Transcend Recovery & Sober Living has built something uncommon in the recovery space: a network of high-end transitional homes that treat sobriety as the beginning of a transformation, not the end goal. With properties in Los Angeles, New York, and Houston, the company has positioned itself as a bridge between clinical treatment and independent living—one that doesn’t compromise on either structure or comfort.

The model is deliberate. Residents get 24/7 staffing, including awake overnight coverage—a rarity in standard sober living environments. There are chef-prepared meals, therapy integration, and what the company calls “holistic recovery activities”: yoga, surf therapy, fitness programs. But the real work happens in life-skills development, community engagement, and family workshops designed to rebuild relationships that addiction often erodes.
A New Tier in Recovery Housing
What separates Transcend from typical operators is its success in carving out a luxury tier in a space that has historically been clinical, utilitarian, or both. The company treats sober living as a lifestyle experience, not just a holding pattern. Premium locations, upscale amenities, and a culture of accountability have attracted a clientele with high expectations—people who want more than supervision. They want a foundation.

The company has also built trust with treatment centers and outpatient providers by creating a referral ecosystem that supports the full continuum of care. For facilities looking for a safe, accountable next step after treatment, Transcend has become a go-to partner. That’s partly due to its ability to treat co-occurring mental health and substance use conditions under one roof, reducing the risk of relapse and improving continuity of care.
Structure That Supports Real Life
Transcend’s operational model sets a benchmark in the industry. The around-the-clock staffing isn’t performative—it’s functional. Residents are held accountable, but they’re also given the space to regain autonomy and rebuild purpose. The company’s approach centers on creating a home that feels connected and professional, where clients can transition back into society with dignity.

The target audience includes men and women either still in treatment or recently out of it, along with their families and the treatment centers managing their care. These clients are looking for more than a place to stay sober—they want structured support that helps them rediscover meaning and move forward with confidence.
What’s Next
Over the next three years, Transcend, now led by Jonathan Azizi, plans to expand into additional markets and deepen partnerships with treatment providers. The company is also exploring more wellness-based and vocational programming to help clients build lives that go beyond sobriety.

The goal isn’t just growth—it’s raising the standard for what recovery housing should deliver. Transcend wants to keep proving that recovery can be built on a foundation of structure, professionalism, and community, without sacrificing the personal touch that makes transformation possible.
