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Health & Wellness July 1, 2026

Mobile IV vs Liquid IV and Oral Electrolytes in Las Vegas: When Each One Wins

Liquid IV and oral electrolytes are the right, low-cost choice for mild dehydration you can drink through. A nurse-administered mobile IV in Las Vegas is the better call when you cannot keep fluids down or need to feel steady fast. Here is when each one wins, and what each costs.

Table of Contents

In Las Vegas, choosing between a mobile IV and an oral option like Liquid IV or an electrolyte powder comes down to one question: can you keep fluids down. Both hydrate you, but they do different jobs, and neither is simply better than the other. Below, we compare how they differ on speed, absorption, and cost, so you can match the right option to how you feel and how quickly you need to recover.

💧
Should I get a mobile IV or just drink Liquid IV?
For everyday mild dehydration you can drink through, Liquid IV and oral electrolytes are the sensible, low-cost choice, and research shows oral rehydration works about as well as an IV for mild to moderate cases. A nurse-administered mobile IV in Las Vegas is the better call when you cannot keep fluids down, when dehydration is past mild, or when you need to feel steady quickly, because the fluid bypasses digestion entirely and goes straight into your bloodstream.

Mobile IV, Liquid IV, and Oral Electrolytes at a Glance

How a nurse-delivered mobile IV compares with two popular oral options for hydration and recovery in Las Vegas.

Comparison of mobile IV therapy, Liquid IV, and oral rehydration solution for hydration in Las Vegas.
Criterion Mobile IV Therapy Liquid IV Oral Electrolytes (ORS)
Best for Nausea, illness recovery, being past mild dehydration Everyday hydration, sweat loss, prevention Mild to moderate dehydration you can drink through
How it is delivered Into a vein by a licensed RN at your home or hotel
Nurse onsite
Powder stick mixed into water, swallowed Premixed solution or powder, swallowed
Absorption path Bypasses digestion entirely, enters the bloodstream
Direct
Through the gut using sodium and glucose transport Through the gut using sodium and glucose transport
Works if you are vomiting Yes, and a nurse can add anti-nausea medication
Yes
Often not, if you cannot keep liquids down Often not, if you cannot keep liquids down
Can include vitamins and medication Yes: B-complex, B12, glutathione, anti-nausea, and more B vitamins and vitamin C only Electrolytes and glucose only
Typical Las Vegas cost $150 to $299 per visit, nurse included About $1 to $1.50 per stick About $6 to $8 per liter
Medical oversight Under Medical Director Dr. Daniel Olivero, MD
Clinical
None, retail product None, retail product

Key Things to Know

These three options are not really competing for the same job. Oral electrolytes solve one problem, and a mobile IV solves a different one. Here is the short version before the detail.

💧
Oral is right for mild cases
For mild to moderate dehydration, oral rehydration is about 95 percent effective and works about as well as an IV, according to a 2022 clinical review. If you can drink and keep it down, start there.
âš¡
IV helps when the gut is out
A mobile IV bypasses digestion entirely and delivers fluid straight into your bloodstream, so it still works when nausea or vomiting makes drinking impossible.
🧪
Different contents
Liquid IV carries sodium, potassium, sugar, and B vitamins. A mobile IV can also include a full B-complex, glutathione, and anti-nausea medication chosen by the nurse.
🩺
Different oversight
Liquid IV and oral electrolytes are retail products. A Las Vegas Mobile IV visit is a medical service placed by a licensed RN under Medical Director Dr. Daniel Olivero, MD.

What Mobile IV Therapy Is

Mobile IV therapy is a nurse-administered service that comes to you anywhere in the Las Vegas metro, 24 hours a day. A licensed registered nurse arrives at your home or hotel, places the IV, and stays through the drip. A standard Hydration IV runs about 45 minutes and is priced at $199.

How Mobile IV Works

An IV line delivers fluids, electrolytes, and vitamins into a vein. That means the contents bypass digestion entirely and enter your bloodstream right away, instead of being absorbed slowly through the gut. Bags are mixed at the time of service, so the nurse builds your IV after reviewing what you booked and how you feel.

What Is Typically in the Bag

A hydration drip starts with sterile IV fluids. From there, a nurse can add ingredients based on the treatment you choose, such as a B-complex, vitamin B12, and glutathione, and for illness recovery a nurse can add anti-nausea medication so the fluids stay down. The Hangover IV and the Myers' Cocktail IV are two of the most requested recovery drips in Las Vegas.

When Mobile IV Is the Right Call

A mobile IV earns its price in specific situations: when nausea or vomiting shuts down drinking, when a hard convention week or the summer heat leaves you past mild dehydration, or when you have a morning meeting or a flight and need to feel steady quickly. Many clients report feeling better within 30 to 60 minutes, though individual results vary. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA, and this service is supportive care, not emergency care.

