Recovery Capital: The Idea Reshaping How We Think About Getting Better
· Sanctuary Community Initiative · 2 min read
For most of modern history, recovery was measured by absence. No substance use. No rearrest. No crisis. Success meant a series of zeros.
A concept called recovery capital flips the frame, and it's quietly reshaping how researchers, treatment systems, and funders think about what actually sustains recovery.
The concept in one sentence
Recovery capital is the sum of all the resources (internal and external) that a person can draw on to begin and sustain recovery.
Researchers typically sort it into a few buckets:
- Personal capital: physical and mental health, skills, education, self-belief, coping tools
- Social capital: family bonds, friendships in recovery, mentors, community belonging
- Physical/financial capital: housing, transportation, income, food security, a working phone
- Community capital: the recovery resources a person's whole environment offers, meetings, peer services, recovery-friendly employers, organizations like ours
The insight: two people can leave the same treatment program with identical clinical progress and wildly different odds, because one returns to housing, family, and a job lead, and the other returns to a shelter waitlist and a dead phone. The difference isn't motivation. It's capital.
Why the field is adopting it
The concept has moved from academic papers into practice. The Pew Charitable Trusts now urges states to measure recovery directly using validated recovery-capital tools like the BARC-10 assessment, arguing that systems can't improve what they only measure by absence. SAMHSA's four pillars of recovery (health, home, purpose, community) map almost perfectly onto recovery capital's categories. Treatment providers increasingly describe their goal as building capital, not just completing episodes of care.
It's a strengths-based lens, and it's a hopeful one: capital can be built. Deliberately. Dollar by dollar, relationship by relationship.
Recovery capital is our whole business model
Look at Sanctuary Community Initiative's five support categories through this lens and the strategy snaps into focus:
- Housing, food, transportation → physical capital
- Employment support → financial and personal capital
- Family connection → social capital
We are, quite literally, a recovery capital fund. When insurance ends and grants can't flex, we invest directly in the specific capital a specific person is missing at the specific moment it decides their trajectory.
The old question was "did they stay clean?" The better question (the one we build around) is "do they have what they need to keep going?" That question has answers you can fund.
See what building recovery capital looks like in practice: How We Work.