Regained Life Calculator — Hours Reclaimed by Recovery
The hours addiction consumed — and what you can do with them back.
Time: the hidden cost of addiction
Most addiction cost calculators focus on money. This one focuses on something that can't be earned back: time. An active addiction doesn't just consume hours — it reorients an entire life around the schedule of use. Obtaining, using, waiting for effects, coming down, recovering. For many people with moderate-to-severe substance use disorders, 4–8 hours per day are fully absorbed by this cycle.
That's 1,460–2,920 hours per year. At 8 hours per "working day," that's 182–365 full workdays. An entire year of productive life, lost to the cycle of use and recovery.
What 2,000 reclaimed hours can become
2,000 hours is a number that sounds abstract until you translate it:
- Language fluency: Research by the Foreign Service Institute shows 600–700 hours of study achieves conversational fluency in Spanish, French, or Portuguese. 2,000 hours gets you fluent in three languages.
- Reading: The average adult reads at 250 words per minute. A typical book runs 80,000 words (~5–6 hours). 2,000 hours = 333 books. At one per week, that's six years of reading.
- A side business: Most successful online businesses required 500–1,500 hours to reach their first $1,000 in revenue. 2,000 hours is enough to build something meaningful from scratch.
- A degree: An associate's degree requires approximately 1,200–1,500 credit hours of coursework and study. 2,000 hours covers it.
- Physical transformation: 150 minutes per week of moderate exercise is the CDC recommendation. 2,000 hours over a year is 4+ hours per day — more fitness time than most professional athletes train.
- Relationships: The time it takes to develop a close friendship has been studied at approximately 200 hours. 2,000 reclaimed hours could build 10 deep relationships.
Why time recovery accelerates financial recovery
Time and money interact in recovery. More available hours means more capacity for productive work — which means more income. Research consistently shows that employment rates and income levels improve significantly in the first year of sustained recovery. According to SAMHSA, people in long-term recovery report average income increases of 35–60% compared to peak addiction years. The mechanism isn't mysterious: when you're present, functional, and have time, you can earn more.
Building a new routine with reclaimed time
One of the most underappreciated aspects of early recovery is the sudden availability of unstructured time. Many people find this disorienting — the addiction filled that time with a purpose, however destructive. Recovery literature consistently emphasizes the importance of filling reclaimed hours intentionally: structured activities, volunteer work, creative pursuits, exercise, and social connection. The hours this calculator shows you aren't just time saved. They're the raw material for the life you're building.