In Phoenix, NAD+ IV therapy costs about $100 to $750 per session, and the figure tracks almost entirely with the dose you receive. Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy lists its NAD+ IV therapy in Phoenix at $100 for a 90-minute drip, started in your home by a licensed registered nurse. This guide breaks down what sets that price, what is included, and how mobile pricing works across the Valley.
NAD+ IV Therapy: $100
- A licensed registered nurse at your location
- Your NAD+ infusion
- All supplies and setup
- A check of your vitals and eligibility
- No separate travel fee
- Your total confirmed before we start
Key Things to Know About NAD+ IV Therapy Cost
A few facts explain almost every price you will see quoted around the Valley. Read these before you compare providers.
What NAD+ IV Therapy Costs in Phoenix
Across the Phoenix metro, NAD+ IV therapy runs roughly $100 to $750 per session. The wide range is not about brand markup. It reflects how much NAD+ you receive, since the dose drives both the product used and the time in the chair.
Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy lists its NAD+ infusion at $100 for a 90-minute drip. That sits at the accessible end of the market, and your nurse confirms the price before the visit begins.
Cost by NAD+ dose
NAD+ doses are measured in milligrams, and most clinic drips fall between 125 and 500 milligrams infused over 60 to 120 minutes. The more milligrams you receive, the longer the drip and the higher the price.
Low-dose or add-on NAD+
A smaller NAD+ dose, often in the range of 100 to 250 milligrams, is the most affordable option and is where prices near $100 typically land. It is also the dose people choose when they are new to NAD+ and want to see how they tolerate it.
Mid-dose NAD+ (250 to 500 mg)
A mid-range dose generally costs more and takes longer. A 500-milligram NAD+ drip usually runs 2 to 3 hours, because a slower rate keeps side effects mild. In the wider Phoenix market this tier commonly falls in the $250 to $500 range.
High-dose NAD+ (750 to 1,000 mg)
High-dose protocols of 750 to 1,000 milligrams can take 4 to 6 hours and sit at the top of the market, often $650 to $750 or more. These larger doses are used under provider guidance, not as a walk-up option.
Cost by delivery method
NAD+ can be given two ways, and the method changes both the dose and the price.
NAD+ IV drip
An IV drip delivers NAD+ directly into your bloodstream, bypassing digestion entirely, which suits larger single doses. It costs more than a shot because of the product volume and the longer infusion time.
NAD+ injection
A NAD+ injection delivers a smaller dose in a few minutes and usually costs less per visit, which makes it a common choice for maintenance between drips. Our guide on how often to get NAD+ injections covers timing in more detail.
What Affects NAD+ IV Therapy Cost
Four things explain most of the difference between one quote and another. When you ask a provider for a price, ask about these.
Dose and infusion length
Dose is the biggest driver. A larger milligram dose uses more NAD+ and needs a longer, slower drip. According to a 2026 tolerability pilot published in Frontiers in Aging, NAD+ infusions averaged 96 minutes, and higher doses run longer still.
Single session vs a series
One drip costs less than a planned series. Some people book a single NAD+ session, while others space several visits over a few weeks. A series costs more in total, though the per-visit price is the same.
Add-ons and combination drips
Extras change the total. At Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy, most vitamin or medication add-ons are $25 each, so pairing NAD+ with another nutrient raises the price in clear, stated steps.
Mobile service and location
How the drip reaches you matters. Some companies advertise a low base price, then add a $50 to $100 mobile fee. Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy comes to your home, hotel, or office across the Valley with no separate travel charge.
Does Insurance Cover NAD+ IV Therapy?
NAD+ IV therapy is an elective wellness service, so insurance does not cover it. You pay out of pocket, and there are no surprise carrier bills to chase later.
Paying out of pocket
Your quoted price is the full price. At Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy that means the nurse, your NAD+ infusion, all supplies, and the in-home visit are included, with no separate facility or travel fee.
Using an HSA or FSA
Some health savings and flexible spending accounts reimburse wellness infusions when you submit documentation, and others do not. Rules vary by plan, so check with your administrator before your visit and keep your receipt.
What a NAD+ IV Visit Includes
The price covers the whole visit, start to finish. Here is what happens when a nurse comes to you.
NAD+ IV Cost vs Other Phoenix Mobile IV Drips
NAD+ is priced differently from a standard vitamin drip because it uses a specific compound and a longer infusion. For comparison, a Myers' Cocktail IV is $195 and a Hydration IV is $175. You can see the full lineup on our full IV drip menu. The table below sets NAD+ next to the most common alternative.
NAD+ IV vs Myers' Cocktail IV
How the two compare on price, time, and what people choose them for at Phoenix Mobile IV Therapy.
| Criterion | NAD+ IV | Myers' Cocktail IV |
|---|---|---|
| Menu price | $100 Lower price |
$195 |
| Session length | 90 minutes | 45 minutes |
| Often chosen for | Cellular energy and recovery support | Hydration and vitamin replenishment |
| How it is delivered | RN-started, in your home | RN-started, in your home |
Is NAD+ IV Therapy Safe? Who Should Not Get It
NAD+ is a coenzyme your cells use for energy metabolism and DNA repair, and a NAD+ infusion is generally well tolerated when it is given slowly by a licensed nurse. The most common effects during the drip are flushing, nausea, chest tightness, and a faster heartbeat, which usually ease when the nurse slows the rate. A 2026 pilot in Frontiers in Aging reported these effects during infusion, and they typically passed once the session ended.
NAD+ IV therapy is not the right choice for everyone. Speak with a qualified provider before booking if any of the following apply to you:
- You are pregnant or breastfeeding
- You have a significant heart condition
- You have a known sensitivity to NAD+ or its ingredients
- You are managing a serious medical condition or taking medications you are unsure about
Our clinical standards are overseen by our Medical Director, Dr. Christopher Seitz, MD, a board-certified emergency physician, and every IV is started by a licensed registered nurse. IV hydration is supportive hydration and nutrient delivery, not emergency care. If your symptoms are severe, if you are pregnant, or if you suspect heat stroke, seek emergency care or call 911.
Sources and References
- Tolerability pilot study of intravenous NAD+ versus nicotinamide riboside, Frontiers in Aging (PMC), 2026. Reported a mean NAD+ infusion time of 96 minutes and infusion-related effects including nausea, raised heart rate, and chest pressure.
- Pilot study of plasma and urine NAD+ metabolome during a 6-hour intravenous NAD+ infusion, National Library of Medicine (PMC), 2019. Documents the slow, prolonged nature of NAD+ infusion protocols.
- Randomized, placebo-controlled pilot of acute intravenous NAD+ in healthy adults, medRxiv, 2024. A controlled study of intravenous NAD+ delivery.
Book NAD+ IV Therapy in Phoenix
A licensed registered nurse brings your NAD+ drip to you across the Phoenix metro and the wider Valley, including mobile IV therapy in Scottsdale, mobile IV therapy in Tempe, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Glendale, Peoria, Surprise, Goodyear, Avondale, and Ahwatukee. Service runs 24 hours a day, often the same day. To book, schedule online or call (480) 908-9266.