When comparing NAD injections vs pills on cost, the upfront numbers favor pills — but the full picture is more nuanced. NAD pills, including popular precursor forms like NMN and NR, typically range from $30 to $80 per month depending on the brand, dose, and formulation. NAD injections through telehealth providers generally run between $100 and $400 per month depending on the dosage protocol and the platform you use. For a detailed breakdown of what to expect to pay, see our
NAD Injection Cost guide. On the surface, that makes pills the obvious budget choice.
However, cost per effective dose tells a different story. If an oral supplement delivers 20 to 40 percent of its stated NAD+ content to your bloodstream due to digestive breakdown, you are not actually getting the dose printed on the label. An injectable delivering near-complete bioavailability is, in practice, delivering significantly more usable NAD+ per dollar spent than an oral supplement at a fraction of the price.
There is also the question of what you are trying to accomplish. For general wellness maintenance and gradual supplementation, pills may offer adequate value at a lower price point. For people targeting specific outcomes — chronic fatigue, cognitive performance,
anti-aging, or recovery — the cost of underdosing through oral supplements may ultimately exceed the cost of injections when you factor in months of ineffective supplementation.
The most cost-effective approach for many people is to start with an injectable loading phase to rapidly elevate NAD+ levels, then evaluate whether ongoing injections or a transition to oral maintenance better fits their budget and goals. To explore your options for getting started, visit our
Where to Buy NAD Injections page.