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IV therapy

How Much Does IV Therapy Cost? 2026 Florida Price Guide

A transparent 2026 guide to how much IV therapy costs in Florida — real price ranges, what drives cost, mobile vs in-clinic, single sessions vs memberships.

JDJohanna Delphin, MSN, APRN, FNP-C, FNP-BC Medically reviewed Updated July 15, 2026 11 min read

Key takeaways

  • In Florida, IV therapy usually runs about $100 to $1,000+ per session, with most everyday wellness drips landing between $150 and $300.
  • Price is driven by the formula and ingredients, the dose, who supervises your care, the setting, and any add-ons — not just the name on the menu.
  • Mobile house calls may carry a modest travel or convenience fee, but they save you a drive across the Treasure Coast and let you drip at home.
  • Memberships lower your effective per-session cost if you go monthly or more; single sessions make sense for occasional or one-off needs.
  • Judge value by clinical oversight, transparency, and personalization — the cheapest sticker price is not always the safest or best drip.
  • Elective wellness IVs are rarely covered by insurance, though an HSA or FSA may apply when a drip is medically necessary.

"How much does IV therapy cost?" is usually the very next question I hear after "will it actually make me feel better?" — and it deserves a straight answer instead of a shrug. The honest version is that IV therapy in Florida ranges from roughly $100 for a simple hydration drip to $1,000 or more for a premium longevity infusion, and where you land inside that range comes down to a handful of factors you can actually see and control. Below is the same transparent, 2026 breakdown I walk through with patients here on the Treasure Coast, so you can judge value for yourself before you ever sit in the chair.

What you're really paying for with IV therapy

An IV therapy session is not one thing with one price — it's a bundle. When you pay for a drip, you're paying for the fluids, the vitamins or other actives inside the bag, the sterile supplies and IV setup, and the time of a trained clinician who places the line and monitors you while it runs.

Because the fluid and nutrients go straight into a vein, they bypass the digestive tract and are available to your cells right away, which is part of why absorption can be higher than with oral supplements. For most healthy adults, though, wellness IVs are best understood as short-term hydration and nutrient support rather than a cure for any specific disease, and the published evidence for many marketed benefits is still limited.

That framing matters for cost, because it means the "right" price is the one that reflects genuine clinical oversight and quality ingredients — not the flashiest name on the menu. A $99 drip with no provider involvement is not automatically a better deal than a $220 drip supervised by a nurse practitioner.

Typical IV therapy cost ranges in Florida (2026)

Across Florida, and specifically here on the Treasure Coast, IV therapy pricing tends to cluster into a few tiers. The table below reflects typical market ranges for elective wellness drips in 2026. These are general ranges to set expectations; our own confirmed numbers for targeted infusions and memberships live on our pricing & memberships page.

IV therapy type Typical single-session range Examples
Basic hydration $100–$200 Saline plus electrolytes
Signature wellness drips $150–$300 Myers' Cocktail, Immune, Beauty, Recovery, Hangover, Jet Lag
Targeted infusions $150–$500 Alpha-lipoic acid, high-dose vitamin C, phosphatidylcholine
Premium / longevity $300–$1,000+ NAD+, high-dose glutathione
Booster injections (IM or IV) $25–$75 B12, vitamin D, glutathione, magnesium

At Delphi, a few of our targeted infusions have confirmed, published ranges so you know exactly where you stand: alpha-lipoic acid runs about $150–$225, a high-dose vitamin C infusion about $199–$399, and phosphatidylcholine about $350–$500. High-dose vitamin C requires appropriate screening, such as a G6PD test, before your first infusion.

Single wellness drips

Our signature menu — the classic Myers' Cocktail, plus Immune, Beauty, Recovery, Hangover, Migraine, Athletic Performance, Executive Performance, and Jet Lag drips — sits in that everyday $150–$300 band that most Floridians expect. These are the drips people reach for before a wedding, after a stomach bug, following a long-haul flight through Orlando or West Palm, or after a scorching Saturday on the water off Fort Pierce.

Premium and longevity infusions

NAD+ is the ingredient that most often surprises people on price. NAD+ is a coenzyme involved in cellular energy and repair, and it is typically infused slowly over a longer session, which is a big part of why it lands at the premium end. When a drip ties up more chair time, more monitoring, and a costlier raw material, the price naturally climbs.

Booster injections

If a full drip is more than you need, a quick intramuscular or IV booster — vitamin B12, vitamin D, glutathione, magnesium, zinc, or biotin — is the lowest-cost way to get targeted support, usually in the $25–$75 range. Vitamin D and B12 are typically given as an IM injection rather than through an IV line.

