Benzodiazepine (Benzo) Detox in Cherry Hill, NJ
Benzodiazepine detox is one of the most medically complex and potentially dangerous withdrawal processes — and one that should never be attempted without professional supervision. Hope Harbor Addiction Center in Cherry Hill provides 24/7 medically supervised benzo detox with individualized taper protocols for South Jersey adults dependent on Xanax, Valium, Klonopin, Ativan, and other benzodiazepines. Call us at (732) 523-5239 for a confidential assessment.
Why Benzodiazepine Withdrawal Is Dangerous
Benzodiazepines are sedative-hypnotic medications that enhance the activity of GABA — the brain's primary inhibitory neurotransmitter. With regular use over weeks or months, the brain adapts by downregulating its own GABA receptors and increasing excitatory glutamate activity. This creates a state of neurological dependence: the brain now requires benzos to function normally.
When benzos are stopped abruptly, the brain's compensatory excitation is left unopposed. The result is potentially severe neurological destabilization — identical in mechanism to alcohol withdrawal and similarly dangerous. Abrupt benzo cessation can cause:
- Grand mal seizures — which can occur even after relatively moderate benzo use and can happen without warning
- Severe rebound anxiety and panic — often far worse than the original anxiety the medication was treating
- Insomnia, tremors, sweating, and heart palpitations
- Perceptual disturbances — hypersensitivity to light and sound, depersonalization
- In severe cases, delirium — rare but possible with very high doses or very long-term use
Stopping benzodiazepines cold turkey — even under the mistaken belief that your dose is "low" — is never safe. If you or someone you care about is dependent on benzodiazepines, medical detox is the only safe way to stop.
Common Benzodiazepines Requiring Medical Detox
Benzodiazepine dependence can develop with any benzo, prescribed or illicitly obtained. The most commonly encountered at Hope Harbor include:
- Alprazolam (Xanax): Short half-life (6–12 hours) means withdrawal can begin quickly and escalate rapidly. One of the highest seizure risks. Often prescribed for anxiety/panic.
- Clonazepam (Klonopin): Intermediate half-life (18–50 hours). Prescribed for anxiety, panic, and seizure disorders. Can produce protracted withdrawal syndrome.
- Diazepam (Valium): Long half-life (20–100 hours). Self-tapers to some degree, but still requires supervision for dependent users.
- Lorazepam (Ativan): Short to intermediate half-life. Frequently prescribed in hospital settings and can produce rapid dependence.
- Temazepam (Restoril), Oxazepam (Serax): Shorter-acting benzos often prescribed for insomnia.
How Medical Benzo Detox Works at Hope Harbor
Unlike opioid detox or even alcohol detox, benzodiazepine detox typically cannot be completed in 5–7 days. Benzo tapering requires a careful, individualized approach:
- Initial Assessment: Our physicians assess the type of benzo, daily dose, duration of use, and any co-occurring medical or psychiatric conditions. This informs the taper rate and any additional medications needed.
- Taper Protocol: If the patient is on a short-acting benzo (like Xanax), we may transition them to a longer-acting equivalent (like diazepam) for more stable management. We then reduce the dose gradually — typically 5–10% every 1–2 weeks, or slower for patients who are more sensitive.
- Seizure Monitoring: Patients are monitored continuously for signs of withdrawal escalation, with standing orders for rescue benzodiazepine administration if needed.
- Symptom Management: Supporting medications including beta-blockers (for heart rate/tremor), sleep aids (non-benzo), and anti-nausea medications help manage discomfort during the taper.
After completing benzo detox, patients typically benefit from transitioning to residential or outpatient treatment to address the psychological patterns that drove benzo misuse and to establish non-medication-based coping strategies. See our general drug detox page for more context, and our page on what to expect in drug detox.
Dual Diagnosis: Benzos and Co-Occurring Anxiety Disorders
Benzodiazepines are most commonly prescribed for anxiety disorders, panic disorder, social anxiety, generalized anxiety disorder, and PTSD. Many people who develop benzo dependence began with a legitimate prescription and a genuine anxiety condition.
