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IV Therapy Cost Calculator — 2026 IV Drip Pricing Estimator

Get a realistic 2026 estimate for a single IV drip by formula, clinic vs mobile setting, and booster add-ons — then compare quotes from local IV bars and mobile nurses.

Drip Formula

Where & Add-Ons

Frequency & Plan

Location

Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing

Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing

Did You Know?

IV therapy costs $150-$400 per session for most drips in 2026: basic hydration runs $100-$200, a Myers' cocktail $150-$300, vitamin C / immunity $125-$300, and NAD+ infusions $300-$800. Mobile in-home service adds $50-$200, and each booster add-on adds $40-$180.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

How much does IV therapy cost per session in 2026?

Most US patients pay $150-$400 for a single IV drip in 2026. Basic hydration runs $100-$200, a Myers' cocktail $150-$300, vitamin C and immunity blends $125-$300, and premium NAD+ infusions $300-$800. Mobile in-home visits add roughly $50-$200 for travel and a licensed nurse, and each booster add-on stacks $40-$180 on top. Because wellness IV therapy is rarely covered by insurance, the figure on this calculator is what you pay out of pocket.

  • Typical single drip: $150-$400 per session
  • Basic hydration: $100-$200
  • Myers' cocktail: $150-$300
  • Vitamin C / immunity: $125-$300
  • NAD+ infusion: $300-$800
Drip FormulaTypical PriceBest For
Basic hydration$100-$200Dehydration, hangover, travel
Myers' cocktail$150-$300Energy, immunity, general wellness
Vitamin C / immunity$125-$300Cold & flu, immune support
NAD+$300-$800Anti-aging, cellular energy
Q

Is mobile (in-home) IV therapy more expensive than a clinic?

Yes. The same drip costs more when a nurse comes to you. Mobile IV therapy typically adds $50-$200 over the brick-and-mortar IV-bar price to cover travel time, portable equipment, and a one-on-one licensed nurse. In high-cost metros like Los Angeles the convenience premium can reach $150-$200 or more. A clinic hydration drip at $120 might be $200-$280 mobile, while a mobile Myers' cocktail commonly lands at $250-$400. You pay extra for not leaving your home, hotel, or office.

  • Mobile premium over clinic: $50-$200 per visit
  • High-cost metros (LA, NYC): $150-$200+ added
  • Clinic hydration: ~$100-$200; mobile: ~$200-$280
  • Mobile Myers' cocktail: ~$250-$400
  • Premium covers travel, equipment, and a private nurse
Q

How much do IV booster add-ons cost?

Booster add-ons are the easiest way for a $200 drip to become a $350 drip. Common add-ons — glutathione, extra B12, vitamin C, magnesium, MIC (lipotropic) blends, or anti-nausea and anti-inflammatory medications — each add $40-$180 to the base bag. A single glutathione push might be $40-$75, while a high-dose amino or NAD+ booster can be $100-$180. Stacking two or three add-ons quickly pushes a standard wellness drip past $400, so confirm each line item before you book.

  • Typical add-on: $40-$180 each
  • Glutathione or B12 push: $40-$75
  • High-dose amino / NAD+ booster: $100-$180
  • Anti-nausea / anti-inflammatory meds: $25-$60
  • Two to three add-ons can add $120-$400 to one session
Q

Are IV therapy memberships and packages worth it?

If you go more than once a month, usually yes. Memberships and multi-session packages cut the per-session price by roughly 15-30%. A common membership runs about $150 per month and includes one standard drip (often a $200 value) plus a free add-on or IM injection, with unused drips rolling over. Packages of 3-5 drips lower the effective price the same way. For a one-time hangover or travel drip, pay per visit; for recurring wellness or NAD+ courses, a package almost always wins.

  • Membership / package discount: 15-30% per session
  • Typical membership: ~$150/month, one drip + a free add-on
  • Packages of 3-5 drips lower the effective per-drip price
  • Rollover of unused drips is common, no long contracts
  • One-off drip: pay per visit; recurring: buy a package
Q

Does insurance cover IV therapy?

