In Phoenix, mobile IV therapy from Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy costs between $150 and $299 for a standard drip, delivered to your home, hotel, or office by a licensed nurse. Prices are set per drip and published upfront, so you can see the full cost before you book. This guide breaks down every drip, what add-ons cost, and what changes the price.
Hydration IV $175
- 1 liter of IV fluids
- Vitamin and electrolyte blend
- Started by a licensed nurse
- Bag mixed at your visit
- Add-ons from $25 each
- Total confirmed before we start
What a Mobile IV Costs in Phoenix
Mobile IV therapy in Phoenix is priced per drip, and every drip on the Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy menu has a flat, published price. The range runs from $150 for a straight bag of IV fluids to $299 for the Mega Myers, the most loaded vitamin drip on the menu. A nurse brings the full kit to you, starts the line, and stays for the session, so the price covers the visit, not just the bag.
Because the price is set by the formula, the fastest way to estimate your cost is to pick the drip that matches why you are booking. The sections below group the menu the way most people shop it.
Cost by drip type
Hydration and IV fluids, $150 to $175
The two simplest options are IV Fluids at $150 for about a 35 minute session and the Hydration IV at $175 for about 45 minutes. IV Fluids is a straight saline rehydration bag. The Hydration IV adds a vitamin and electrolyte blend for general dehydration, heat recovery, and travel fatigue. The least expensive drip in Phoenix is a bag of IV fluids at $150.
Myers' Cocktail and Mega Myers, $195 to $299
The Myers' Cocktail IV is $195 and is the classic vitamin and mineral drip, combining magnesium, calcium, B vitamins, and vitamin C in saline. The Mega Myers is $299 and is a higher-dose version of the same idea. The Myers' family is the middle of the menu and the most common starting point for first-time clients.
Hangover, migraine, and food poisoning IVs, $250
Three symptom-focused drips are each $250: the Hangover IV, the Migraine Relief IV, and the Food Poisoning IV. Each pairs fluids with targeted additions. The Hangover IV may help relieve discomfort the morning after a night out by addressing fluid and electrolyte loss, and the Migraine Relief IV may help provide relief for some patients. The Food Poisoning IV runs a little longer at about 70 minutes. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA, and this service is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. If your symptoms are severe or worsening, see the emergency care section before booking.
NAD+ and specialty drips
NAD+ is $100, but it runs the longest of the standard drips at about 90 minutes because it is infused slowly for comfort. The Kids Mini Myers is $175 and is a smaller, pediatric-appropriate formulation. Beauty Boost is $249.71. Stem Cell therapy is $4,999 and is a separate service that is not approved by the FDA, so it is offered on an investigational basis only. For a closer look at the NAD+ price, see our NAD+ IV therapy cost guide for Phoenix.
Add-ons and vitamin shots
Most single vitamin or mineral add-ons, such as B12, glutathione, or extra vitamin C, are $25 each and can be pushed into any drip. A standalone intramuscular vitamin shot, given without a full drip, is $35. Add-ons in Phoenix are a flat $25 each, and a standalone IM vitamin shot is $35. If you are not sure which drip or add-ons fit your visit, our nurses can help you decide, or you can use the which IV is right for me guide.
What Affects the Price of a Mobile IV in Phoenix
Four things move the price of a mobile IV, and the first one matters far more than the rest.
The drip formula you choose
The formula is the price. A straight fluid bag is $150, a Myers' Cocktail is $195, and a Mega Myers is $299, so choosing a more loaded drip is what moves you up the menu. Everything else is minor by comparison.
Add-ons and dose
Each vitamin or mineral add-on is $25, so one add-on raises a $175 Hydration IV to $200. Higher-dose or longer drips, such as the 90 minute NAD+ infusion, are priced as their own line item rather than as an add-on.
Number of people, solo or group
Individual drips are priced per person off the standard menu. For events, bachelorette weekends, or team recovery, the Group IV is a 120 minute service quoted per booking, so the per-person total depends on the group size and the drips chosen.
In-home, 24-hour convenience
Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy is a mobile, in-home service that operates 24 hours a day, so a nurse comes to your home, hotel, or office instead of you driving to a clinic. The published drip price is the price of that visit. Confirm any travel or gratuity policy with the team when you book.
Does Insurance Cover Mobile IV Therapy?
Mobile IV therapy for hydration, recovery, and wellness is an elective service, and like most elective wellness care it is generally not billed to health insurance. Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy is a self-pay practice, which is part of why the pricing is published upfront. You know the full cost before you book, which keeps the model simple and avoids surprise bills.
Why IV therapy is usually self-pay
Standard health plans cover medically necessary care ordered through a clinic or hospital. Wellness hydration booked on demand at home does not usually meet that bar, so most mobile IV visits are paid out of pocket. That is the norm across the Phoenix market, not something specific to one provider.
HSA, FSA, and paying for your visit
Some clients ask whether they can use a health savings account or flexible spending account card for wellness IV therapy. Eligibility depends on your plan and whether the service is considered medically necessary, so confirm HSA or FSA use with the team and your plan administrator before your visit. Prices are the same regardless of how you pay, and there is no membership required to get the listed price.
What Is Included in Your Visit
Your drip price covers the whole appointment, from setup to cleanup. Every IV is started by a licensed nurse, and the clinical standards and formulary are overseen by the Medical Director, Dr. Christopher Seitz, MD, a board-certified emergency physician. Here is what happens.
Who Should Not Get a Mobile IV
IV therapy is a medical service, and it is not right for everyone. Speak with your physician before booking if any of these apply to you:
- You are pregnant, think you might be, or are breastfeeding.
- You have kidney disease, heart failure, or a condition that limits how much fluid you can safely receive.
- You have a history of severe allergic reactions to IV vitamins or minerals.
- You have a bleeding disorder or take blood thinners.
- You are managing a chronic medical condition and are unsure whether extra fluids or vitamins are safe for you.
If any of these apply, talk with a qualified provider before proceeding. IV hydration is supportive care, not a substitute for treatment from your own physician.
When to Seek Emergency Care Instead
Mobile IV therapy is for supportive hydration and nutrient delivery, not for emergencies. If your symptoms are severe, if you are pregnant, or if you suspect a serious medical condition such as heat stroke, seek emergency care immediately and do not wait for a mobile visit. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room for symptoms such as chest pain, trouble breathing, confusion, a high fever that will not come down, repeated vomiting with no ability to keep fluids down, or signs of severe dehydration. IV hydration is not a substitute for emergency treatment.
Sources and References
- Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy public booking menu (Jane App): source of all drip prices and session lengths.
- Cleveland Clinic, IV therapy and hydration overview, medical context for IV hydration.
- Mayo Clinic, Dehydration, symptoms and when to seek care.
- National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements, vitamin C and B vitamin fact sheets.
External sources support medical context only. All prices come from the Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy public menu.
Service Area
Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy comes to you across the Phoenix metro and the wider Valley, including Scottsdale, Tempe, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Glendale, Peoria, and Surprise. See the full Arizona service area list for every city we cover.