This creates a critical dual diagnosis challenge: stopping benzos worsens anxiety (as rebound anxiety is a prominent withdrawal symptom), which makes it harder to stop benzos. Successfully treating benzo dependence requires simultaneously addressing the underlying anxiety or mental health condition with evidence-based non-benzo treatments — including SSRIs/SNRIs, buspirone, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and other approaches.
Hope Harbor's dual diagnosis treatment program integrates psychiatric evaluation and mental health care into benzo detox and subsequent treatment. This integrated approach is essential for sustainable recovery and long-term anxiety management without benzo reliance.
Ready to Start Recovery? Our Cherry Hill Team is Available 24/7.
Free, confidential assessments. Insurance accepted. Same-day intake available.
How Long Does Benzo Detox Take?
This is one of the most important things to understand about benzo detox: it takes weeks, not days. Unlike opioid withdrawal (5–10 days) or alcohol detox (5–7 days), benzo taper schedules extend over weeks to months:
- Mild dependence (lower doses, shorter use): Taper may complete in 4–8 weeks
- Moderate dependence (moderate doses, 6–12 months): Taper typically 8–16 weeks
- Severe dependence (high doses, years of use): Taper may require 6–12+ months, sometimes tapered in the outpatient setting after initial inpatient stabilization
Hope Harbor's inpatient program manages the most acute and dangerous phase of benzo withdrawal, with transition to outpatient care for ongoing taper management as clinically appropriate. See our inpatient rehab program for more information.
Benzo Detox FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
Benzodiazepines work on the same GABA receptor system as alcohol, and abrupt cessation after dependence can cause life-threatening seizures and severe neurological destabilization — similar to alcohol withdrawal. Someone who has been taking benzos daily for months or years can experience seizures within 24–72 hours of abrupt cessation. This is why 'cold turkey' benzo detox is never recommended and medically supervised tapering is the safe standard of care.
All benzodiazepines can cause physical dependence with regular use, and all require caution when stopping. The most commonly misused benzos requiring medical detox include alprazolam (Xanax) — which has a very short half-life and causes rapid withdrawal; diazepam (Valium) — long-acting but still requires supervised taper; clonazepam (Klonopin) — medium half-life, commonly prescribed for anxiety and seizures; and lorazepam (Ativan) — short-acting, commonly prescribed in hospitals. Even people prescribed benzos therapeutically can develop physical dependence and need supervised tapering.
A benzo taper involves slowly reducing the dose of benzodiazepine over time — often switching the patient to a longer-acting equivalent (typically diazepam/Valium) for easier dose management, then reducing the dose by 5–10% every 1–2 weeks or slower as tolerated. Unlike opioid or alcohol detox which may complete in 5–10 days, benzo tapers typically take weeks to months depending on the dose, duration of use, and the specific benzodiazepine. Hope Harbor's physicians manage individualized taper schedules for each patient.
Xanax (alprazolam) has one of the highest seizure risks of any benzodiazepine due to its short half-life and potency. Stopping Xanax abruptly at home — even if you think your dose is low — carries genuine seizure risk. This is not a situation where 'pushing through' is safe. Medical supervision during Xanax detox is essential. If you are currently taking Xanax daily, please call us before stopping on your own.
Many people are prescribed benzodiazepines for anxiety or panic disorder in the first place. During benzo detox, anxiety can intensify significantly — both from withdrawal itself and from the return of the underlying anxiety that the medication was managing. Hope Harbor's dual diagnosis approach addresses both the physical detox process and the underlying anxiety disorder simultaneously, using evidence-based non-benzo treatments (SSRIs, therapy, buspirone) to establish long-term anxiety management without dependence-forming medications.
Ready to Start Recovery? Our Cherry Hill Team is Available 24/7.
Free, confidential assessments. Insurance accepted. Same-day intake available.