Almost never for wellness use. Elective IV hydration, vitamin drips, Myers' cocktails, and NAD+ are considered wellness or cosmetic services and are paid entirely out of pocket — that is the figure this calculator estimates. Insurance may cover IV fluids only when they are medically necessary and ordered for a diagnosed condition (severe dehydration, chemotherapy support, documented deficiency) and administered in a clinical setting. If a provider claims insurance covers a wellness drip, ask for the billing code in writing before you book.

  • Wellness / vitamin drips: not covered, 100% out of pocket
  • Medically necessary IV fluids: may be covered with a diagnosis
  • NAD+ and Myers' cocktail for wellness: not covered
  • HSA/FSA may apply only with a doctor's letter of medical necessity
  • Get any coverage claim in writing with a billing code

Example Calculations

1Single Myers' cocktail at a clinic, no add-ons (Midwest)

Inputs

Drip formulaMyers' cocktail
SettingClinic / IV bar
Add-onsNone
PlanSingle drip
RegionMidwest

Result

Typical price$170 - $250
Add one booster+$40 - $180
Same drip, mobile$230 - $400

A standard Myers' cocktail at a walk-in IV bar in a mid-cost market sits near the national average. Skipping add-ons and booking in-clinic keeps it toward the middle of the range.

2Mobile hydration drip with one booster (single visit)

Inputs

Drip formulaBasic hydration
SettingMobile (in-home)
Add-onsOne booster (B12)
PlanSingle drip
Sessions1

Result

Typical price$220 - $360
Base hydration (clinic)$100 - $200
Mobile premium+$50 - $200

A basic hydration bag is cheap, but the mobile nurse premium and a single B12 booster roughly double the in-clinic floor for the convenience of an at-home visit.

3NAD+ course on a package / membership (West Coast)

Inputs

Drip formulaNAD+
SettingClinic / IV bar
Add-onsNone
PlanPackage / membership
RegionCalifornia / West Coast

Result

Typical price per session$350 - $650
Single NAD+ (no package)$400 - $800
Package discount15% - 30% off

NAD+ is the most expensive common formula, and patients usually buy a course. Booking a package or membership in a premium metro trims 15-30% off the per-session price versus paying single.

Formulas Used

IV drip price build-up

Session price = Base formula price + Mobile premium + Add-on boosters - Membership discount

IV therapy is priced from the base drip formula, then adjusted up for mobile service and booster add-ons, and down for memberships or packages. Start from the formula midpoint and layer the other drivers on top.

Where:

Base formula price= Hydration $100-$200, Myers' cocktail $150-$300, vitamin C / immunity $125-$300, NAD+ $300-$800
Mobile premium= In-home / hotel visits add $50-$200 over clinic pricing for travel and a private nurse
Add-on boosters= Each glutathione, B12, amino, or medication add-on adds $40-$180
Membership discount= Memberships and packages cut the per-session price by 15-30%

Single drip vs membership break-even

Annual single-visit cost = Drip price x Visits; compare to Membership x 12 + extra-drip fees

To decide between paying per visit and joining a membership, multiply your typical drip price by how often you go, then compare it to twelve months of membership dues plus any per-drip overage.

Where:

Drip price= Your typical per-session price at single-visit (retail) pricing
Visits= How many drips per year you realistically get
Membership x 12= Monthly dues annualized, often ~$150/month including one drip
Extra-drip fees= Discounted member price for any drips beyond the one included each month

IV Therapy Costs in 2026: What an IV Drip Actually Costs

1

What IV Therapy Costs in 2026

IV therapy has moved from hospital corridors to strip-mall drip bars, med spas, and mobile nurses who show up at your hotel room. With that convenience comes a price tag that is almost always paid out of pocket, because insurers treat elective hydration and vitamin drips as wellness rather than medicine. In 2026, a single IV drip runs $150 to $400 for most people, with basic hydration at the floor and premium NAD+ infusions reaching $300 to $800 on their own.

