Is IV Therapy Worth It? What Nurses See That WebMD Won't Tell You

Minimalist IV therapy icon set featuring customizable add-ons for hydration, detox, and recovery.
Published On:
April 14, 2026
Author:
Kyle Larson, RN, BSN
Medical Reviewer:
Dr. Fatima Hussein, MD
Last Updated:
April 14, 2026

You've been down the rabbit hole. Fifteen browser tabs open, and none of them agree with each other. The Mayo Clinic is skeptical. The wellness influencer on Instagram is convinced IV therapy changed her life. Reddit is split between people calling it a scam and people who swear they recovered from a brutal week in Vegas in two hours flat.

You're not gullible. You're also genuinely run-down.

Maybe you're a producer in Silver Lake who just wrapped a shoot in three time zones and your body clock is completely wrong. Maybe you ran Runyon Canyon on Saturday morning and pushed too hard, and now your legs feel like sandbags and your head is pounding. Maybe you have a wedding in six days and you cannot afford to feel like this.

You want an honest answer to a reasonable question: is IV therapy worth it?

The honest answer is that it depends on who you are, what you're dealing with, and what you're comparing it to. This article won't hype you into booking a drip you don't need. It will give you what nurses actually see, what the research does and doesn't support, what a session costs versus what it compares to, and who gets the most value from mobile IV therapy in Los Angeles.

By the end, you'll have enough to make a clear decision for yourself.

What IV Therapy Is (and Isn't)

IV therapy delivers fluids, electrolytes, vitamins, and minerals directly into your bloodstream through a small catheter placed in a vein, usually in your arm. That's the mechanism. Nothing more complicated than that.

A standard IV bag starts with a saline base, typically 500mL to 1,000mL of normal saline or lactated Ringer's solution. That saline base rehydrates you and restores electrolyte balance. From there, providers add compounds based on the purpose of the drip. A Myers Cocktail, for example, includes magnesium, calcium, B vitamins, and vitamin C. An immune-focused drip may include higher-dose vitamin C and zinc. NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) requires its own dedicated infusion because of how the compound behaves in the body.

What IV therapy is not: it's not a medication, not a cure, not a diagnostic tool, and not a substitute for working with your doctor on underlying conditions. A well-formulated IV drip is a delivery method designed to support hydration and micronutrient availability. The distinction matters.

The reason that delivery method has appeal comes down to bioavailability. When you swallow a vitamin C capsule, your digestive system processes it first. Absorption rates for oral vitamin C top out around 70-90% at low doses and drop significantly as dose increases. Your gut has a ceiling. IV delivery bypasses that ceiling entirely. What goes into the bag goes into your blood.

This is the core argument for IV therapy, and it's the reason the comparison between oral supplements and IV therapy is worth examining carefully. If you want to understand that comparison in depth, our IV therapy vs oral supplements breakdown covers the bioavailability data in detail.

For people with healthy digestion and no particular nutrient deficiencies, oral supplementation handles most needs. For people under acute physical stress, recovering from illness, dealing with malabsorption, or trying to optimize before a high-stakes event, the IV route offers a different profile of delivery speed and completeness.

What the Research Shows

Let's be straight about the evidence, because the research on IV vitamin therapy is genuinely mixed, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest.

Intravenous hydration for dehydration is well-supported. Emergency departments and hospitals use IV saline daily because oral rehydration is sometimes too slow, insufficient, or not possible. That part of the science is not in question.

For specific micronutrients delivered by IV, the picture is more complicated. High-dose intravenous vitamin C has been studied in cancer supportive care settings, with some trials suggesting it may help reduce inflammation markers and support quality of life during treatment. These are not claims that IV vitamin C cures cancer. They reflect that researchers have found measurable effects worth investigating further.

B12 delivered by injection or IV has clear support in clinical settings for people with B12 deficiency or absorption disorders like pernicious anemia. The research here is solid. For people without deficiency, the evidence that IV B12 produces noticeable benefits is thinner.

