NAD+ telehealth cost: what providers charge and how to evaluate a quote
NAD+ is a coenzyme present in every living cell, central to mitochondrial energy production and to the activity of sirtuins and PARP enzymes involved in DNA repair. It is sold by longevity and wellness clinics as an intravenous infusion, a subcutaneous injection and an oral or sublingual supplement, marketed for energy, cognition, addiction recovery and anti-ageing.
What telehealth providers charge
Publishing an unverified number would be worse than publishing none. When we have captured them, they will appear here with a source and a verification date, exactly like our GLP-1 pricing.
Normalise any quote before you compare it
Because we will not hand you a number we cannot stand behind, the useful thing we can give you is the method — the same one we apply to GLP-1 pricing, where we do hold verified figures.
| Ask for… | Because… |
|---|---|
| The total monthly cost, every fee included | Split billing — medication plus a membership — is the commonest way a price looks lower than it is |
| The ongoing price, not the first month | Introductory rates are customer-acquisition pricing. You pay the ongoing rate eleven months of twelve |
| Whether the price rises with dose | A programme cheapest at the starting dose can be the most expensive at maintenance |
| What happens if you cancel early | On a committed plan this is the question most likely to cost you money |
| Whether labs and shipping are included | 'All-inclusive' is used loosely. Test it against specifics |
| The annual total | Monthly figures are how this is marketed; annual totals are how it is lived |
Providers differ enormously in what happens then. Some refund the unused portion. Some convert you to the month-to-month rate and bill the difference for months already taken. Some refund nothing. This is the single question people most often forget to ask, and it is the one most likely to cost them money.
Frequently asked questions
What does NAD+ cost through telehealth?
We have not verified a price and will not publish one we cannot substantiate. This page gives you the method to evaluate any quote you are given.
Is NAD+ FDA-approved?
NAD+ is not FDA-approved for any of the uses it is commonly marketed for. Injectable and intravenous NAD+ preparations are compounded products, which the FDA does not review for safety, effectiveness or quality before marketing. Oral NAD+ precursors such as nicotinamide ri
Does NAD+ work?
The honest summary: the biology is real and the clinical evidence is thin. NAD+ levels do decline with age, and that decline is genuinely implicated in mitochondrial dysfunction — this is well-established cell biology. What has not been established is that supplemen
Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration — approved labels and compounding guidance for this molecule.
- PubMed / NIH — indexed human clinical literature.
- ClinicalTrials.gov — registered trials, where they exist.
- Our source hierarchy and pricing-verification methodology.