The single biggest driver is the drip formula. A plain saline-and-electrolyte hydration bag is the cheapest at $100 to $200. Step up to a Myers' cocktail — the classic blend of magnesium, calcium, B vitamins, and vitamin C — and you are looking at $150 to $300. Vitamin C and immunity blends land in a similar $125 to $300 band. NAD+, marketed for cellular energy and anti-aging, is in a class of its own at $300 to $800 because the compound itself is expensive and the infusion runs long. Use the calculator above to land on a figure for your formula and setting, then read on to see what each input is really pricing.

It helps to know what the quoted price does and does not include. A base price covers the bag, the nurse's time to place the line, and the standard ingredients in that formula. It usually excludes booster add-ons, the mobile travel fee, and gratuity for a mobile nurse. When you compare two quotes, confirm whether the price you were told is the all-in number or just the base bag, because add-ons and travel can swing the real total by $150 or more.

IV drip pricing by formula, US, 2026.
Drip FormulaTypical PriceWhat It TargetsBest For
Basic hydration$100-$200Fluids + electrolytesHangover, travel, illness
Myers' cocktail$150-$300Vitamins + mineralsEnergy, immunity, wellness
Vitamin C / immunity$125-$300Immune supportCold & flu season
NAD+$300-$800Cellular energyAnti-aging, recovery

Wellness IV therapy is almost never covered by insurance. The number on this calculator is what you pay out of pocket — only medically necessary IV fluids ordered for a diagnosed condition stand any chance of coverage.

2

Five Factors That Move Your IV Drip Price

Two people can walk out of the same IV bar having paid wildly different amounts, and the variance is rarely random. Providers price from a base formula and then adjust for the choices you make at intake. The more add-ons, the more convenience, and the higher-cost the metro, the more you pay — and because there is no insurer setting a rate, the retail price is whatever the local market will bear.

Read every quote against the list below. If a provider cannot tell you the base bag price separately from the add-ons and the travel fee, that is a sign the all-in number will keep climbing once you are in the chair.

Ask for the base bag price before any add-ons. The most common surprise on an IV invoice is a stack of $40-$180 boosters the front desk suggested after you sat down, turning a $200 drip into a $400 one.

  • Drip formula: hydration ($100-$200), Myers' cocktail ($150-$300), immunity ($125-$300), or NAD+ ($300-$800)
  • Setting: mobile in-home service adds $50-$200 over the same drip at a clinic
  • Booster add-ons: glutathione, B12, amino blends, or medications add $40-$180 each
  • Region and labor rate: high-cost metros like LA, NYC, and Miami run well above the national average
  • Membership or package: recurring plans cut the per-session price by 15-30%
3

Clinic vs Mobile (In-Home) IV Therapy

The same drip is priced two different ways depending on where you get it. A brick-and-mortar IV bar or med spa is the cheaper option because the clinic treats several patients per hour from one location. A mobile service sends a licensed nurse to your home, hotel, or office, and that one-on-one travel time is the single most expensive line item after the formula itself. Expect mobile to add $50 to $200 over the clinic price, and more in dense, high-cost metros.

Whether the premium is worth it depends on why you are getting the drip. If you are dehydrated from a stomach bug or a brutal hangover, the whole point is not having to leave the house, and the mobile premium buys exactly that. If you are getting a routine wellness or NAD+ drip on a schedule, the clinic is almost always the better value, and many drip bars have comfortable lounges built for the hour-long sit. The table below shows how a few common formulas compare across the two settings.

There is also a logistics layer most first-timers miss. Mobile nurses often have a minimum order or a flat trip fee, charge more for late-night or same-day calls, and expect a gratuity on top — none of which appears in the headline drip price. A clinic visit has none of that, but you trade it for travel, parking, and a wait if they are busy. Factor your own time into the comparison, not just the sticker price.

Clinic vs mobile IV pricing by formula, 2026.
FormulaClinic PriceMobile PriceMobile Premium
Basic hydration$100-$200$170-$300+$50-$120
Myers' cocktail$150-$300$220-$420+$70-$150
NAD+$300-$800$400-$1,000+$100-$200

Mobile services often have a trip minimum and expect a tip on top of the drip price. Ask whether the quote includes the travel fee and whether gratuity is added automatically before you book the visit.

