Pricing reflects the labor model: $200–400 NAD+ infusions (250–500 mg), $100–200 Myers Cocktail, $150–300 vitamin C high-dose, $1,500–4,000 multi-session NAD+ protocols. Mobile delivery typically adds $50–100. The FDA does not approve specific IV nutrient formulations beyond their parenteral pharmaceutical use; oversight falls to state medical boards and pharmacy compounding regulations.
What to ask: who's compounding the formulation (a 503A or 503B compounding pharmacy is a meaningful distinction), who's administering (RN under physician supervision, NP, or MD), what your medical history was reviewed against, and whether they'll do baseline labs. Drip menus that don't ask about your medications, kidney function or current health status are worth more scrutiny — IV vitamin C in particular interacts with several common medications and is contraindicated in G6PD deficiency.
The research base: Vitamin C IV has the strongest data (Padayatty 2010); NAD+ infusion human data are thin and most evidence is preclinical or small open-label; glutathione bioavailability via IV remains an open question.










