Indiana Certified Alcohol and Drug Addiction Consultant I or IV (CADAC I or CADAC IV)

CEU Matrix’s 180-hour Indiana Certified Alcohol and Drug Addiction Consultant I or IV (CADAC I or CADAC IV) online package is approved by the Association for Behavioral Health Professionals of Indiana (ICAADA) and fulfills all education requirements for the CADAC I and CADAC IV credentials. Every required content area and topic — including Scientific Principles of Substance Use and Co-Occurring Disorders, Evidence-Based Screening and Assessment, Evidence-Based Treatment, Counseling, and Referral, and Professional, Ethical, and Legal Responsibilities — is covered in this 180-hour package for CADAC I or CADAC IV certification.

Package Information

Indiana CADAC Certification Requirements and Course Package

This course package offers substantial savings versus purchasing the courses individually. Courses are taken at your convenience, there is no time limit, and everything is done online. If you have any other questions please call John Tinsley at (512) 843-0866.

What This Package Covers

Indiana requires 180 hours of addiction counseling education for the CADAC I and CADAC IV. CEU Matrix’s Indiana CADAC I/IV package covers all 180 required hours:

  • Scientific Principles of Substance Use and Co-Occurring Disorders
  • Evidence-Based Screening and Assessment
  • Evidence-Based Treatment, Counseling, and Referral
  • Professional, Ethical, and Legal Responsibilities

All 180 hours must include a minimum of 6 hours of ethics and 6 hours of HIV/AIDS education.

Please see the “Package Contents” section below for the complete list of courses included in this package.

Certification Requirements

  • Education Required: CADAC I: A high school diploma or GED is required. CADAC IV: An applicable master’s degree or higher is required.
  • Work Experience: CADAC I: 2,000 hours of supervised experience for high school diploma holders; 1,000 hours for those with an applicable bachelor’s or master’s degree. CADAC IV: 2,000 hours of supervised experience in a substance use treatment setting.
  • Supervised Hours: CADAC I: Minimum 220 hours of direct clinical supervision across all domains. CADAC IV: Minimum 100 hours of direct clinical supervision with at least 10 hours per domain.
  • State Exam: CADAC I: Passing score on the IC&RC ADC examination. CADAC IV: Passing score on the IC&RC AADC examination.

Important Notes

The CADAC I is Indiana’s entry-level addiction credential, aligned with IC&RC ADC domains. The CADAC IV is Indiana’s advanced treatment credential, aligned with IC&RC AADC domains (Screening/Assessment/Engagement; Treatment Planning/Collaboration/Referral; Treatment and Education; Professional Responsibilities and Ethical Considerations), and is billable in Indiana Opioid Treatment Programs. Both credentials are issued by ICAADA and require applicants to live or work in Indiana at least 51% of the time.

Renewal Requirements

40 clock hours of domain-specific education every two years, including a minimum of 6 hours of ethics. Requirement is the same for both CADAC I and CADAC IV.

