10% off first visit IV therapy & peptides to your door in Las Vegas, 24/7.

Health & Wellness, IV Therapy & Treatments July 9, 2026

How Often Should You Get NAD+ IV Therapy in Las Vegas?

How often should you book NAD+ IV therapy in Las Vegas? This guide covers the typical loading and maintenance pattern providers use, what a 2026 peer reviewed study actually tested, real session pricing, and who should talk to a provider before their first appointment.

Table of Contents

NAD+ IV therapy in Las Vegas comes with a practical question once the first session is done: how often should you come back. Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy runs the NAD+ IV as a 90 minute, nurse administered drip, and the right cadence depends on why you started it in the first place. This guide walks through how providers typically structure a plan, what a published research protocol actually studied, and who should talk to a provider before booking.

💧
How Often Should You Get NAD+ IV Therapy?
Most providers structure NAD+ IV therapy around a short loading phase of closer spaced sessions, then space visits out for maintenance, often every few weeks to monthly. A published research protocol used four consecutive daily 500 mg infusions with a 30 day follow up. Your nurse and the practice set your exact plan at booking.

NAD+ IV Therapy Pricing in Las Vegas

Las Vegas pricing
NAD+ IV Therapy · $100
90 minutes Per session In-home or hotel
What's included
  • Nurse administered IV placement
  • NAD+ delivered directly into the bloodstream
  • Mixed at the time of your visit
  • Available 24 hours a day
Price shown is for a single 90 minute session. Add-ons are $35 each if you stack another drip on the same visit.
Book This Drip

Key Things to Know

💧
Session Length
A NAD+ IV session runs 90 minutes at $100, nurse administered in your home or hotel.
Cadence Is Individualized
How often you book depends on your goal, how your body responds, and what your nurse and the practice recommend at your first visit.
🧬
Elective Wellness, Not Treatment
NAD+ IV therapy supports general wellness. It is not a treatment for, and does not prevent, any diagnosed condition.
🛡️
Safety Comes First
Pregnancy, breastfeeding, and certain medications are reasons to talk with a provider before booking. See the safety section below.

What NAD+ IV Therapy Is

NAD+, or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, is a coenzyme every cell in the body uses in energy metabolism. NAD+ supports the mitochondrial pathways that convert nutrients into usable cellular energy, a role described in peer reviewed metabolism research (see Sources below).

At Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy, the NAD+ IV, sometimes searched as an NAD+ injection, is a nurse administered, 90 minute drip. It is mixed at the time of your visit and delivered directly into the bloodstream, bypassing digestion entirely. This is a different product from the clinic's compounded NAD+ peptide vial, which is a separate, self administered, patient specific medication with its own dosing plan set by a provider. This guide covers the nurse administered IV drip only.

What Happens During a Session

A registered nurse arrives at your home or hotel, places the IV, and stays for the full 90 minutes. Many clients report feeling better within 30 to 60 minutes of starting. You can rest, work, or relax on your phone while the drip runs.

Where NAD+ IV Fits Among the Menu

NAD+ IV therapy is positioned for energy and cellular support, distinct from hydration focused drips like the Myers' Cocktail. Clients often book it as a standalone session rather than pairing it with a hangover or hydration drip on the same visit.

How Often People Get NAD+ IV Therapy

There is no single fixed schedule for NAD+ IV therapy. What follows is a two part picture: how providers commonly structure a plan in practice, and what one published research protocol actually studied. The two are not the same thing, and this guide keeps them separate.

Loading Phase vs. Maintenance Phase

In clinical practice, NAD+ IV therapy is often structured in two phases. A loading phase uses closer spaced sessions over the first few weeks, followed by a maintenance phase spaced weeks to a month apart. Clinics commonly adjust cadence to the client's goal: general wellness support usually calls for a slower pace, while a short term recovery or training block may call for more frequent visits for a limited window. This two phase pattern reflects common industry practice, not a single published standard.

A 2026 retrospective pilot study published in Frontiers in Aging studied a specific research protocol: four consecutive daily 500 mg NAD+ IV infusions, with a 30 day follow up period. That protocol describes what researchers studied, not a recommendation for how often to book a session at Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy. Individual results vary, and the right cadence for you depends on your goals and how your body responds.

What Affects How Often You Should Book

Your goal is the biggest factor: general wellness, recovery support, or a specific event you are preparing for. How you feel after your first session also matters. Budget and schedule play a role too. Your nurse and Medical Director Dr. Daniel Olivero, MD, set a plan with you at your first visit, not before.

