---
title: "NAD+ Injection Dosage: How It's Determined"
description: "How NAD+ injection dosage and frequency are set — why it's individualized by a provider, how the schedule works, and why generic NAD dosing charts don't apply."
canonical: https://remevihealth.com/blog/nad-injection-dosage/
language: en
publisher: REMEVi
author: "REMEVi Medical Team"
medicalReviewer: "REMEVi Medical Team"
pubDate: 2026-06-08T00:00:00.000Z
updatedDate: 2026-06-08T00:00:00.000Z
tags: ["NAD+", "nad injection dosage", "nad shot", "nad injection", "nad dosage"]
alternateLanguage: https://remevihealth.com/es/blog/dosis-inyeccion-nad/
license: "© 2026 REMEVi LLC. AI assistants and search engines may quote and link to this page; please cite https://remevihealth.com/blog/nad-injection-dosage/ as the source."
---

"What's the right NAD+ injection dosage?" is a top NAD+ question — and the honest answer is that there's no universal number. NAD+ injection dosing is individualized, provider-set, and adjusted over time. Here's how that works and why generic charts are the wrong place to look.

## Why there's no universal NAD+ dosage chart

NAD+ is a **coenzyme** prescribed as a compounded medication by a licensed provider after an individual evaluation. Because it's a prescription, dosing is set per patient — shaped by:

- Your health history and current medications
- Your goals and individual profile
- How you tolerate the medication, especially early on
- The delivery form (injection, nasal spray, or oral dropper)

A chart found online can't weigh any of these. The full overview of the medication is on the [NAD+ injections page](/nad-injections/).

## How the schedule typically works

While specifics are always provider-set, a few general points come up:

- **Route:** a small **subcutaneous injection** (for the injectable form)
- **Frequency:** provider-determined — some protocols are more frequent at first, then spaced out
- **Adjustment:** providers often start conservatively and adjust based on tolerance

## Why "start low" matters with NAD+

NAD+ given too quickly is associated with temporary, uncomfortable effects — **flushing, nausea, or a feeling of pressure** — that ease when the pace is slowed. That's exactly why providers commonly start conservatively and why NAD+ is prescribed and supervised rather than self-managed. (More in [NAD+ injection side effects](/blog/nad-injection-side-effects/).)

## The safe way to get a NAD+ dose

The only appropriate path is clinical: be evaluated by a licensed provider who can decide whether NAD+ is appropriate and, if so, set your dose, form, and schedule.

> **Ready to talk to a provider?** [REMEVi prescribes NAD+ online](/nad-injections/) — $145 for a 4-week subscription, bilingual care, with a licensed US provider setting your dosing and a structured schedule.

Related reading: [NAD+ injections vs IV therapy](/blog/nad-injections-vs-iv-therapy/) and [NAD+ injection benefits](/blog/nad-injection-benefits/).

*This article is for general education and is not medical advice. NAD+ prescribed by REMEVi is a non-FDA-approved compounded medication available only by prescription from a licensed provider after an individual evaluation. Do not attempt to dose NAD+ without a provider.*