Nurse's Tip
If you are keeping water down and your symptoms are mild, try an electrolyte drink first and give it an hour. Call us when drinking is not working, when you cannot stop vomiting, or when you need to be back on your feet quickly. That is the line where an IV starts to make sense.
Rich Majors, FNP-BC · Lead Nurse Practitioner, Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy

What Liquid IV and Oral Electrolytes Are

Liquid IV and oral electrolyte products are drink mixes and solutions you swallow. Despite the name, Liquid IV has nothing to do with an intravenous line. It is an oral rehydration powder, and it is built on the same science that clinics have used for decades.

How Oral Rehydration Works

Oral rehydration relies on sodium and glucose being absorbed together in the small intestine, which pulls water across the gut wall with them. That is why an electrolyte mix hydrates faster than plain water. The approach is grounded in the CDC and World Health Organization oral rehydration guidance, and you can read more on the site's own electrolyte science page.

What Is in Liquid IV and ORS

According to the manufacturer, one Liquid IV Hydration Multiplier stick delivers about 500 mg of sodium, roughly 370 to 500 mg of potassium, about 11 grams of sugar, and a handful of B vitamins plus vitamin C. A standard oral rehydration solution follows the WHO reduced-osmolarity formula of 75 mEq per liter of sodium and 75 mmol per liter of glucose. Both are electrolytes and sugar in water. Neither contains medication.

When Oral Electrolytes Are Enough

For everyday hydration, a workout in the Nevada heat, or the first several hours of a mild stomach bug you can drink through, oral electrolytes are the sensible and inexpensive choice. Reduced-osmolarity ORS is effective enough that, in one WHO and UNICEF review, it cut the need for unscheduled IV fluids by 33 percent. If you can drink, oral rehydration usually does the job.

How They Differ on Speed and Absorption

This is the difference that matters most, and it comes down to the route the fluid takes. Oral electrolytes have to pass through your stomach and be absorbed by your intestines before the water reaches your bloodstream. That works well when your gut is cooperating. When it is not, the whole system stalls.

A mobile IV skips that step. The fluid bypasses digestion entirely and enters your bloodstream, which is why an IV still works when nausea or vomiting makes drinking impossible. As Cleveland Clinic notes, severe dehydration and cases with persistent vomiting are where intravenous fluids are called for. For mild dehydration in someone who can drink, the two routes reach a similar result, so the faster, direct route is not worth the extra cost.

~95%
Effectiveness of Oral Rehydration for Mild to Moderate Dehydration
Oral rehydration is about 95 percent effective for mild to moderate dehydration and performs about as well as intravenous fluids in those cases. The gap opens up when vomiting or more serious dehydration takes drinking off the table, and an IV becomes the better route.
Source: 2022 narrative review of oral rehydration therapy, PMC (PMC9464461)

How They Differ on Cost in Las Vegas

Price is where the two approaches look most different, and the comparison is fair only if you match it to the problem you are solving.

Mobile IV Cost in Las Vegas

Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy prices are upfront. IV Fluids are $150, a Hydration IV is $199, a Myers' Cocktail is $225, and a Mega Myers is $299. Add-ons are $35 each, and first-time customers receive 10 percent off their first visit. That price includes a licensed nurse who comes to you, places the line, and stays for the session. You can see the full menu on the mobile IV pricing guide.

Liquid IV and Electrolyte Cost

Oral options cost a fraction of that per serving. A Liquid IV stick runs about $1 to $1.50, and a liter of a name-brand oral rehydration solution runs about $6 to $8. For daily hydration, that math clearly favors the powder. The point of a mobile IV is not to beat a drink mix on price per ounce. It is to do something the powder cannot when you actually need it.

Who Each One Is Right For

Match the tool to the situation. If you can drink and your symptoms are mild, reach for oral electrolytes and save your money. If drinking is not working or you need to recover quickly, a mobile IV is the better call.

When to Lean Toward Oral Electrolytes

Everyday mild dehydration

A hot afternoon, a long walk on the Strip, or a couple of drinks the night before all respond well to an electrolyte drink and some rest. This is what oral rehydration is built for.

Prevention before and after the heat

Sipping electrolytes before a workout, a pool day, or a desert hike is a smart, low-cost habit. For more on this, see the guide to preventing dehydration in Las Vegas. Prevention is one job a mobile IV is not meant for.

