IV Nutrient Therapy at Longevity Clinics: Benefits, Costs, and Safety Questions
IV nutrient therapy can be clinically useful for selected deficiencies, but anti-aging claims are weaker. Here is how to compare clinics, costs, and safety protocols.
“We treat longevity-clinic claims as medical decisions, not wellness slogans: every guide separates peer-reviewed evidence, regulatory status, pricing transparency, and patient safety before recommending a clinic.” — World Longevity Clinics Editorial Team
IV nutrient therapy is now common in longevity clinics, biohacking centers, and medical-wellness resorts. The basic premise is simple: vitamins, minerals, amino acids, antioxidants, electrolytes, or NAD+-adjacent ingredients are infused directly into a vein, bypassing digestion and delivering a measured dose into the bloodstream.1
The clinical question is not whether IV delivery works. Hospitals use IV fluids, parenteral nutrition, iron infusions, and injectable vitamins for defined reasons. The buyer question is narrower: when does a drip solve a real problem, and when is it an expensive wellness ritual?
The short answer: IV nutrient therapy can make sense when a clinician is correcting a documented deficiency, treating dehydration, working around poor absorption, or integrating it into a medically supervised program. It is weaker when sold as a general “detox,” “immune boost,” or rejuvenation shortcut for someone with normal labs.2
This guide is not personal medical advice. Acute dehydration, chest pain, fainting, severe infection symptoms, suspected allergic reactions, or questions during cancer treatment belong with a qualified clinician or urgent care, not a wellness drip menu.
What IV nutrient therapy usually includes
In a longevity-clinic setting, IV nutrient therapy usually means one of four things:
| Category | Typical contents | Strongest use case | Evidence caution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hydration and electrolytes | Saline, electrolytes, sometimes magnesium | Acute dehydration or recovery context | Not a longevity treatment by itself |
| Micronutrient correction | B vitamins, vitamin C, magnesium, trace minerals | Documented deficiency or absorption issue | Oral treatment can be enough for many deficiencies |
| Performance or wellness drips | Myers-style cocktails, amino acids, glutathione | Convenience add-on after clinician review | Many claimed benefits remain under-studied |
| NAD+ or cellular-health protocols | NAD+, NR/NMN-related protocols, antioxidants | Specialist longevity program with monitoring | See our NAD+ guide for the separate evidence debate |
Myers-style cocktails usually refer to clinic-blended IVs built around combinations of vitamins and minerals; “banana bag” style infusions are closer to defined clinical hydration and deficiency contexts than to longevity optimization.3 Claims such as detox, immunity, glow, energy, and anti-aging should be treated as claims requiring evidence, not as default benefits.
Cleveland Clinic summarizes the appeal clearly: IV delivery gets nutrients into the bloodstream quickly, but evidence for broad wellness benefits remains limited.1 Mayo Clinic Press makes a similar distinction: IV vitamins can be appropriate when they meet a medical nutritional need, but the evidence for healthy people paying for broad wellness claims is thin.2
That distinction matters because longevity clinics often mix preventive medicine with optional add-ons. The serious clinic starts with labs, medical history, medication review, and follow-up. The weak clinic starts with a menu.
Evidence: deficiency correction is not the same as anti-aging
The strongest case for IV nutrients is not “anti-aging.” It is targeted correction.
Vitamin B12 is a useful example. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes that B12 deficiency can arise from malabsorption, pernicious anemia, gastrointestinal surgery, vegetarian or vegan diets, and certain medications. It can cause anemia and neurological symptoms, and injections are often used when absorption is the problem.4 That is a medical indication, not a luxury claim.
Vitamin C is different. It is essential, but NIH lists adult tolerable upper intake at 2,000 mg per day and notes gastrointestinal, kidney-stone, and iron-overload concerns in susceptible people.5 A clinic offering high-dose vitamin C should explain who it excludes and which labs it checks. A review in Nutrients reaches the same general conclusion: vitamin C is physiologically important, but documented indications are narrower than marketing often implies.6
That same safety logic applies to G6PD deficiency risk, especially when a clinic proposes high-dose vitamin C. If the protocol is far above routine nutrition support, the clinic should be able to explain screening, exclusions, and monitoring rather than treating the dose as a generic wellness upgrade.6
Magnesium is another example. NIH says healthy kidneys remove excess magnesium from food, but supplemental or medication-level magnesium above upper limits can cause diarrhea, nausea, cramping, and, at extreme intakes, rhythm problems.7 If magnesium is part of a drip, the clinic should care about kidney function, medications, and dose.