4

Add-Ons, Memberships, and How to Save

Once you know your base formula price, the two levers that move your real spend are add-ons (which raise it) and memberships (which lower it). Booster add-ons are where IV bars make their margin: a glutathione push, an extra B12, a high-dose vitamin C, a MIC lipotropic blend, or an anti-nausea medication each tacks $40 to $180 onto the base bag. Stack two or three and a standard wellness drip quietly crosses $400. None of these are wrong to buy, but you should choose them deliberately rather than nodding along at the front desk.

Memberships and packages run the other direction. A typical membership is around $150 a month and includes one standard drip — often a $200 value — plus a free add-on or IM injection, with unused drips rolling over and no long-term contract. Packages of three to five drips work the same way, trimming the effective per-session price by 15 to 30 percent. The math is simple: if you get a drip more than once a month, a membership almost always beats single-visit pricing, and the water intake calculator is a free first step to confirm you actually need recurring hydration before you commit.

Before you spend anything, rule out the cheaper baseline. A lot of what people chase with a hydration drip — fatigue, headache, sluggishness — responds just as well to oral fluids, electrolytes, and sleep, none of which cost $200. IV therapy delivers vitamins faster and at higher doses, but for routine wellness the marginal benefit over a good diet and water is debated. Treat the drip as an occasional convenience or a targeted recovery tool, not a substitute for the basics, and your annual spend stays sane.

If you get a drip more than once a month, price out a membership before paying single-visit rates. At ~$150/month including one drip and an add-on, recurring users routinely save 15-30% versus retail.

  • Add-ons: glutathione, B12, amino blends, or meds add $40-$180 each
  • Membership: ~$150/month, one drip plus a free add-on, drips roll over
  • Package of 3-5 drips: 15-30% lower effective per-session price
  • Single visit: best for one-off hangover, travel, or illness drips
  • Free baseline first: oral fluids, electrolytes, and sleep cost nothing
5

How to Choose an IV Therapy Provider

The cheapest IV drip is the one administered safely by a qualified provider, so vet on credentials and transparency before price. IV therapy is a medical procedure: a registered nurse or paramedic should place the line under the supervision of a physician or nurse practitioner, and a licensed clinician should review your intake for allergies, kidney issues, and medication interactions. A provider who skips the health screen to get you dripping faster is cutting the wrong corner.

Get the full price in writing before you sit down. Ask for the base bag price, the cost of each add-on you are considering, the mobile travel fee if applicable, and whether gratuity is automatic. Compare that all-in number across two or three local providers, because the same Myers' cocktail can vary by $100 between an upscale med spa and a no-frills drip bar a mile away. The steps below walk the decision in order, and the rest of the health calculators help you sanity-check whether you need the drip at all.

Finally, match the formula to a real goal rather than the most impressive menu item. Basic hydration handles dehydration and hangovers. A Myers' cocktail suits general wellness and immune support. NAD+ is a premium, long-infusion product for people specifically chasing cellular-energy or recovery benefits, and it should never be an impulse buy at three to eight hundred dollars a session. Knowing why you are there keeps the up-sell in check and your spending tied to something you actually wanted.

Never pick an IV provider on price alone. A drip placed without a proper health screen or clinical oversight is a safety risk that no $50 discount makes worthwhile.

  1. 1

    Confirm clinical oversight

    Verify an RN or paramedic places the line under physician or NP supervision, with a real intake health screen.

  2. 2

    Get the all-in price in writing

    Ask for the base bag, each add-on, the mobile travel fee, and whether gratuity is automatic before you commit.

  3. 3

    Compare two to three providers

    The same drip can vary by $100 between a med spa and a budget drip bar in the same town.

  4. 4

    Match the formula to a goal

    Hydration for dehydration, Myers' for wellness, NAD+ only when you specifically want it - not as an up-sell.

  5. 5

    Price a membership if recurring

    If you will go monthly or more, compare a ~$150/month membership against single-visit pricing before paying retail.

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Last Updated: Jun 18, 2026

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.

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