Benzodiazepine Addiction Treatment in Iowa

Among the most dangerous drugs to quit on your own, and one you can leave safely with the right medical care

Radix Recovery provides benzodiazepine addiction treatment in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan, Valium, and other benzos. Because benzo withdrawal can be dangerous and even cause seizures, you should never quit cold turkey. We provide medically supervised detox with a gradual, doctor-managed taper, 24/7 monitoring, and integrated treatment for the anxiety that often drives benzo use. We serve residents across Iowa, with admissions in less than 24 hours.

The safety picture, in brief

Boxed

FDA Boxed Warning

Benzos carry the FDA’s most prominent warning: stopping abruptly can cause life-threatening seizures

Taper

The safe path off

A slow, doctor-managed dose reduction lets the brain readjust without the danger of an abrupt stop

Days

How fast dependence builds

Physical dependence can form in days to weeks, even taken exactly as prescribed (FDA)

Anxiety

What sits underneath

Most benzo use begins with anxiety or sleep, and lasting recovery treats that too

Trusted in-network insurance partnerships

What to Expect, by the Numbers

24/7

Medically supervised detox Around-the-clock monitoring through the taper, with nursing and medical support at every stage of withdrawal.

Never

Quit cold turkey The acute stimulant crash peaks in the first week. Our nursing team manages sleep, mood, and safety through it.

Taper

Gradual, doctor-managed A slow dose reduction lets the brain readjust safely, the proven path off benzos rather than an abrupt stop.

30·60·90

Day residential pathways Structured lengths of stay after detox, matched to clinical need rather than a fixed schedule.

Why You Should Never Quit Benzos Cold Turkey

This is the most important thing to understand about benzos. Stopping them suddenly, or cutting the dose too quickly, can cause serious withdrawal reactions including seizures that can be life-threatening (FDA). Benzodiazepine dependence is one form of substance use disorder, and coming off safely is a medical process, not a test of willpower.

FDA Boxed Warning

The FDA places a Boxed Warning, its most prominent warning, on all benzodiazepines: abruptly stopping or rapidly reducing the dose can cause withdrawal reactions that include life-threatening seizures (FDA).

Daily benzo use OFF BENZODIAZEPINES, SAFELY Seizure risk Cold turkey Monitored, safe Supervised taper

Two ways off benzos. Quitting abruptly drops the brain off a cliff, where seizures can occur. A gradual, medically supervised taper steps down to a safe landing (FDA, ASAM).

Physical dependence can build in just days to weeks, even when the medication is taken exactly as prescribed (FDA). That is why anyone who has taken benzos for more than a month should not stop on their own, but should taper gradually under medical supervision (ASAM). The danger is not a reason to keep using. It is the reason to come off safely, with medical support, instead of alone.

What Does Benzo Withdrawal Look Like?

Benzo withdrawal tends to move through phases, and the timeline depends on which benzo was used and for how long. Short-acting benzos like Xanax and Ativan often produce a faster, sharper onset; longer-acting ones like Klonopin and Valium tend to start later and stretch out. Here is the general pattern, with the reminder that everyone is different.

PEAK: SEIZURE RISK SYMPTOM INTENSITY EarlyWithin days AcuteWeeks 1-4 ProtractedWeeks 4-6+ RecoveryMonths

Rebound anxiety and insomnia

As the drug leaves the system, the anxiety and sleeplessness the benzo was suppressing come rushing back, often sharper than before. Short-acting benzos like Xanax and Ativan start this phase fastest.

The seizure-risk window

Heightened anxiety, insomnia, tremor, and sweating, and in serious cases seizures. This is the window where medical supervision matters most (FDA).

The long tail

Lingering anxiety, sleep disruption, and difficulty concentrating that gradually improve with time and support (FDA). Longer-acting benzos like Klonopin and Valium often surface here.

Steady return to baseline

As the brain readjusts to functioning without benzos, calm and sleep slowly return. Continuing care and real anxiety tools carry recovery through the long tail.

Because seizures can occur suddenly and without warning, benzo withdrawal should happen where medical help is immediately available, not at home alone (FDA, ASAM). This is the single biggest reason to come off benzos with medically supervised detox rather than attempt a taper yourself.

Timeline drawn from the FDA benzodiazepine Boxed Warning and the ASAM Clinical Practice Guideline on Benzodiazepine Tapering. Individual experience varies with the specific benzo, dose, and duration of use.

Which Benzos Do We Treat?

We treat dependence on every common benzodiazepine. Each works a little differently, which changes how the taper is managed, but all of them require the same careful, medically supervised approach. The meter on each card shows roughly how long the drug lingers in the body, which is one of the things that shapes the taper.

Xanax

Short-acting and fast-acting, Xanax is one of the most commonly misused benzos and one of the trickier to taper because of how quickly it leaves the body. We manage Xanax withdrawal with a structured taper and close monitoring.

