Find an AA or NA meeting near you, right now.
No matter where you are, support can be found. Check the map and find in-person meetings anywhere in the United States.
- Free, always.
- Anonymous. No account, no sign-up.
- Every meeting, open and closed, welcomes newcomers.
- Around 91,000 AA and NA meetings across the US, updated nightly.
Keep Coming Back is not an emergency service. If you’re in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, you don’t have to wait for a meeting — call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline), call SAMHSA’s free helpline 1-800-662-4357, or call 911.
How it works
Find
Share your location or type a city to see meetings near you, closest first.
Choose
Pick by day, time, and format — open or closed, in person or online.
Go
Get the address and directions, and simply show up. That’s the whole thing.
Browse meetings by location
Would rather look around than share your location? Browse the full directory of AA and NA meetings by state and city — open to read, no app needed.
By state
Browse all states →Major metros
Browse all metros →App coming soon
The website works great right now — find a meeting, get directions, no install needed. The native app is in development and will be free on iOS and Android.
- Works offline — pull up the room and address even when the signal at the meeting is bad.
- Save your home group so it’s one tap away, every week.
- Gentle reminders before a meeting you count on starts.
- One-tap launch straight to the map, no browser needed.
Learn
Plain answers to the questions people ask before their first meeting.
Before your first meetingOpen vs closed meetings: why no one should be deterred from either
Open meetings welcome anyone — including people who are simply curious, or there to support someone else. Closed meetings are for people who think they may have a problem with drinking or drugs. If that might be you, a closed meeting is for you. Either way, no one checks how “bad” things are, and no one is turned away. If you’re unsure, start with an open meeting.
Read more →More explainers and a plain-language glossary are on the way.