Nurse's Tip
Clients who are new to NAD+ IV therapy often ask if they need to commit to a schedule right away. You do not. Start with one session, see how you feel over the next few days, and build a cadence from there with your nurse.
Rich Majors, FNP-BC · Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy

What the Research Shows

What the Research Shows
From a 2026 peer reviewed tolerability study
Research on NAD+ IV infusions is still early stage. A 2026 retrospective pilot study is one of the few peer reviewed looks at real world tolerability, not a large randomized trial.
Reported adverse experiences in that study included nausea, diarrhea, muscle cramping, chest discomfort, and dizziness.
The study followed participants for 30 days after four consecutive daily 500 mg infusions, a research protocol, not a recommendation for how often to book a session.
Source: Frontiers in Aging, 2026 retrospective tolerability pilot study of intravenous NAD+ (see Sources and References below)

These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This service is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Who Should Not Get NAD+ IV Therapy

Pregnancy or Breastfeeding
NAD+ IV therapy is not recommended during pregnancy or breastfeeding. Talk with your provider before booking if either applies to you.
Known Hypersensitivity
A history of allergic reaction to NAD+ or to IV infusions is a reason to talk with a provider before your session.
Certain Medications
Medications that affect mitochondrial function, including some chemotherapy agents, antidiabetics, and statins, may interact with NAD+. Tell your nurse about everything you take.
New or Worsening Symptoms
Any new or worsening symptom should be evaluated by a provider before your session, not worked around.

When to Talk to Your Provider First

If any of the above applies to you, call ahead so your nurse and the practice's Medical Director can confirm NAD+ IV therapy is appropriate before your appointment.

When to Seek Emergency Care

IV hydration and IV wellness therapy are supportive care, not emergency care. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, are pregnant with concerning symptoms, or suspect heat stroke, seek emergency care or call 911.

Common Questions About NAD+ IV Therapy

Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on your goal. In clinical practice, providers often start with a closer spaced loading phase, then space sessions out for maintenance, anywhere from every few weeks to monthly. Your nurse and the practice set your specific plan at your first visit.
Many providers use one. A loading phase means a few sessions spaced closer together at the start, followed by a longer spaced maintenance schedule. A 2026 research protocol studied four consecutive daily infusions, though that reflects a study design, not a universal recommendation.
A session runs 90 minutes, nurse administered in your home or hotel.
NAD+ IV therapy is $100 per 90 minute session. Add-ons are $35 each.
No. NAD+ IV therapy is not recommended during pregnancy or breastfeeding. Talk with your provider if either applies to you.
A 2026 tolerability study reported nausea, diarrhea, muscle cramping, chest discomfort, and dizziness. Individual results vary, and your nurse can walk through what to expect before your session.
No. NAD+ IV therapy is a nurse administered, 90 minute drip. The clinic's compounded NAD+ peptide vial is a separate, self administered, patient specific medication with its own dosing plan set by a provider. This guide covers the IV drip only.

Sources and References

NAD+'s role in cellular energy metabolism is described in a peer reviewed review, "NAD+ Metabolism and the Control of Energy Homeostasis: A Balancing Act between Mitochondria and the Nucleus," hosted on PubMed Central: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4487780.

The tolerability data referenced above comes from a 2026 retrospective pilot study, "Intravenous infusion of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) versus nicotinamide riboside (NR): a retrospective tolerability pilot study in a real-world setting," published in Frontiers in Aging: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12907335.

10% Off Your First Visit
Ready to Book NAD+ IV Therapy in Las Vegas?
Licensed nurses come to you, home, hotel, or event, anywhere across the Las Vegas valley. Available 24 hours a day. Call (725) 217-4236 or book online.
Book Your NAD+ IV

Service Area

Las Vegas Mobile IV Therapy serves the Las Vegas metro and Southern Nevada, including Henderson, North Las Vegas, Summerlin South, Paradise, Enterprise, Sunrise Manor, Winchester, Whitney, Boulder City, Mesquite, Laughlin, Pahrump, Primm, Moapa Valley, Searchlight, and Lake Las Vegas.

Reviewed by Patricia S. Sullivan, MD, MPH · Family Medicine · NPI 1861455222
This article is reviewed by Patricia S. Sullivan, MD, MPH (Family Medicine). It is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual results vary. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA, and this service is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. IV therapy is supportive wellness care, not emergency care. If you are experiencing a medical emergency in Las Vegas, call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room.

Share this Article

Table of Contents

Last Updated: July 9, 2026

Related Resources

How Often Should You Get NAD+ IV Therapy in Las Vegas?

How Mobile IV Therapy Works in Las Vegas: What to Expect When the Nurse Comes to You

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

Related Blogs

Registered nurse placing an IV for a seated woman in a Las Vegas hotel room during a mobile IV therapy visit

How Mobile IV Therapy Works in Las Vegas: What to Expect When the Nurse Comes to You

Nurse reviewing an intake tablet with a client before a mobile IV in a Las Vegas hotel suite

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

Las Vegas mobile IV therapy vitamin drip prepared for an in-home visit

Is Mobile IV Therapy Covered by Insurance? What Las Vegas Patients Need to Know (2026)