The seven factors that drive your final price

Two drips with the same name at two different practices can differ by $100 or more, and it's rarely arbitrary. Here's what actually moves the number:

  • Formula and ingredients. A bag of saline with a B-complex costs far less to compound than one carrying NAD+, high-dose vitamin C, or a glutathione-heavy blend.
  • Dose and volume. A 10-gram vitamin C infusion is not priced the same as a 25-gram one; larger doses mean more product and often a longer, more closely watched session.
  • Who supervises your care. Drips overseen by a licensed nurse practitioner or physician carry the cost of real clinical judgment — health-history review, personalization, and monitoring — which a bargain pop-up simply doesn't include.
  • Setting. An in-suite drip, a mobile house call, and a group event are three different cost structures.
  • Add-ons. Extra booster pushes, anti-nausea medication when clinically indicated, or upgrading the base formula all stack onto the base price.
  • Local market. Coastal, concierge-oriented markets like Port St. Lucie, Vero Beach, and Stuart price a bit differently than high-volume urban clinics.
  • Membership vs. à la carte. How you buy — one-off or on a monthly plan — can change your effective per-session cost dramatically, which we'll break down below.

Mobile vs. in-clinic: does a house call cost more?

This is one of the most common Treasure Coast questions, because so much of life here happens at home, on the boat, or at the office rather than in a waiting room.

In-clinic IV therapy in our calm Port St. Lucie suite is typically the most economical option, because there's no travel involved. Mobile IV therapy — where we come to your home in Jensen Beach, your office in Stuart, or your rental on the barrier island — may include a modest travel or convenience fee to cover the provider's time and mileage, particularly for longer drives.

For a lot of people, that trade is easily worth it. You skip the drive entirely, you recover in your own bed after an illness or a rough night, and you don't have to arrange a ride afterward. When you're weighing mobile against in-suite, think about the true cost of your time and convenience, not just the line item. You can see how we structure both settings on our IV hydration therapy page, and we'll always tell you any mobile fee up front — no surprises after the needle is in.

Single sessions vs. memberships: which is the better value?

The biggest lever on your long-run cost isn't the drip you choose — it's whether you pay per visit or join a membership. À la carte pricing is perfect for occasional use: a pre-travel immune boost, a post-illness recovery drip, a one-time beauty infusion before an event. But if IV therapy becomes part of your routine, a membership almost always wins on math and perks.

Here's how our concierge memberships are structured:

Membership Monthly price What's included Best for
Silver $249 One wellness IV monthly, priority booking, 10% off additional services Once-a-month maintenance
Gold $499 Two IVs monthly, one booster injection, one complimentary house call, 15% off NAD+ Regular users who want a house call
Platinum Executive $999 Four concierge IVs monthly, unlimited B12, monthly glutathione infusion, priority same-day scheduling, NP consultations, after-hours access High-frequency and busy executives

Notice how the effective per-IV cost lands around $250 at the Silver and Gold tiers, then drops further at Platinum once you factor in the extra infusions, unlimited B12, and complimentary house calls. If you'd otherwise pay single-session rates twice a month, a membership can pay for itself and hand you priority scheduling and discounts on top. Full, current details are on our pricing & memberships page.

There's also a group option worth mentioning for local businesses: our corporate and onsite wellness days start around $1,500 for a half-day event, with per-person pricing that depends on the number and type of infusions. It's a popular choice for Treasure Coast law firms, medical offices, and real estate brokerages that want to bring wellness to the team.

How to judge value, not just price

Cost intent is really value intent — nobody wants the cheapest drip, they want the best drip for the money. After years of doing this, here's how I'd tell a friend to separate a fair price from a red flag.

Green flags worth paying for

  • A real provider reviews your health history before your first drip and personalizes the formula, rather than handing everyone the same bag.
  • Transparent, published pricing you can read before you commit, ideally with confirmed ranges for premium infusions.
  • Appropriate screening for higher-risk infusions, and a clear explanation of what your chosen drip requires.
  • Clean, medical-grade setup and monitoring during the infusion.

Red flags that a low price can hide

  • No licensed clinician involved, or no health-history review at all.
  • Pressure to buy large prepaid packages before you've tried a single session.
  • Vague or hidden fees that only appear on the final bill.
  • Sweeping medical promises — that a drip will cure a disease, replace real treatment, or guarantee results. The evidence doesn't support those claims, and neither will an honest provider.

A genuinely good deal is a quality drip, matched to your goals, delivered safely, at a price you understood in advance. That's the standard we hold ourselves to.

Does insurance, HSA, or FSA cover IV therapy?

For most people, elective wellness IV therapy is an out-of-pocket expense. Because these drips aren't treating a diagnosed medical condition, commercial insurance generally won't reimburse them, and it's best to assume you'll pay directly unless you've confirmed otherwise.

There is some nuance. If IV therapy is tied to a documented medical need, an HSA or FSA may be usable — but eligibility depends entirely on your plan and how the visit is coded, so confirm with your plan administrator before counting on it. We're always glad to provide an itemized receipt you can submit. Certain services in a wider wellness plan, like our medical weight loss program, may also involve components your plan treats differently, which is another reason to ask questions up front rather than guess.