Package Contents

  • Ethics, Boundaries, and Dual Relationships: Professional Issues for Addiction Professionals (3 hours)
  • Ethical Practice with Special Populations (3 hours)
  • HIV and Other Blood-Borne Infections in Drug Users (6 hours)
  • A Community Reinforcement Plus Vouchers Approach: Treating Cocaine Addiction Module 1 (4 hours)
  • A Community Reinforcement Plus Vouchers Approach: Treating Cocaine Addiction Module 2 (3 hours)
  • A Community Reinforcement Plus Vouchers Approach: Treating Cocaine Addiction Module 3 (4 hours)
  • Addressing Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors in Substance Abuse Treatment (3 hours)
  • An Introduction to Treatment Medications: What Every Counselor Should Know (4 hours)
  • Cluckers, Clockers, Cookers: An Introduction to Drug Control Policy for Substance Abuse Counselors (3 hours)
  • Computerized Assessment of Substance Abuse (CASA) (4 hours)
  • Counseling for Marijuana Dependence – A Manual for Treating Adults (6 hours)
  • Drug and Alcohol Dependence: The Problem, The Solution, and Co-Occurring Disorders (3 hours)
  • Effective Tools for Treating Pain While Reducing Opioid Use (4 hours)
  • Group Treatments for Addiction (6 hours)
  • Implementing Change in Substance Abuse Treatment Programs (3 hours)
  • Maintaining Fidelity to Assertive Community Treatment (ACT): Current Issues and Innovations in Implementation (5 hours)
  • Managing Depressive Symptoms in Substance Abuse Clients During Early Recovery (6 hours)
  • Mind Over Matter: The Brain’s Response to Drugs. A Teacher’s Guide (3 hours)
  • Overview of Co-Occurring Disorders Treatment (4 hours)
  • Overview of Group Therapy for Substance Abuse Treatment (8 hours)
  • Relapse Prevention Counseling (4 hours)
  • Screening and Assessment of Clients in the Criminal Justice System (6 hours)
  • Substance Abuse and Sexual Assault (3 hours)
  • Substance Abuse Treatment and Domestic Violence (6 hours)
  • Substance Abuse Treatment and Family Therapy TIP 39 Part I (3 hours)
  • Substance Abuse Treatment and Family Therapy TIP 39 Part II (4 hours)
  • Substance Abuse Treatment and Family Therapy TIP 39 Part III (3 hours)
  • Substance Abuse Treatment and Family Therapy TIP 39 Part IV (4 hours)
  • Substance Use Disorder Treatment for People with Physical and Cognitive Disabilities (6 hours)
  • Substance Use Disorders Recovery with a Focus on Employment and Education (3 hours)
  • Supporting Infants, Toddlers, and Families Impacted by Caregiver Mental Health Problems, Substance Abuse, and Trauma (4 hours)
  • The Clinical Evaluation: Professional Competencies and Elements to Consider for Using DSM-5 for Substance Use and Co-Occurring Disorders (4 hours)
  • The Offender and Addiction – Clinical Case Management (6 hours)
  • The Offender and Addiction – Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (6 hours)
  • The Sober Life Treatment Series (4 hours)
  • Treating Chronic Mental Illness & Substance Use Disorders: Individual and Group Counseling Strategies (6 hours)
  • Treating Early Life Trauma-Related Issues in Early Recovery From Addictive Disorders (4 hours)
  • Treatment of Adolescents with Substance Use Disorders, Module 1 (3 hours)
  • Treatment of Adolescents with Substance Use Disorders, Module 2 (3 hours)
  • Treatment of Anger and Aggression in Early Recovery (6 hours)
  • Using Technology-Based Therapeutic Tools in Behavioral Health Services (6 hours)
  • Confidentiality of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Patient Records Regulation and the HIPAA Privacy Rule (2 hours)

Package FAQs

How do I become a certified addiction counselor in Indiana?

Indiana substance use credentials are issued by the Indiana Credentialing Association on Addiction and Drug Abuse (ICAADA), an addictions-specific credentialing body separate from Indiana’s behavioral health licensure system. Indiana also issues independent clinical licenses (LCSW, LCAC, LMHC, LMFT, HSPP) through the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA), which oversees mental health practitioner licensure. The ICAADA-issued credentials most commonly pursued are the ACIT (Addiction Consultant in Training) — a 3-year non-renewable training credential — and the CADAC II (Certified Alcohol and Drug Addiction Consultant II), open to high school graduates with degree-tiered supervised work experience. Counselors with bachelor’s or master’s degrees pursue CADAC I or CADAC IV, and counselors who already hold an active IPLA license can pursue CADAC III or CADAC V to add an addictions specialization on top of their existing license.

Indiana has five CADAC tiers, each tied to a specific education and licensure pathway. CADAC I requires a bachelor’s degree and the IC&RC ADC exam. CADAC II is the high-school-pathway credential — 300 training hours with degree-tiered supervised work hours (6,000 with HS down to 2,000 with master’s), and the IC&RC ADC exam. CADAC III requires an active bachelor’s-level IPLA license. CADAC IV requires a master’s degree and the IC&RC AADC exam. CADAC V requires an active master’s-level IPLA license (LCSW, LMHC, LMFT, or HSPP) and the IC&RC AADC exam.