Ativan

Short-acting and fast-acting, Xanax is one of the most commonly misused benzos and one of the trickier to taper because of how quickly it leaves the body. We manage Xanax withdrawal with a structured taper and close monitoring.

Klonopin

Longer-acting, Klonopin stays in the system longer, which can stretch the withdrawal timeline. We tailor the taper to that longer half-life so the reduction stays gradual and safe.

Valium

Long-acting, Valium is sometimes used within medical detox to support a smoother, more controlled reduction. We treat Valium dependence itself with the same gradual, supervised approach.

How Does Medically Supervised Benzo Detox Work?

Coming off benzos safely is a medical process, not a test of willpower. Four steps, one team.

1

Comprehensive assessment and medication reconciliation

A full medical and psychiatric history, plus an accurate picture of every substance involved, since combining benzos with opioids or alcohol sharply raises the risk of dangerous reactions (FDA).

2

Medically supervised detox and gradual taper

A slow, physician-managed dose reduction with 24/7 monitoring, designed to prevent dangerous withdrawal rather than power through it (ASAM). Our medical detox controls the taper and can slow or pause it if symptoms become difficult.

3

Behavioral therapy

CBT, DBT, and motivational interviewing to build the skills that replace what benzos were doing, especially around anxiety and sleep, so coming off does not mean white-knuckling the symptoms underneath.

4

Dual diagnosis and aftercare

Integrated treatment for co-occurring anxiety and other conditions, plus relapse prevention and an alumni connection that carry through the protracted phase, when lingering symptoms make support matter most.

Coming Off Benzos Safely Is a Medical Process, Not Willpower

A medically supervised taper is the safe way off benzos, and our team manages every step so you never have to face withdrawal alone. Confidential admissions available 24/7.

Why Benzos and Anxiety Go Together

Most people do not start benzos to get high. They start them for anxiety, panic, or sleep, often with a prescription. Over time the body adapts, the dose creeps up, and stopping makes the original anxiety roar back worse than before. That is why treating benzo dependence without treating the underlying anxiety rarely holds. Our integrated dual diagnosis care addresses both together (SAMHSA), teaching real tools for anxiety and sleep so that coming off benzos does not mean white-knuckling the very symptoms that started the cycle. Learn more about our treatment for anxiety and addiction.

Benzodiazepine use

It rarely starts on its own. Most benzo use begins with one of these, and lasting recovery has to treat both the dependence and what sits underneath it.

Anxiety

The most common reason benzos are prescribed, and the symptom that surges back hardest when they stop.

Panic

Panic that benzos suppress in the moment, then rebound as each dose wears off and the cycle tightens.

Insomnia

Sleeplessness the benzo was managing, which returns in early withdrawal and needs real tools, not another pill.

Trauma

Underlying trauma the sedation masked, surfacing once the benzo is removed and treated as part of the plan.

For the full integrated approach across co-occurring conditions, see our dual diagnosis treatment program.

Levels of Care for Benzo Addiction

Benzo addiction treatment runs through every level of our continuum, and the same clinical team carries you from one level to the next, so the work never resets when the level of care changes. Detox is the critical entry point, because coming off benzos safely starts with a medically supervised taper. Detox and residential are highlighted below.

All six levels of care — one campus in Cedar Rapids, one clinical team.

Most clinical → Independent

Medical detox Critical entry point

A gradual, physician-managed taper with 24/7 monitoring, the safe way off benzos. Length varies by the specific benzo and how long it was used, and a dual diagnosis assessment here shapes everything after.

Residential inpatient Entry point

Daily behavioral therapy and dual diagnosis care in our restored Higley Mansion facility, where the anxiety underneath the benzo use is treated alongside the dependence. Most benzo residents step here directly from detox.

Partial hospitalization (PHP)

Day treatment with off-site living, a strong middle path when outpatient is not enough structure.

Intensive outpatient (IOP)

Built around work, school, and family, with therapy and real anxiety and sleep tools continuing into outpatient life. Same clinical team throughout.

Continuing care and relapse prevention

Long-term maintenance through the protracted window, when lingering anxiety and sleep disruption make ongoing structure matter most.

Alumni and aftercare

A peer network alongside continuing clinical care, so recovery has community behind it.

Benzodiazepine Addiction Treatment Iowa

Benzodiazepine dependence often begins quietly, with a legitimate prescription, which is part of why it reaches communities across the state. Radix Recovery serves residents across Iowa from our Cedar Rapids campus, with medically supervised benzo detox and treatment at every level of care, and an admissions team that coordinates travel logistics, work and school communication where you want it, and insurance for every Iowa community we serve.