NAD+ infusion research is early but interesting. Preclinical studies and some human trials suggest NAD+ may support cellular energy metabolism and has been used in addiction medicine for years. Functional medicine practitioners report consistent patient feedback on cognitive clarity and energy following NAD+ sessions, though large-scale randomized controlled trials are limited. If you want to understand the specific evidence on this, our NAD+ IV therapy guide covers what's known and what's still being studied.

For hangovers and post-event recovery, the evidence base is largely anecdotal but the mechanism is logical. Alcohol causes dehydration, depletes B vitamins, and produces acetaldehyde that the liver needs to clear. An IV drip that addresses hydration and B-vitamin depletion may help your body move through that recovery faster. Sports medicine practitioners have observed similar patterns with post-endurance recovery.

The honest summary: IV therapy is not FDA-approved for wellness use, RCTs on most wellness applications are limited, and the evidence varies by specific compound and use case. What functional medicine practitioners and nurses observe in practice often outpaces what has been formally studied. That gap is real, and you should factor it into your decision.

Who Gets the Most Value

Clinical evidence aside, nurses who do mobile IV work see patterns over time. Certain types of people report consistent, noticeable results. Others don't. Here are the profiles that tend to get the most value from IV therapy in Los Angeles.

The Frequent Flyer Through LAX

You're on the road every week or every other week. Long-haul flights are brutal on hydration. Cabin pressure keeps the air dry, alcohol on the plane makes it worse, and your sleep schedule is permanently disrupted. By the time you land at LAX and drive to your hotel in El Segundo or to a client meeting in Century City, your body is running on fumes. A hydration IV with B vitamins may help reset the baseline faster than two days of rest would. For people who can't afford two days of rest, that speed matters.

The Weekend Athlete

You work a desk job Monday through Friday and go hard on weekends. Santa Monica stairs. A long beach run from Venice to Manhattan Beach. A Spartan race in Malibu. Your body doesn't have the recovery infrastructure of a professional athlete, but you're asking it to perform like one. Post-event IV hydration may help accelerate muscle recovery and reduce next-day fatigue, which means you can function on Monday instead of limping through it. Our dehydration guide explains why LA's dry heat and elevation changes hit harder than most people expect.

The Entertainment Professional Before a Big Event

Awards season is its own kind of stress. So is a film premiere, a press tour, or a product launch with three hundred people watching. Professionals in entertainment and media often book IV sessions in the week leading up to major events because they want to look and feel their best under production lights. A Beauty drip designed to support skin hydration and collagen precursors is popular before on-camera work. This isn't magic, but if you're already managing everything else and your appearance affects your income, a $349 drip the week before an Emmys event is a different kind of calculation.

People with Absorption Issues

If you have IBS, Crohn's disease, celiac disease, or have had gastrointestinal surgery, your gut's ability to absorb nutrients from food and supplements may be compromised. IV delivery bypasses the gut entirely. For this group, IV therapy isn't a wellness preference but a more efficient delivery route for nutrients their bodies need. This is worth discussing with your GI specialist or primary care physician.

The Post-COVID or Chronic Fatigue Patient

Some people dealing with post-viral fatigue, including long COVID, report improvement after IV sessions focused on NAD+, B vitamins, and hydration. This is an area where anecdotal reports are strong but the clinical research is still developing. Nurses working in mobile IV see this group regularly in Los Angeles, particularly in neighborhoods like WeHo and Los Feliz where health-conscious residents are proactive about tracking their symptoms.

The Person Who Overdid the Weekend

You know who you are. A bachelorette in Santa Barbara that turned into two days. A birthday dinner in Beverly Hills that became five bottles of wine and no water. A music festival in the desert. The hangover IV exists because the mechanism makes sense: get fluids and B vitamins in fast and let the body clear acetaldehyde with some hydration support. Nurses report this as one of the most consistently positive use cases for mobile IV, particularly when the session happens within the first few hours of waking up rough.

Who Should Skip It

Honest information cuts both ways. Some people should not get IV therapy, and some people won't benefit enough to justify the cost.