What IV therapy costs at Delphi on the Treasure Coast

To pull it together: at Delphi Health & Wellness, everyday wellness drips generally fall in the typical Florida range you saw above, our targeted infusions carry confirmed published ranges (alpha-lipoic acid around $150–$225, high-dose vitamin C around $199–$399, phosphatidylcholine around $350–$500), premium infusions like NAD+ sit at the top of the menu, and memberships start at $249 a month for people who want IV therapy as a routine rather than a one-off. Whether you're being seen in our Port St. Lucie suite, at home anywhere from Fort Pierce to Vero Beach, or by a combination of in-person and telehealth visits, we tell you the price before we start.

The single most important thing I can leave you with: choose your drip and your setting around your actual goals and health history, and insist on transparency about both the formula and the fee. That's how you get real value out of IV therapy instead of just a lower number.

A note before you book

This article is educational and reflects general 2026 pricing on the Treasure Coast — it is not medical advice, and it can't tell you whether a specific infusion is right for you. IV therapy has real benefits for the right person and real considerations for others, and some formulas require screening before your first session. The best next step is a conversation with a licensed provider who reviews your history and goals with you directly.

If you're curious what a personalized drip and an honest price would look like for you, I'd love to help. You can review our current menu and plans on our pricing & memberships page, and when you're ready, book a visit at our Port St. Lucie suite, as a mobile house call across the Treasure Coast, or by telehealth. We'll build something that fits your body, your schedule, and your budget — and we'll be clear about the cost every step of the way.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a single IV therapy session cost in Florida?+
For most wellness drips — a Myers' Cocktail, an immune blend, a recovery or beauty drip — you can expect roughly $150 to $300 per session across Florida. Simpler saline-and-electrolyte hydration can start closer to $100, while premium or targeted infusions such as high-dose vitamin C, NAD+, or phosphatidylcholine run higher, sometimes $400 to $1,000 or more depending on the dose. At Delphi we publish our confirmed targeted-infusion ranges on our pricing page so you can see the numbers before you book.
Why is a NAD+ IV so much more expensive than a regular vitamin drip?+
NAD+ is a costlier ingredient than standard vitamins and minerals, and it is typically infused slowly over a much longer session, which ties up more chair time and supplies. time, and premium positioning. That combination of premium raw material and a longer, closely monitored drip is why NAD+ usually sits at the top of any IV menu.
Does health insurance cover IV vitamin therapy?+
Elective wellness IVs are generally considered non-covered because they are not treating a diagnosed medical condition, so most patients pay out of pocket. In some cases an HSA or FSA can be used when a provider documents medical necessity, but you should confirm eligibility with your plan administrator rather than assuming it will apply. We are always happy to give you an itemized receipt to submit.
Is mobile IV therapy more expensive than going to a clinic?+
Sometimes. A house call may include a travel or convenience fee to cover the provider's time and mileage, especially for longer drives out to Vero Beach, Stuart, or the barrier islands. Many people find the trade-off worth it because they can be treated at home, at the office, or at a hotel without driving afterward. We are transparent about any mobile fee up front so there are no surprises.
Are IV therapy memberships actually worth the money?+
If you use IV therapy regularly — say, monthly or more — a membership almost always lowers your effective per-session cost and adds perks like priority booking, discounted add-ons, and complimentary house calls. If you only want a drip occasionally, before travel, or after an illness, a single session is usually the better value. It really comes down to how often you plan to come in.
Is IV therapy safe, and are there hidden costs if something goes wrong?+
For most healthy adults, IV therapy delivered by a qualified, licensed provider is generally well tolerated, with the most common issues being minor bruising or irritation at the IV site. framing and common side effects. Certain infusions require screening first — high-dose vitamin C, for example, may call for G6PD testing before your first drip — which is part of doing it safely rather than a hidden cost. Choosing a practice with real clinical oversight is the best way to avoid problems in the first place.

Sources & further reading

  1. MedlinePlus — Fluid and Electrolyte Balance (U.S. National Library of Medicine)
  2. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements — Vitamin & Mineral Fact Sheets
  3. U.S. Food & Drug Administration — Consumer Information
  4. Mayo Clinic — Health Information & Consumer Guidance

This article is for general health education and does not replace personalized medical advice. To discuss your specific situation, please book a visit.

JD
Written & reviewed by
Johanna Delphin, MSN, APRN, FNP-C, FNP-BC

Johanna Delphin is a board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner (MSN, APRN, FNP-C, FNP-BC) providing concierge wellness care — IV hydration therapy, medical weight loss, physicals, and preventive wellness — in Port St. Lucie, Florida and via telehealth statewide.

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