Cedar Rapids

Our Location

Iowa City

~30 min

Davenport

~1.5 hrs

Quad Cities

~1.5 hrs

Dubuque

~1.5 hrs

Marion

~10 min

Des Moines

~2 hrs

Ankeny

~2 hrs

West Des Moines

~2 hrs

Ames

~1.5 hrs

Waterloo

~1 hr

Cedar Falls

~1 hr

Sioux City

~3.5 hrs

Council Bluffs

~3 hrs

Credentials You Can Count On

Clients Served
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Google Rating
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Accredited
JCAH 0
Years Serving Iowa
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Accepted Insurance

Why Families Trust Radix Recovery

Real outcomes from real people. Hear what our clients and their loved ones have to say about their time in our program.

Your questions about Benzodiazepine treatment, answered

Yes. Stopping benzos suddenly, or cutting the dose too quickly, can cause serious withdrawal reactions including seizures that can be life-threatening. The FDA places its most prominent warning on all benzodiazepines for this reason. Anyone who has taken benzos for more than a month should not stop on their own, but should taper gradually under medical supervision. The danger is exactly why coming off safely with medical support matters so much.

It depends on which benzo was used and for how long. Short-acting benzos like Xanax and Ativan tend to produce a faster, sharper withdrawal, while longer-acting ones like Klonopin and Valium start later and stretch out. Acute withdrawal often runs one to four weeks. Protracted symptoms such as lingering anxiety and sleep disruption can persist beyond four to six weeks and gradually improve with time and support.

It is not safe to do alone. Because benzo withdrawal can cause seizures that come on suddenly and without warning, withdrawal should happen where medical help is immediately available. Self-directed tapers also have low completion rates, since symptoms drive people back to the medication. Medically supervised detox controls the taper, monitors you around the clock, and is prepared to respond to serious symptoms if they occur.

We treat dependence on all common benzodiazepines, including Xanax (alprazolam), Klonopin (clonazepam), Ativan (lorazepam), and Valium (diazepam), along with others. Each works differently, which changes how the taper is managed, but all require the same careful, medically supervised approach. Our team builds the detox and taper plan around the specific benzo, how long it has been used, and any other substances or conditions involved.

Yes. Physical dependence can develop in just days to weeks, even when benzos are taken exactly as prescribed. That is not a personal failing; it is how these medications affect the brain. Dependence means your body has adapted to the drug, so stopping causes withdrawal. Many people we treat first received benzos legitimately for anxiety or sleep. Treatment helps you come off safely and address what the medication was managing.

A taper is a slow, carefully managed reduction of the benzo dose over time, rather than stopping all at once. Tapering gives the brain time to readjust and lowers the risk of dangerous withdrawal, including seizures. In medically supervised detox, the medication is controlled and dispensed on the taper schedule, with monitoring and the ability to pause or adjust if symptoms become difficult. The schedule is individualized, never one-size-fits-all.

Yes, and it is essential. Most people start benzos for anxiety, panic, or sleep, and stopping can make that anxiety surge back. Treating the dependence without treating the underlying anxiety rarely holds. Our integrated dual diagnosis care addresses both together, teaching real tools for anxiety and sleep through therapy so that recovery does not mean white-knuckling the symptoms that started the cycle.

Yes. We serve residents from across Iowa, including Des Moines, Iowa City, Davenport, Waterloo, Dubuque, and the Quad Cities. Our admissions team coordinates travel and logistics, and treatment outside your home city can help by creating distance from the people and places tied to using. Call (319) 270-2890 to talk through the details for your situation.

imgi 54 Kayla Borja Frosst

Kayla Borja Frost

Chief Clinical Officer, Radix Recovery
This page was medically reviewed for clinical accuracy on May 31, 2026. The safety guidance (never quitting cold turkey, the FDA Boxed Warning, and a medically supervised gradual taper), the benzodiazepine withdrawal timeline, the four-drug treatment scope, and the dual diagnosis approach to the anxiety underneath benzo use described here were checked against current FDA, ASAM, and SAMHSA guidance for benzodiazepines. Kayla leverages more than a decade of behavioral health leadership designing evidence-based addiction and mental health programs that deliver structured, compassionate, trauma-informed care.

Last Reviewed

June 2026

Reviewed By

Radix Recovery clinical leadership

Detox is the hardest first step, and no one should take it alone. Our nurses and physicians stay with you through the hardest hours, because the medicine works best when someone in the room actually cares how you are doing.

imgi 54 Kayla Borja Frosst

Kayla Borja Frost, LMHC, IADC

Chief Clinical Officer, Radix Recovery

Recovery doesn't require putting your life on pause.

IOP at Radix means keeping your job, your family, your life while getting the real clinical support that makes lasting recovery possible. Start as soon as tomorrow.

Primary clinical sources

01
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
02
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
03
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
04
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)

Source list reviewed for clinical accuracy by Kayla Borja Frost, LMHC. Last reviewed June 3, 2026.