Crossroads Treatment Centers

Crossroads Treatment Centers

Outpatient MAT provider for OUD

Overview

Crossroads Treatment Centers provides outpatient addiction treatment for opioid use disorder through a network of over 100 clinics in nine states, using Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) with FDA-approved medications and behavioral therapies. Care is offered in person or via telehealth, and includes counseling, toxicology testing, and care coordination; Instant Intake enables a licensed provider to start care with a virtual appointment in about 10 minutes. The company differentiates itself with a large, multi-state footprint, value-based care contracts that reward quality outcomes, and collaborations with hospitals, primary care providers, and criminal justice systems. Its goal is to expand access to evidence-based OUD treatment, grow through acquisitions and capital investments, and improve patient outcomes through integrated, coordinated, value-driven care.

About Crossroads Treatment Centers

Simplify's Rating
Why Crossroads Treatment Centers is rated
C+
Rated B on Competitive Edge
Rated B on Growth Potential
Rated D+ on Differentiation

Industries

Healthcare

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

N/A

Total Funding

N/A

Headquarters

Denver, Colorado

Founded

2005

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Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Opioid use disorder demand remains high across Medicaid, Medicare, and self-pay patients.
  • Mobile units and rural expansion extend reach into underserved, transportation-constrained markets.
  • Acquisitions like Family Health Services add clinics and accelerate state-by-state density.

What critics are saying

  • North Carolina's 2026 Medicaid settlement invites repeat billing audits in other states.
  • Heavy reliance on urine drug testing revenue faces payer scrutiny and reimbursement compression.
  • Acquisition growth imports compliance failures, documentation gaps, and controlled-substance oversight risk.

What makes Crossroads Treatment Centers unique

  • Founded in 2005 by psychiatrist Rupert McCormac IV, keeping clinician-led ownership.
  • Combines methadone, buprenorphine, counseling, telehealth, and instant intake within ten minutes.
  • Operates 113 outpatient centers across nine states with value-based payer contracts.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Disability Insurance

Life Insurance

Paid Vacation

401(k) Company Match

Professional Development Budget

Parental Leave

Mental Health Support

Commuter Benefits

Phone/Internet Stipend

Company News

McClatchy
May 5th, 2026
Attorney General Jeff Jackson announces $584,000 Medicaid fraud settlement with Greensboro treatment center.

Attorney General Jeff Jackson announces $584,000 Medicaid fraud settlement with Greensboro treatment center. May 5, 2026 Attorney General Jeff Jackson announced on May 5 that his office has secured a $584,000 settlement to resolve allegations of Medicaid fraud involving Crossroads, a treatment center for substance use disorders in Greensboro. The case highlights ongoing efforts to protect taxpayer dollars and maintain the integrity of the Medicaid program. The investigation was prompted when Trillium Health Resources, a managed care organization, identified irregular billing patterns and referred the matter to state authorities. "This is the best-case scenario for addressing fraud and waste in the Medicaid program," said Attorney General Jeff Jackson. "A managed care organization flagged something that was out of pattern, we worked with our federal partners and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Middle District to investigate, and the facility cooperated with us to resolve the issues and repay the Medicaid program. We're going to protect every single dollar taxpayer dollar to ensure it goes to taxpayer healthcare." First Assistant United States Attorney Mike DeFranco said: "False claims undermine the integrity of the Medicaid program and waste valuable taxpayer dollars. It is the mission of this to identify and hold accountable providers that seek to enrich themselves and defraud taxpayers by submitting such claims. Together with our partners at the North Carolina Attorney General's Office, we will continue to identify fraud and pursue justice on behalf of Medicaid." The allegations centered on Crossroads submitting claims between 2019 and 2023 for urinary drug testing without allowing physicians an option for lower-level tests, resulting in more complex - and more expensive - testing than necessary. Crossroads voluntarily closed its clinical laboratory in 2024. The North Carolina State Executive Attorney General acts as a state government entity authorized to handle legal matters on behalf of North Carolina; it provides services including legal representation, criminal prosecution support, consumer protection across all counties in North Carolina; it aims to prevent crime while assisting law enforcement agencies according to its official website. Jeff Jackson currently heads this office as attorney general. The federal and state False Claims Acts allow governments involved in these cases to recover triple damages plus civil penalties per false claim submitted. Authorities emphasized that these are civil allegations only; there has been no judicial determination or admission of liability by Crossroads. This case was investigated jointly by several agencies including NCDOJ's Medicaid Investigations Division (MID), which recovers funds lost due to provider fraud or patient abuse within facilities funded by Medicaid programs. Since its inception MID has recovered over $1.2 billion for North Carolina through restitution or penalties - with more than $41 million since 2012 allocated directly toward public schools.

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