When to Lean Toward a Mobile IV

You cannot keep fluids down

Food poisoning, a stomach bug, or a migraine with nausea can all make drinking pointless. A nurse can deliver fluids and add anti-nausea medication so hydration finally sticks. If symptoms are severe, seek emergency care first.

You need to feel steady fast

A morning meeting, a wedding, a flight, or a shift you cannot miss are the moments people book a mobile IV. A nurse can reach most Las Vegas and Henderson addresses within a short window, day or night.

Who Should Talk to a Provider First

IV therapy is a medical service, so a few situations call for a provider's sign-off before you book.

Check With a Provider Before Booking If
A few conditions need a provider's guidance first
You have kidney disease, heart failure, or a fluid-balance condition, since a rapid fluid load can be risky without medical guidance.
You are pregnant or breastfeeding, or you have a known allergy to an IV ingredient. Confirm with your physician before booking.
You have signs of severe dehydration or heat illness such as confusion, a racing heart, fainting, no urination, or suspected heat stroke. This is an emergency. Call 911 or go to your nearest Las Vegas emergency room instead of booking an IV.
If any of these apply, speak with a qualified provider before proceeding. IV hydration is supportive care, not emergency care. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.
Common Questions About Mobile IV vs Oral Hydration
For mild dehydration, Liquid IV can hydrate you well, because it uses the same sodium and glucose science as clinical oral rehydration solutions. It is not the same as an IV drip, though. Liquid IV still has to be absorbed through your gut, so it does not help when you cannot keep liquids down, and it contains no medication.
Choose a mobile IV when drinking is not working or is not fast enough: persistent nausea or vomiting, dehydration that is past mild, or a situation where you need to feel steady quickly. If you can sip an electrolyte drink and keep it down, start there first.
An IV delivers fluid into the bloodstream and bypasses digestion entirely, so it does not wait on your gut the way an oral drink does. For someone who is vomiting, that direct route is the practical difference. For mild dehydration in someone who can drink, oral rehydration reaches a similar result, which is why it is the recommended first step for mild cases.
Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy prices IV Fluids at $150, a Hydration IV at $199, a Myers' Cocktail at $225, and a Mega Myers at $299. Add-ons are $35 each, and first-time customers receive 10 percent off. The price includes a licensed nurse who travels to your home or hotel.
If you are recovering after a night out with nausea and cannot keep fluids down, a mobile IV is the more practical option, because a nurse can add anti-nausea medication and deliver fluids directly. If you feel rough but can still drink, Liquid IV or another electrolyte mix may be enough. The Hangover IV is built for the harder mornings.
Sodium and glucose are the active part, and that is by design. The two are absorbed together and pull water across the gut wall, which is the mechanism behind every oral rehydration solution. Liquid IV also adds potassium, B vitamins, and vitamin C. The roughly 11 grams of sugar per stick is worth noting if you are watching added sugar.
A mobile IV is supportive care for mild to moderate dehydration and recovery, not emergency care. If you have signs of severe dehydration such as confusion, fainting, a racing heart, or no urination, call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room in Las Vegas. When in doubt, choose emergency care.
A nurse can come to you across the Las Vegas metro and Southern Nevada, including Henderson, North Las Vegas, Summerlin South, Paradise, Enterprise, and Boulder City. Service is available 24 hours a day. Booking gives you the soonest arrival window for your address.

Sources and References

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Managing Acute Gastroenteritis Among Children: Oral Rehydration, Maintenance, and Nutritional Therapy. MMWR. cdc.gov
  2. Understanding the use of oral rehydration therapy: a narrative review from clinical practice to main recommendations. PMC, 2022. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
  3. World Health Organization and UNICEF. Joint Statement: Clinical Management of Acute Diarrhoea (reduced-osmolarity ORS). data.unicef.org
  4. Cleveland Clinic. Dehydration: Symptoms and Causes. clevelandclinic.org
  5. Liquid I.V. Product Ingredients, Hydration Multiplier. liquid-iv.com
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Service Area

Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy delivers nurse-administered IV therapy across the Las Vegas metro and Southern Nevada, 24 hours a day. To book, call (725) 217-4236 or reserve a time at the online booking page.

  • Las Vegas
  • Henderson
  • North Las Vegas
  • Summerlin South
  • Paradise
  • Enterprise
  • Sunrise Manor
  • Whitney
  • Winchester
  • Boulder City
  • Lake Las Vegas
  • Pahrump
  • Mesquite
Reviewed by Patricia S. Sullivan, MD, MPH · Family Medicine · NPI 1861455222
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Mobile IV therapy is administered by licensed healthcare professionals under Medical Director Dr. Daniel Olivero, MD. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results vary. IV hydration is supportive care, not emergency care. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 immediately.

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Last Updated: July 1, 2026

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