If alcohol has become a problem for you or someone you love in Cedar Crest, New Mexico, AA meetings can help. The groups listed below meet across Cedar Crest and nearby areas, offering anonymity, structure, and a path forward built on the 12 Steps. There's nothing to sign and nothing to pay.
| Name | Address | Location | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| In The Stream | 4 Penny Ln | Cedar Crest, New Mexico, 87008 | DiscussionOpenEnglish |
| Penny Lane | 4 Penny Ln | Cedar Crest, New Mexico, 87008 | DiscussionEnglishOpen |
| Penny Lane Group | 4 Penny Ln | Cedar Crest, New Mexico, 87008 | Big BookDiscussionOpenEnglish |
| Friday Night Live | 4 Penny Ln | Cedar Crest, New Mexico, 87008 | DiscussionOpenTemporary ClosureEnglish |
| Friday Night Smokeless | 10000 Spain Rd NE | Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87111 | ClosedDiscussionEnglish |
| Downtown Lunchbunch | Online | Albuquerque, New Mexico | 12 Steps & 12 TraditionsAs Bill Sees ItBig BookDaily ReflectionsDiscussionOpenEnglish |
| Oficina Hispana de Alcoholicos Anonimos de Albuquerque | Online | Albuquerque, New Mexico | Contact for Meeting Schedules |
| Dog on the Roof Group | 8700 Alameda Blvd NE | Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87122 | DiscussionOpenStep MeetingWheelchair AccessEnglish |
| Women on Monday | Online | Albuquerque, New Mexico | OpenWomenEnglish |
| Dawn Patrol ONLINE | Online | Albuquerque, New Mexico | 12 Steps & 12 TraditionsBig BookDiscussionEnglishNewcomerOpenSpeakerStep MeetingTradition Study |
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Your Guide to AA Meetings in Cedar Crest, New Mexico
Cedar Crest, NM hosts 4 active AA meetings serving members across the area. Meetings run throughout the week in a range of formats, including discussion, Big Book, step study, speaker, and specialty groups, so members can find a meeting that fits both their schedule and their stage of recovery. Building a network of sober peers is one of the most effective ways to maintain recovery. Friends who are also working the program understand the harder days without needing an explanation and can offer the kind of practical support that is hard to ask for elsewhere. Many members say that the people they meet at AA become some of the most important relationships in their lives. Browse the full directory below to compare day, time, and format, or read our overview of the 12 Steps to understand how the program works before you attend.
What Happens at an AA Meeting in Cedar Crest
If a meeting doesn't feel right, try a different one. There's no obligation to return, and every group has its own personality, even within the same format. The suggestion most often passed to newcomers is to try at least six different meetings before deciding which ones become your regulars, since the differences between groups can be larger than expected. Most groups in Cedar Crest also offer in-person and online formats, and you can read more about how the program works on our 12 Steps and AA FAQs pages.
About Alcoholics Anonymous
Alcoholics Anonymous was founded in 1935 in Akron, Ohio by Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith, two members who discovered that one alcoholic talking to another could keep them both sober when nothing else had worked before. From that conversation grew the 12 Steps, the 12 Traditions, and a fellowship that today reaches roughly 180 countries with literature available in more than 100 languages. The program has remained intentionally simple from the start: no professional staff, no fees, no membership lists, and no central authority, just members helping each other stay sober one day at a time.
The format of a typical AA meeting in Cedar Crest mirrors the structure used at meetings around the world. Most meetings open with the Serenity Prayer and a reading from "How It Works" or a daily reflection, followed by a moment to welcome any newcomers in the room. Members then share, one at a time, on a topic chosen by the chairperson or on whatever is on their mind that week. A basket is passed for voluntary contributions toward rent and literature, and meetings close with a short reading or prayer, after which members often stay to talk informally before heading home.
What makes AA different from clinical treatment is the emphasis on shared experience over expert opinion. There are no diagnoses, no charts, and no required milestones, only the practices passed down by members who have stayed sober and the structure of the 12 Steps to give that work direction. Many people in Cedar Crest combine AA with therapy, medical care, or other peer-support programs; AA itself is designed to be additional, not exclusive, and it has no opinion on outside treatments members choose to pursue.
Where Cedar Crest AA Meetings Take Place
AA meetings serving Cedar Crest cover multiple zip codes, including 87008. Whether you live downtown or in a surrounding neighborhood, there is likely a meeting within reach by car, public transit, or a short walk depending on where you are starting from. If transportation is a barrier, members in Cedar Crest can also attend the same online meetings used elsewhere in New Mexico, removing the commute entirely while still keeping the structure of a regular schedule.
Sponsorship and Service in Cedar Crest
After attending meetings in Cedar Crest for a while, many members ask another member to be their sponsor, a one-on-one guide who walks them through the 12 Steps and stays in close contact between meetings. Sponsorship is informal, free, and entirely voluntary on both sides; most sponsors have at least a year of continuous sobriety and have worked the Steps themselves with a sponsor of their own. There is no application process, no contract, and no obligation beyond what both members agree to.
Beyond meetings and sponsorship, members can take on small service positions within their home group, such as making coffee, setting up chairs, greeting newcomers, chairing a meeting, or holding the role of secretary, treasurer, or General Service Representative. These commitments are short, usually six months to a year, and members commonly say that taking on service work is one of the things that helped their early sobriety the most. Service is also entirely voluntary, and groups in Cedar Crest regularly rotate positions so newer members have the chance to participate.
Take the Next Step in Cedar Crest
Taking the first step toward sobriety doesn't have to be complicated. Start by attending one meeting this week. Listen, observe, and decide later if you want to come back, that is how most members started, and almost no one regrets the first meeting they attended. The format will make more sense once you have seen it once, even if it feels unfamiliar at first. Contact our team if you'd like to talk about your options before going.
Frequently Asked Questions About AA Meetings in Cedar Crest, NM
- Yes. Open meetings in Cedar Crest, New Mexico welcome anyone curious about AA, and the only requirement for AA membership is a desire to stop drinking — not a diagnosis. Attending is a good way to decide if AA is right for you.
- Arrive a few minutes early, introduce yourself if you'd like, and listen. The chairperson will open with readings, members will share, and the meeting will close. You don't need to do or say anything specific — being there is the first step.
- Yes. Anonymity is a foundational AA tradition. What you share at meetings in Cedar Crest stays in the room, and members typically use only first names. This protection is what allows people to share openly.
- Yes. Many AA groups serving Cedar Crest now host hybrid or fully online meetings via Zoom or other platforms. Filter the directory by the "Virtual" or "Hybrid" tag to see online options.
- AA (Alcoholics Anonymous) focuses on recovery from alcohol. NA (Narcotics Anonymous) addresses recovery from drug addiction. Al-Anon supports family members and friends affected by someone else's drinking. Cedar Crest, New Mexico hosts groups for all three fellowships.