People with no symptoms who are looking for prevention. If you feel fine, sleep well, eat reasonably well, and have no upcoming physical or professional stress events, IV therapy is unlikely to produce noticeable results. You may feel nothing. That's not a malfunction. It means your body didn't need what was in the bag.

People with kidney disease or compromised kidney function. Your kidneys filter excess minerals and fluid. If they aren't working well, IV fluid and high-dose vitamins can create problems. Talk to your nephrologist before considering IV therapy.

People with congestive heart failure or certain cardiac conditions. Extra IV fluid adds volume to your circulatory system. For people whose hearts are already struggling to manage fluid load, this is a contraindication. A licensed nurse will screen for this before starting any session.

People who can't commit to it for their stated goal. If your goal is energy and cognitive clarity and you're hoping one NAD+ session fixes a six-month burnout, the math won't work. Some goals require repeated sessions to build toward. If the budget doesn't support that, it's worth being realistic.

People on medications that interact with IV vitamins. High-dose vitamin C can affect certain cancer treatments. Magnesium interacts with some cardiac medications. Always disclose your current medications to the nurse before a session. A qualified provider will not proceed if there's a contraindication.

The Cost Equation

Instadrip's current pricing in Los Angeles:

  • Hydration IV: $299
  • Energy Boost: $325
  • Hangover: $349
  • Myers Cocktail: $349
  • Immune Boost: $349
  • Beauty: $349
  • NAD+: $699
  • Add-ons: first one free, $50 each additional

For context, an urgent care visit in Los Angeles with a copay runs $50-$150, but you're waiting in a room with other sick people, you're not getting IV fluids unless they determine clinical necessity, and the appointment may take two hours. An ER visit for dehydration can run $800-$2,000+ after insurance, depending on what they bill for observation and supplies.

Lost productivity is harder to put a number on, but if you're a freelancer, a contractor, or someone who bills by the hour, a day of functioning at 40% capacity costs real money. For someone who charges $300/hour consulting rates, a four-hour day at half capacity represents $600 in reduced output. Measured against a $349 hangover drip that may restore full function by noon, the comparison looks different than it does in the abstract.

That's not a sales pitch. That's the math. You can run your own version of it with your own numbers. Our IV therapy pricing guide covers how pricing compares across LA providers if you want to do a broader comparison.

What Your Session Looks Like

If you've never had a mobile IV session, here's what to expect from an Instadrip appointment.

You book online or by phone. You choose your drip, pick a time, and provide your location. Instadrip serves homes, hotel rooms, offices, and event venues across Los Angeles. A licensed RN is assigned to your appointment.

The nurse arrives with all supplies. You don't need to do anything to prepare the space. A flat surface to sit or lie down comfortably is enough. The nurse reviews your health history, confirms there are no contraindications, answers any questions you have, and selects an appropriate vein, usually in the forearm or the back of the hand.

The IV is placed with a small catheter. Most people describe placement as a brief pinch. The drip runs for 30 to 60 minutes depending on the formula and your vein tolerance. NAD+ sessions run longer because the compound needs to infuse slowly to avoid side effects like chest pressure or nausea. The nurse stays with you throughout the session.

When the bag is done, the nurse removes the catheter, applies pressure to the site, and gives you aftercare instructions. The whole experience from arrival to departure typically runs 45 to 90 minutes.

You don't need to drive anywhere, park anywhere, or wait in a lobby. The service comes to you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is IV therapy worth the money?

For some people and some situations, yes. For others, no. The people who tend to find it worth the cost are those dealing with acute physical stress, dehydration, post-event recovery, or documented nutrient absorption issues. People who feel fine and are looking for a general health boost without any specific symptom often notice less. The cost-benefit calculation changes depending on your situation, what you're comparing the cost to, and how much your time and productivity are worth when you're not functioning well.

How long do IV therapy results last?

Hydration effects typically last 24 to 48 hours. Vitamin and mineral effects vary. B12 has a longer half-life than some other B vitamins. NAD+ results for cognitive clarity and energy are often reported lasting several days to a week after a full session. Hangover recovery is acute, meaning you're treating a short-term condition and the results reflect that. If you're using IV therapy for ongoing energy support or wellness goals, most practitioners suggest spacing sessions two to four weeks apart rather than treating it as a one-time fix.

