Online Suboxone Doctor in San Diego — No Insurance Required
Private-pay telehealth Suboxone treatment in San Diego. Physician-led addiction medicine, $249/month, no insurance, same-day appointments often available.
Get StartedTelehealth treatment for opioid use disorder and alcohol use disorder in San Diego. Licensed physician. No insurance accepted. $249/month. Serving San Diego County and beyond.
Addiction treatment in San Diego — physician-led, completely private
San Diego has a strong network of publicly funded and insurance-based addiction treatment options. Those programs serve an essential role, and for many people they are the right fit.
Our program is designed for those who place a premium on privacy alongside effective, physician-led care.
San Diego's professional landscape — spanning defense, biotech, healthcare, international business, and one of the country's largest military communities — includes a significant number of people for whom privacy in medical care carries particular weight. Career considerations, professional licensing, security requirements, and personal reputation all factor into how people think about their health records. For that population, the standard insurance-billed model introduces exposures that simply don't exist with private-pay care.
Substance use disorders still carry a stigma that most medical conditions don't. We understand that. Insurance billing creates records — diagnostic codes, claims, explanations of benefits — that travel in ways patients cannot fully control. Our program eliminates that entirely. A flat monthly fee, no insurance involvement, and care that stays between you and your physician. That's a meaningful distinction for the patients our program is built for — and for anyone in San Diego County who simply values discretion as part of their recovery.
Coverage across San Diego County
Rezolv Health serves patients throughout San Diego County by telehealth — no physical location in San Diego means no waiting room, no parking, and no driving across town to a clinic.
Patients we serve include those in:
- Downtown San Diego and the urban core
- North County communities (Carlsbad, Encinitas, Escondido, Oceanside, Vista)
- East County (El Cajon, Santee, La Mesa)
- South Bay (Chula Vista, National City)
- Coastal communities (La Jolla, Del Mar, Solana Beach, Coronado)
- Inland areas (Ramona, Alpine, Lakeside)
If you have a phone or computer with a camera and a few minutes of privacy, Rezolv Health can see you — wherever in San Diego County you are.
Services and pricing
Opioid use disorder (Suboxone): $249/month — covers all appointments and prescription management. Medication filled at your pharmacy.
Alcohol use disorder (naltrexone): $249/month — covers all appointments and prescription management. Medication filled at your pharmacy.
All care is delivered by telehealth. Follow-up care is managed through periodic visits scheduled based on your individual treatment plan.
Frequently asked questions
Does Rezolv Health serve active military or veterans in San Diego? Yes, from a service standpoint — we can see any patient who is a California resident, in San Diego or elsewhere. However, if you are active duty military, your care may be subject to military health system requirements. If you have specific concerns about how treatment might interact with your military status or security clearance, we recommend speaking with a JAG officer or an attorney familiar with military personnel law before starting treatment.
Can I get Suboxone in San Diego on the same day I call? In many cases, yes. Same-day appointments are often available. Complete the intake form and we can typically schedule you quickly. Whether your prescription is filled the same day depends on the pharmacy's processing time.
Does Rezolv Health serve patients in Tijuana or just across the border? No. Rezolv Health is licensed to practice in California and serves California residents. We cannot treat patients who are residents of Mexico, even if they frequently cross the border for work or personal reasons.
Is telehealth addiction treatment appropriate if I have a complex medical history? It depends on the specifics. Most patients seeking buprenorphine or naltrexone for substance use disorder are good candidates for telehealth management. Patients with complex comorbidities, active serious psychiatric conditions, or other factors that require frequent in-person assessment may be better served by an in-person program. Your intake form will flag any factors that might affect your eligibility, and your physician will discuss this with you at the initial visit.
What pharmacy options are there in San Diego for my prescription? Any pharmacy you choose. We send prescriptions electronically and you fill them wherever is convenient — CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, independent pharmacies, or a discount pharmacy service like Cost Plus Drugs if the medication is available there at a better price.
Do you accept insurance in San Diego? No. Rezolv Health California is a private-pay practice. We don't accept insurance — not commercial plans, not Medi-Cal, not Tricare. The monthly fee covers all of your clinical care. This keeps things simple and keeps your treatment completely off your insurance record.
How private is my care if I'm a defense contractor or government employee? Your treatment records are protected by federal and state medical privacy laws. We don't bill insurance, so there is no insurance claim and no explanation of benefits. Your records are not accessible to your employer or contracting agency without your written authorization. If you have specific concerns related to a security clearance, we recommend consulting with a clearance attorney — the rules vary by clearance level and agency.
What if I live in North County — Carlsbad, Encinitas, Oceanside — do I need to drive anywhere? No. All care is delivered by telehealth. You can have your appointment from your home, your car, or anywhere you have a private moment and a phone or laptop. There is no clinic visit required at any point.
Does Rezolv Health treat kratom dependence in San Diego? Yes. Kratom can cause physical dependence, and in appropriate cases buprenorphine is used to manage withdrawal and cravings. Complete the intake form describing your kratom use and your physician will determine whether medication-assisted treatment is appropriate.
Can I do alcohol treatment and opioid treatment at the same time? That depends on your clinical situation. If you are dealing with both alcohol use disorder and opioid use disorder simultaneously, your physician will evaluate the safest and most effective treatment approach — which may involve treating one at a time or a combined strategy. This is a clinical decision made with your physician based on your specific history.
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