NAD+ IV Therapy: Costs for Your Clinic in 2026

May 25, 2026
Portrait Care Team
NAD+ IV Therapy: Costs for Your Clinic in 2026
SHARE

https://www.portraitcare.com/post/nad-iv-therapy-costs-for-your-clinic-in-2026

Empowering Professionals at Every Stage

Portrait offers strategic expertise to help you make informed decisions and achieve long-term success.

Book Intro Call

NAD+ IV therapy is booming in the wellness world, but if you want it to actually turn a profit, you have to look beyond the hype. You can attract patients who are willing to pay top dollar, but the real win is knowing your numbers: how much it costs to offer NAD+ IV therapy, and how you can tighten up your margins.

If you're considering putting NAD+ IV therapy on your menu, or you already offer it and want to do better, you need to get granular. The total cost includes a lot more than the per-vial price. You'll want to factor in sourcing, consumables, clinical labor, chair time, compliance, inventory, and finding new patients. Let's break down each piece so you can set better prices and make smart operational choices.

What Drives NAD+ IV Therapy Cost for Your Clinic?

NAD+ IV therapy cost isn't a one-line expense. Your true price per treatment adds up everything: the NAD+ itself, your nurse's time, and even the cost to toss used supplies after treatment.

Since a single session can take two to four hours, it makes more sense to think about your margin per chair hour, instead of just looking at margin per appointment.

You need to tally up every real cost before setting your price. That way, your pricing keeps the clinic healthy, not just the patients.

Product and Ingredient Sourcing

Where you get your NAD+ really matters. Clinically, you want pharmaceutical-grade NAD+ from a legit compounding pharmacy, either an FDA-registered 503B outsourcing facility or a 503A pharmacy with sterile production that's been validated.

Food-grade NAD+ isn't safe for IV infusions and doesn't meet the required sterility or endotoxin standards.

Sourcing isn’t just about the per-dose price. Watch for:

  • Volume discounts
  • Shipping fees and minimum orders
  • Product availability

Clinics with more than one compliant supplier have more flexibility. Before you set up your sourcing, check your state’s compounding rules and documentation needs.

IV Supplies and Consumables

NAD+ is just the beginning. Each session needs saline or another IV fluid, a catheter, tubing, flushes, prep pads, gloves, dressings, and sharps disposal. IV catheters usually cost $3 to $10, and consumables can hit $15 per session before you even count everything else.

One or two supplies seem cheap, but it all adds up by the end of a day. Remember, consumables aren’t just bags. Tubing, catheters, additives, wipes, sharps disposal, and cold-chain waste all go into your cost of goods sold.

Provider Time and Chair Time

NAD+ IV therapy is time-intensive. Sessions often last two to four hours depending on dosage, and you need to infuse slowly so patients don’t get nausea or warmth.

Include these in your calculations:

  • Intake and consent
  • Placing the IV
  • Ongoing monitoring during infusion
  • Room turnaround and documentation

Don’t just look at margin per treatment. Compare NAD+’s margin per chair hour to your other services. That’ll help you decide how much you want to prioritize it in your clinic.

Clinic-Level Costs to Plan Before Launching NAD+ IV Services

There's a lot more than supplies and product cost when you’re planning to offer NAD+ IV therapy. You also have some upfront costs that’ll impact your budget and margins down the line, even if they’re easy to overlook.

Medical Oversight and Protocol Development

NAD+ IV therapy is a medical service. In most states, giving IV fluids and compounds is practicing medicine. You need the right oversight: a medical director, standing or patient-specific orders, screening for contraindications, consent, adverse event protocols, and documentation that’s up to medical standard.

Rules around this can change a lot by state. For example, Texas's rules for elective IV drips changed in 2025 and California’s got new patient-specific requirements in 2026. Make sure your protocols are up-to-date by working directly with your medical director, and get legal or compliance support as needed before treating patients.

Staff Training and Workflow Setup

Your staff should know good IV technique, but they also need specifics for NAD+: how to administer correctly, what to look for in patient screening, recognizing side effects, and documenting like a pro.

The room setup matters too. Make sure you’ve got IV poles, infusion pumps, comfy reclining chairs (these sessions are long), plus blood pressure monitors, pulse oximeters, and emergency meds on hand.

Both staff training and buying equipment count as launch costs. Expect to spend between $15,000 and $30,000 on NAD+ equipment and inventory, depending on what you already have in place.

Software, Charting, and Patient Communication

If you want the clinic to run smoothly, make scheduling, charting, and communications easy for staff and patients. You’ll want systems for:

  • Online bookings that sync with your calendar
  • EHR templates just for IV therapy
  • Digital consent forms
  • Payment processing
  • Appointment reminders
  • Post-session follow-ups

When these are connected, your team wastes less time on paperwork and more time with patients. When they’re not, you’ll see gaps in documentation, missed rebooking, and messy inventory.

Try an all-in-one platform that brings together EHR, booking, payments, and inventory tracking. It just makes life easier.

Marketing and Patient Acquisition

Getting patients in the door is part of the business. Before launching, create a NAD+ page on your website, update your Google profile, and send out email or text campaigns. Social media works great because people want to know what’s in their drip before booking.

To get those first-timers to come back, use packages or memberships. Local marketing that highlights your drips helps fill up that schedule fast.

How to Think About Pricing NAD+ IV Therapy for Patients

Your price for patients should cover all your costs, your team, your chair time, your market, and your target margin. Don’t just try to be cheaper than everyone else. Build your offer so it’s sustainable for you and valuable for your patients.