There is no good human evidence that IV nutrient therapy extends lifespan, reverses biological age, or produces durable anti-aging outcomes in healthy people with normal labs. The more a clinic leans on age-reversal language, the more evidence and medical governance you should demand.
What it costs
Published pricing is inconsistent. In the WLC data set, IV therapy is usually a session add-on, membership perk, or component of a residential program.
Prices and inclusions change frequently. Public clinic pages and WLC profiles were checked on June 11, 2026; ask clinics for itemized written pricing, the exact formula, who prescribes it, and what follow-up costs extra before booking.
| Clinic model | Examples | Price signal |
|---|---|---|
| A-la-carte biohacking center | Next Health, 10X Health | WLC profile estimate and current public promo signals suggest IV sessions can start in the low hundreds; verify exact formula and checkout pricing |
| Residential longevity program | Progevita, Clinique La Prairie, Lanserhof | WLC profile estimate: usually bundled inside multi-day programs rather than quoted per drip |
| Medical-wellness resort | SHA Wellness Clinic, RoseBar Ibiza | WLC profile estimate: often part of program menus or personalized protocols |
| Networked recovery and biohacking | The Longevity Suite, Chi Longevity | WLC profile estimate: session or program pricing depends on geography and protocol |
Next Health’s public pages describe twice-monthly IV therapy inside its Premier IV Therapy Membership and recommend micronutrient testing before personalized formulas.8 Lanserhof at The Arts Club lists vitamin infusion therapy and formulas such as NAD+, Life Infusion, Fitness, and Immune Support.9 SHA’s Revitalising Medicine page describes serum therapy as an intravenous customized combination of substances, vitamins, and minerals.10 10X Health lists customized IV drips tailored to symptoms and wellness goals.11
For Progevita, the relevant buyer point is not a per-drip quote. In the WLC profile, Progevita is a residential diagnostics-plus-treatment clinic where IV nutrient therapy sits alongside diagnostics, NAD+ IV therapy, hyperbaric oxygen, and regenerative options. That makes it a different decision from a walk-in drip bar: you are paying for clinical context, not just a bag of nutrients.
Safety checklist before booking
Before paying for IV nutrient therapy at any longevity clinic, ask:
- What labs justify the formula? At minimum, the clinic should explain whether it is correcting a deficiency, supporting a defined medical goal, or offering a convenience wellness add-on.
- Who prescribes the drip? FDA has specifically raised concerns about IV hydration clinics, med spas, and mobile IV services where sterile compounding or patient-specific prescribing may be weak.12 ACCP recommends physician approval for a valid medical reason and administration by appropriately licensed and trained staff.13
- Where is the infusion prepared? Sterility is not a detail. Ask whether the IV is compounded by a licensed pharmacy or under documented sterile compounding standards, and whether the clinic uses pharmaceutical-grade fluids and vitamins.1213
- Who is physically present? Ask whether a clinician is on site during the infusion and what happens if there is a reaction, fainting, infection concern, fluid overload, or a cardiac event. The clinic should be able to describe emergency protocol and equipment, not just a lounge experience.13
- What exactly is in the bag? Ask for itemized ingredients, doses, electrolytes, medications, osmolarity-relevant details, and whether any add-ons such as glutathione, high-dose vitamin C, ketorolac, or anti-nausea medication change risk.
- What conditions change the protocol? Kidney disease, kidney-stone history, heart failure or fluid restriction, pregnancy, cancer treatment, iron overload risk, blood disorders, allergies, current medications, and medication interactions should all trigger medical review.
- Is high-dose vitamin C involved? If yes, ask about kidney function, stone risk, iron overload risk, and whether G6PD screening is appropriate in your case.
- What happens after the drip? A good clinic links the treatment to repeat labs, symptoms, nutrition, medications, and follow-up. A weak clinic sells a feeling and sends you home.
How to compare longevity clinics offering IV therapy
Use IV nutrient therapy as a signal, not a destination. The best clinic is rarely the one with the most exotic formula. It is the one that can explain why the intervention belongs in your plan.