The ACIT (Addiction Consultant in Training) is Indiana’s introductory training credential — 12 hours of approved education (6 hours ethics + 6 hours HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, and Bloodborne Pathogens), no exam, no work experience. It is valid for three years and is non-renewable, meaning ACIT holders must advance to a CADAC credential before expiration. The ACIT is not strictly required to become a CADAC, but it allows new counselors to begin working in addiction services while accumulating the supervised hours and education needed for full CADAC certification. CEU Matrix’s ICAADA-approved 12-hour ACIT package covers both required topics in full.

The exam depends on the CADAC tier. CADAC I, CADAC II, and CADAC III all require a passing score on the IC&RC Alcohol and Drug Counselor (ADC) examination. CADAC IV and CADAC V require a passing score on the IC&RC Advanced Alcohol and Drug Counselor (AADC) examination — a master’s-level exam. The ACIT does not require any exam.

Indiana’s CADAC II is the most common entry credential and requires: a high school diploma or GED, 300 hours of approved addiction counseling education across the four IC&RC performance domains, supervised work experience scaled by degree (6,000 hours with a high school diploma, 5,000 with an associate’s, 4,000 with a bachelor’s, or 2,000 with a master’s), 100-300 hours of direct clinical supervision (also degree-tiered, with at least 10 hours per domain), and a passing IC&RC ADC exam. CEU Matrix’s ICAADA-approved 300-hour CADAC II package covers the full education requirement.

Training is self-paced — 300 hours for CADAC II or 180 hours for CADAC I/IV. The longest factor is the supervised work experience requirement: up to 6,000 hours (about three years full-time) for the high-school pathway, scaling down to 1,000-2,000 hours for bachelor’s and master’s degree holders. Combined with clinical supervision and the IC&RC exam.

All CADAC credentials (I through V) renew every two years and require 40 clock hours of domain-specific continuing education, including a minimum of 6 hours of ethics. CADAC III and CADAC V holders must additionally maintain their underlying IPLA license throughout the renewal period. The ACIT is non-renewable — holders have three years to advance to a CADAC credential before the ACIT expires.

Yes. Indiana’s CADAC I, II, and III are built on the IC&RC ADC examination, and CADAC IV and V on the IC&RC AADC examination — both are portable across IC&RC member boards in other states. Indiana’s IPLA-based tiers (CADAC III/V) may have additional state-specific licensure considerations during transfer.

Counselors holding an IC&RC ADC or AADC credential in good standing from another IC&RC member state can transfer to the equivalent Indiana CADAC credential through reciprocity. ICAADA processes reciprocity applications and may require documentation of state-specific content (such as the 6-hour HIV/AIDS education requirement). Counselors transferring into the CADAC III or CADAC V tiers must also hold an active Indiana IPLA license at the corresponding level.

Yes. CEU Matrix is an ICAADA-approved continuing education provider. Our Indiana packages cover the full education requirement for each ICAADA credential we offer — ACIT (12 hours), CADAC I/IV (180 hours), CADAC II (300 hours), and CADAC III/V (40 hours).

All courses become available in your CEU Matrix Student Center the moment payment clears, with no enrollment delay. Coursework is fully self-paced — there is no fixed completion deadline. Your progress, exam scores, and earned certificates are tracked automatically and stored under “My Courses,” giving you a single consolidated view of your Indiana credential progress and total hours earned.

Approved and Widely Recognized

CEU Matrix is approved by the following national and state accreditation boards:

Provider #6310
Provider #94564

CEU Matrix is approved with the following state boards:

Arkansas (ASACB), California (CCAPP #OS-07-394-0222), California (CADTP #250), Connecticut (#0115-5202), Delaware (DCB #37), Florida (FCB #5141-A), Georgia (ADACBGA #2026-4-003), Illinois (IAODAPCA #19345), Kentucky, Louisiana (LA ADRA #E026), Michigan (MCBAP), Missouri (Missouri CB #183), New Mexico (NMCBBHP #2046), North Carolina (NCSAPPB), Ohio (OCDP #50-19236), Oklahoma (OBLADS #20260153), Texas (TCB #1758-07)

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