Is IV therapy safe? What are the side effects?

When administered by a licensed nurse with proper screening, IV therapy carries a low risk profile for most healthy adults. Possible side effects include mild bruising or soreness at the insertion site, a cool sensation in the arm as the fluid runs, and occasional lightheadedness if you're very dehydrated or haven't eaten. NAD+ can cause transient chest pressure, flushing, or nausea if infused too quickly, which is why licensed nurses control the drip rate carefully. Serious complications like infection or air embolism are rare and preventable with proper sterile technique. The nurse will screen for contraindications before starting.

Can IV therapy help with hangovers?

The mechanism supports it. Alcohol depletes B vitamins, causes significant dehydration, and produces acetaldehyde as a metabolic byproduct. An IV drip that restores fluids and B vitamins may help your body process the aftermath faster. Most people who receive a hangover drip report feeling meaningfully better within an hour or two. This is one of the most consistently reported use cases among mobile IV nurses.

How often should you get IV therapy?

Frequency depends on your goal. For acute recovery from a specific event (illness, travel, hangover, post-race), a single session is appropriate. For ongoing wellness support, energy optimization, or NAD+ therapy, most functional medicine practitioners suggest monthly sessions as a starting point, with adjustments based on how you respond. Frequent flyers or people in high-demand professional roles sometimes schedule sessions every two to three weeks during peak periods.

Do I need a prescription for IV therapy in California?

In California, mobile IV therapy requires medical oversight. Instadrip operates under physician supervision, which means a medical director reviews protocols and the nurses are licensed RNs. You don't need your own prescription or a referral from your personal doctor. However, the nurse will review your health history and current medications before administering any drip.

What's the difference between mobile IV and a clinic IV?

The compounds and the nurse qualifications are typically the same. The primary difference is location and environment. A clinic requires you to travel, park, and sit in a waiting room. Mobile IV comes to wherever you are. For someone dealing with a hangover, post-flight exhaustion, or recovery from a physical event, not having to drive across town is a meaningful advantage.

Can I get IV therapy if I'm on medications?

Many people on medications receive IV therapy without issues. The important step is disclosure. Tell your nurse every medication you take, including supplements, before the session begins. Certain combinations require caution. High-dose magnesium can interact with some cardiac medications. High-dose vitamin C may affect certain chemotherapy drugs. A qualified nurse will flag any potential interactions and may decline to proceed if the risk profile isn't clear.

Book Same-Day in Los Angeles

Instadrip sends licensed RNs directly to your home, hotel, or office across Los Angeles. No waiting rooms, no parking, no driving when you don't feel well. Sessions take 45 to 90 minutes and can often be scheduled same day.

If you're ready to book or want to read patient reviews before you decide, find Instadrip on Google Maps for reviews and same-day booking. You can also visit instadrip.com to browse drip options, check pricing, and confirm availability in your area.

Written by Kyle Larson, RN, BSN. Medical Review: Dr. Fatima Hussein, MD.

About the Author

Kyle Larson, RN, BSN, is the founder of Instadrip, a mobile IV vitamin therapy company serving Los Angeles. As a registered nurse, Kyle brings clinical expertise to every treatment and is passionate about making IV therapy accessible and convenient for LA residents.

About the Reviewer

Dr. Fatima Hussein, MD, serves as Instadrip's Medical Director. She oversees all IV therapy protocols and reviews all health content published on instadrip.com to ensure medical accuracy.

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© 2026 Instadrip Nursing Corporation. All right reserved.
This website and our services are not intended to regulate or encourage self-management of medically diagnosed alignments or behaviors. The services provided by Instadrip Nursing Corporation have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. The material on this website and its related social media accounts is for information purposes only and should not be taken as medical advice. We recommend you contact your primary care physician prior to starting any new vitamin therapy such as an IV vitamin drip, push, or shot. Our products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. Our IVs are manufactured in an FDA approved Pharmacy in the USA.