For reference, NAD+ IV sessions usually cost anywhere from $250 to $1,500 depending on dosage, city, and how premium your clinic is. In big cities, $600 to $1,000 per session is the norm. Let your own numbers, not competitors' prices, decide where you land.

Start With Your Cost Per Treatment

Figure out exactly what you spend on each session, including:

  • The NAD+ product
  • IV supplies and consumables
  • Full staff time per appointment
  • Room time
  • Payment processing fees
  • Allowances for waste and expired product
  • Admin and follow-up time

Once you have that number, work backwards to set your price with your target margin.

Most med spas try to keep cost of goods sold between 30% and 40% of sales. Use this as a reality check on your current sourcing and pricing.

Evaluate Margin Per Chair Hour

A 500mg NAD+ session can drive a lot of revenue, but if it ties up a provider and a room for four hours, check if it’s really your best earner per chair hour. Run the numbers across all your services. If NAD+ isn’t meeting your targets after staff time and real costs, try new prices or change up your scheduling model instead of just pushing more marketing.

Strong clinics can hit IV therapy margins of 60–70%, and NAD+ can even get to 65–75% after you invest in equipment. Hitting those numbers means your costs are totally dialed in.

Consider Packages, Memberships, and Add-On Positioning

You’ll make the most on NAD+ IV therapy from regulars, not just one-timers. Bundle it into wellness plans, recovery protocols, or a membership tier. Show both single-session and package pricing. Package deals bring back more repeat patients and boost upfront revenue. Memberships often make up 20–30% of a clinic’s total revenue and bump up patient lifetime value.

Add vitamin boosts like glutathione, B12, or C to raise ticket size without slowing down the session. Make sure your staff knows how to talk them up, and keep your notes accurate by recording everything administered.

Common Margin Leaks That Make NAD+ IV Therapy Less Profitable

You’ve got strong pricing and smart sourcing, but there are still places where profits leak. Here’s where money often slips away:

Overordering or Underordering Inventory

NAD+ products don’t last forever. If you order too much, you’ll have to throw away expired stock. If you order too little, you run out and turn patients away.

Either way, that hits your bottom line and damages trust. Using inventory tracking cuts spending by 15% to 20% because you don’t over- or under-buy. Set up automated reorder alerts tied to your treatments to avoid shortages and waste.

Unclear Treatment Protocols

When protocols and appointment times aren’t clear, you get delays and confusion. One nurse might finish a 500mg session in three hours, another in five, and suddenly your schedule is broken. Have your medical director define clear, standardized protocols for your team so your workflow is smooth and predictable.

Too Much Manual Admin Work

Things like manual booking, paper charts, separate spreadsheets for payments or inventory all add hidden labor cost and slow you down. Every extra step is time your team isn’t with patients.

Use connected software for bookings, charting, payments, and supply tracking in one place. You’ll see less friction and better profit margins.

Questions to Ask Before Choosing an NAD+ Supplier

Choosing a supplier is about way more than just price per dose. Here’s what really matters if you want things to run smoothly:

Is the Supplier Reliable and Easy to Work With?

Reliable fulfillment is key. Cheap prices won’t help if shipping is slow or inventory is hit-or-miss. Ask potential suppliers about:

  • Lead times
  • Minimum order size
  • What paperwork comes with each shipment
  • Backup plans for out-of-stock items

Does the Supplier Fit Your Compliance Standards?

You need suppliers who provide proper certificates of analysis, sterility results, and USP compliance docs. Your medical director or compliance pro should review the paperwork before you get started. Keep in mind, state laws change quickly in the IV space, so check often.

Can Your Ordering Process Scale With Volume?

If you’re planning to grow through maybe more team members, extra locations, or just more patient volume your ordering process should grow with you.

Having centralized purchasing, good spend visibility, and automated reordering helps a ton. If you’re tied to only one vendor, you’re vulnerable to price hikes and supply issues.

How Portrait Helps Clinics Lower Supply Costs and Run Leaner

If you want to keep your NAD+ IV therapy margins healthy, cutting your supply spend is a good start. Portrait’s marketplace lets you tap into over 2,000 compliant medical products, including IV and IM supplies, injectables, devices, and wellness meds, often with up to 60% savings. There are no revenue splits or contract lock-ins to trip you up.

Portrait also connects your supply inventory directly to what’s happening in the clinic. When you use supplies, the system tracks it and pings you before you run out. You’ll waste less and have fewer supply emergencies.

Their tools are made for busy clinics, so you’re not guessing what’s on your shelf or stuck in spreadsheets. Plus, the platform covers EHR, scheduling, payments, CRM, inventory, compliance, and marketing, so those savings go into growing your business, not fixing admin headaches.

Build a More Profitable Wellness Menu With Smarter Cost Control

NAD+ IV therapy can be a strong money-maker for your menu. Demand is real, margins can be great, and it fits with services like hormone therapy, weight loss, and aesthetics. But your real profit only comes when you know all your NAD IV therapy costs, keep workflows tight, price based on the real math, and source reliably.

If you want to run lean and scale up, check out Portrait’s all-in-one platform that brings together software, services, and supply savings for modern wellness clinics. There are over 1,000 clinics already using Portrait to boost their margins and scale with less stress.

One Platform.
Everything You Need.
Portrait combines the technology, support, and savings to run and scale your modern medical wellness business.
Book Intro Call

Stay Connected with Portrait Care

Subscribe to our email list and receive the latest insights, updates, and exclusive content delivered straight to your inbox.

By entering your email address, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.