SAMHSA
SAMHSA National Helpline
NIH
NCHS
988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
Find Help and Stay Safe
Heroin addiction is serious but treatable. Recovery is possible with evidence-based care,
overdose prevention, and ongoing support.
The Recover is an educational publisher and referral network. We do not offer treatment — we refer to licensed centers.
