PHP vs. IOP: What's the Difference?
PHP and IOP are both outpatient mental health programs. You go to sessions, you go home. No overnight stays, no inpatient admission. On paper, they can sound almost identical.
The difference is how much of your day — and your week — treatment takes up. And more importantly, which level of structure is actually going to help you right now.
Need Structure Without Full-Time Stay?
Let’s talk about whether a day program like PHP is the right step for you.
You deserve support that fits your life — and we’re here to help you find it.
PHP vs. IOP: A Side-by-Side Look
Schedules and hours vary based on clinical need and individual treatment planning. Here’s how the programs typically compare at Greater Boston Behavioral Health.
| PHP | IOP | |
| Days per week | 5–6 days | 3–5 days |
| Hours per day | Full daytime program | ~3 hours per session |
| Schedule | Daytime | Daytime or evening |
| Live at home? | Yes | Yes |
| Intensity | Higher | Moderate |
| Primary focus | Stabilization and daily structure | Continued treatment with increasing flexibility |
| Typical use | Stepping down from inpatient; acute symptoms; need for daily support | Stepping down from PHP; more than therapy alone; schedule requires flexibility |
Both programs run out of GBBH’s Needham, MA location. Virtual treatment is also an option — worth asking about when you call.
Curious what the day or week actually looks like inside each program? See what a typical day in PHP looks like and what a typical week in IOP looks like.
Common Reasons Someone Might Start in PHP vs. IOP
The final call always comes from a clinical assessment. But there are patterns worth knowing about.
PHP tends to come up when:
- Day-to-day functioning has taken a real hit — you’re struggling to work, maintain relationships, take care of yourself
- You’ve just left an inpatient or residential program and need somewhere structured to land
- You need to be seen by a clinical team every day, not a few times a week
- You’ve been in outpatient therapy for a while and it’s not moving the needle
- Something has shifted — a crisis, a relapse, a period of acute symptoms — and weekly sessions aren’t enough to hold things together
IOP tends to come up when:
- You can still manage the basics of daily life between sessions
- You’re stepping down from PHP and ready for less structure
- Work, school, or family make a full-day program logistically impossible — but you need more than one hour a week
- Evening sessions are the only realistic option
- You’re earlier in treatment and haven’t yet needed a higher level of care
One thing worth noting: if you’re dealing with both a mental health condition and substance use — a co-occurring or dual diagnosis picture — you don’t need two separate programs. GBBH treats both within the same program. It’s integrated, not siloed.
How Do You Know Which One Is Right for You?
Most people who call GBBH don’t know. That’s not a problem — it’s actually the norm.
What tends to matter most is where your symptoms are right now. If things are acute, if functioning has broken down, if you need to be somewhere structured every single day — that’s PHP territory. If you’re in a more stable place but weekly therapy clearly isn’t enough, IOP is usually where the conversation starts.
If you’re trying to figure out whether IOP even makes sense versus staying in regular therapy, this page gets into that specifically.
A short intake assessment with our team will give you a clearer answer than any webpage can. No pressure, no commitment — just an honest conversation about where you are and what level of support actually fits.
Still have questions about PHP?
We’re here to walk you through it—no pressure, no hold times — just real answers from people who care.
Let’s get your admission process started when you’re ready.
Ready to Talk Through Your Options?
Call us at (888) 278-0716 or verify your insurance online.
Clinically reviewed by the Greater Boston Behavioral Health clinical team.
Live Sober
Live Connected
Greater Boston Behavioral Health
Explore the Right Level of Care