For a broad view, start with the WLC clinic ranking and Find Your Clinic tool. If you want treatment-forward European programs, compare Progevita, Lanserhof, Clinique La Prairie, and SHA Wellness Clinic on diagnostics, medical oversight, and what is included. For faster U.S. access, Next Health and 10X Health are more convenient, but a-la-carte menus require a stricter evidence filter.
| Clinic model | Best fit | Caution |
|---|---|---|
| Residential longevity clinic | IV therapy is part of diagnostics, physician review, and follow-up | Do not pay a resort premium if the drip is still generic |
| A-la-carte biohacking center | Convenience, recovery context, and transparent single-session pricing | Menu-driven overuse is easier when testing and follow-up are thin |
| Medical-wellness resort | Integrated wellness stay with optional medical services | Separate spa programming from medical decision-making |
If you are also considering peptide therapy or NAD+ therapy, keep the categories separate. A clinic may be careful with IV nutrients and overconfident with peptides, or evidence-aware on NAD+ but too promotional on “detox.” Evaluate each intervention on its own evidence, regulatory status, and monitoring plan.
Bottom line
IV nutrient therapy is not nonsense, but it is often oversold. In the right context, it can correct deficiencies, solve absorption problems, support hydration, or fit into a supervised longevity program. In the wrong context, it is a high-margin wellness add-on with weak evidence for anti-aging claims.
The practical rule is simple: the more ambitious the claim, the more medical structure you should demand. Labs first. Licensed clinician oversight. Clear dosing. Sterile preparation. Contraindication screening. Follow-up. If a clinic cannot explain those basics, use the WLC comparison tool before booking.
FAQ
Is IV nutrient therapy evidence-based?
It depends on the indication. IV or injectable nutrients can be evidence-based for documented deficiencies, dehydration, malabsorption, or specific medical settings. Evidence is weaker for broad claims such as detox, immunity, energy, and anti-aging in healthy people.
How much does IV nutrient therapy cost?
A-la-carte wellness drips often start in the low hundreds of dollars or euros per session. Residential longevity clinics usually bundle IV therapy into broader programs. Exact pricing depends on formula, testing, oversight, location, and follow-up.
Who should avoid IV nutrient therapy or ask a doctor first?
People with kidney disease, kidney-stone history, heart failure, fluid restrictions, pregnancy, cancer treatment, G6PD deficiency risk, significant medication use, or a history of infusion reactions should speak with a qualified clinician before booking.
Is IV therapy better than oral supplements?
Not automatically. IV delivery bypasses digestion and can be useful when absorption is impaired or rapid delivery is medically appropriate. For many routine deficiencies, oral supplementation, diet, or injections may be simpler, cheaper, and sufficient.
Footnotes
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Cleveland Clinic, “IV Vitamin Therapy: Does It Work?” https://health.clevelandclinic.org/iv-vitamin-therapy ↩ ↩2
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Mayo Clinic Press, “IV Vitamin therapy: Understanding the lack of proven benefit and potential risks of this health fad.” https://mcpress.mayoclinic.org/living-well/iv-vitamin-therapy-understanding-the-lack-of-proven-benefit-and-potential-risks-of-this-health-fad/ ↩ ↩2
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Poison Control, “Can a Myers’ cocktail help me?” https://www.poison.org/articles/can-a-myers-cocktail-help-me ↩
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NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, “Vitamin B12 - Health Professional Fact Sheet.” https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminB12-HealthProfessional/ ↩
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NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, “Vitamin C - Health Professional Fact Sheet.” https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminC-HealthProfessional/ ↩
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Dosedel M, et al. “Vitamin C - Sources, Physiological Role, Kinetics, Deficiency, Use, Toxicity, and Determination.” Nutrients (2021). https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13020615 ↩ ↩2
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NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, “Magnesium - Consumer Fact Sheet.” https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Magnesium-Consumer/ ↩
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Next Health, “IV Therapy Combo.” https://www.next-health.com/product/iv-therapy-combo ↩
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Lanserhof at The Arts Club, “Vitamin Infusion Therapy.” https://lhtac.com/services/vitamin-infusion-therapy/ ↩
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SHA Wellness Clinic, “Revitalising Medicine.” https://shawellness.com/en/sha-integrative-method/longevity-and-functional-medicine/revitalising-medicine/ ↩
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10X Health, “IV Services.” https://10xhealthsystem.com/ivservices/ ↩
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U.S. Food and Drug Administration, “FDA highlights concerns with compounding of drug products by medical offices and clinics under insanitary conditions.” https://www.fda.gov/drugs/human-drug-compounding/fda-highlights-concerns-compounding-drug-products-medical-offices-and-clinics-under-insanitary ↩ ↩2
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American College of Clinical Pharmacology, “ACCP Position Statement on Hydration and Vitamin Infusion Clinics.” Journal of Clinical Pharmacology (2024). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37792799/ ↩ ↩2 ↩3