Compounded NAD+ Injection
A weekly compounded NAD+ that restores cellular energy, mental focus, and recovery. The fuel your body slowly stops making.

Treatment options
NAD+
Your provider picks the right fit based on your goals and history.
All plans include
- Provider review, no cost upfront
- 3-4 day shipping
- Message your provider anytime
- Customized patient portal
PepHaūs Guarantee
No charge until a U.S.-licensed provider approves your prescription. Every refill compounded by a U.S.-licensed pharmacy. Pause, change, or cancel anytime from your portal.
Starting at
$195/mo*$229/mo*
*Quarterly plan. New patient pricing. Not charged unless prescribed.
NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a vital coenzyme found in every cell. It's essential for energy production, DNA repair, and mitochondrial function. Levels decline with age, contributing to fatigue, brain fog, and slower recovery.
Two cadences. Both are flexible. Cancel anytime from your patient portal.
Monthly
$229/mo
Billed monthly. Cancel anytime.
Quarterly Save 15%
$195/mo
Billed every 3 months. Best value.
Complete your intake
A short medical questionnaire about your goals and history. Two minutes. No payment up front.
Provider review
A U.S.-licensed provider in your state reviews your intake. If a live video visit is required, it's scheduled at no additional cost.
Care, delivered
If approved, your prescription is filled by a U.S.-licensed compounding pharmacy and shipped free expedited to your door.
Why injection instead of IV?
An IV pushes a full dose into circulation in minutes. The subcutaneous route releases NAD+ gradually over hours. Most patients tolerate the SC route better. It costs less. It happens at home. You skip the clinic chair and the drive.
How is this different from NAD or NMN supplements?
Oral NAD precursors like NMN and NR are converted in the gut and liver before circulating. The subcutaneous route delivers NAD+ directly. The two are not the same intervention. Many patients try oral first. Switch to injection when they want a more direct route.
What is the protocol?
A weekly subcutaneous injection. Your provider sets the starting dose based on your intake. Adjusts based on how you respond. Some patients run a higher loading cadence for the first month. Then settle into weekly.
What are the common side effects?
The most common report is a transient flushing or warmth at the injection site for a few minutes. Some patients report a brief headache the first dose or two. Your provider reviews any concerns in the portal.
Can I stack NAD+ with a GLP-1?
Many patients do. Energy and recovery support tend to be the most common reason patients on tirzepatide or semaglutide add NAD+. Your provider reviews the combination during intake.
Every NAD+ prescription requires a full provider review of your medical history. Common side effects, drug interactions, contraindications, and storage details are documented on our safety page.
Full NAD+ safety information