Belvedere Behavioral Health crestBelvedereBehavioral Health

Residential treatment · Ages 12–17

A clearer view forward, for your teen and your whole family.

Belvedere Behavioral Health is a residential mental health program for adolescents — grounded in clinical expertise, built around a home-like setting, and designed so healing includes the whole family.

Or call (863) 555-0142
Setting
Residential
Ages served
12–17
Family therapy
Weekly

The Belvedere view

Named for a lookout — built to help families see the way ahead.

Clinical depth

Board-certified psychiatrists, licensed therapists, and registered nurses build an individualized plan around your teen's diagnosis, history, and strengths.

A home, not a ward

Small, gender-separate residences with home-cooked meals, shared living rooms, and a rhythm to the day — care that doesn't feel clinical.

Family at the center

Weekly family therapy and a dedicated family program mean your whole household is part of treatment, not just an occasional update.

Conditions we treat

Care built around what your teen is actually facing.

See our full clinical approach →
  • Depression
  • Anxiety disorders
  • Trauma & PTSD
  • Mood dysregulation
  • Self-harm
  • Suicidal ideation
  • OCD
  • Attachment difficulties

Getting started

Four steps from first call to admission.

  1. 01

    Reach out

    Call or request a callback. A clinical admissions counselor listens and asks a few questions — no pressure, no obligation.

  2. 02

    Free assessment

    We complete a confidential clinical assessment to understand whether residential care is the right level for your teen.

  3. 03

    Insurance & logistics

    Our team verifies benefits, explains costs plainly, and helps arrange travel if you're coming from out of town.

  4. 04

    Admission day

    Your teen is welcomed into their residence, meets their care team, and begins settling into the daily rhythm of treatment.

“For the first time in two years, I recognized my daughter's voice on the phone — hopeful instead of exhausted.”

A Belvedere parent