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NAD+ Dosing Calculator

NAD+ (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide): Essential coenzyme for cellular energy, DNA repair, and anti-aging research.

Pre-filled with the most-reported community reconstitution protocol for NAD+. See how 1 mL and 2 mL of bacteriostatic water change concentration and syringe-draw volume, then adjust the calculator below for your own vial.

Quick answer · Community-reported standard

A 15 mg vial of NAD+ reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water yields a concentration of 7.50 mg/mL. At that concentration, a 50 mg dose of NAD+ equals 666.7 units on a U-100 insulin syringe (6.667 mL). NAD+ is typically administered every other day via subcutaneous.

NAD+ reconstitution: 1 mL vs 2 mL bac water

Bacteriostatic water volume is flexible. Less water means higher concentration and smaller injection volumes; more water means lower concentration and easier dose precision. Both options below are valid for a 15 mg vial.

BAC water addedConcentrationVolume per 50 mg doseDraw on U-100 syringe (units)
1 mL15.00 mg/mL3.333 mL333.3 units
2 mL7.50 mg/mL6.667 mL666.7 units
Based on a 15 mg vial of NAD+ reconstituted with bacteriostatic water. Insulin-syringe units assume a standard U-100 syringe (100 units = 1 mL).

Calculate your NAD+ dose

Alternative NAD+ protocols

Beyond the default above, NAD+ is also reported in the following protocols. Use these as starting points and recalculate with the tool above.

IV Loading Protocol

Community
Dose
250-500 mg
Frequency
4-5 sessions over 2 weeks
Duration
2 weeks (loading), then monthly maintenance
Route
Intravenous

Initial loading phase at IV clinics; infused slowly over 2-4 hours to minimize side effects

High-Dose IV Protocol

Community
Dose
500-1000 mg
Frequency
Weekly for 4 weeks then monthly
Duration
Ongoing
Route
Intravenous

Higher dose protocol; requires slow infusion rate (3-4 hours) to manage NAD flush symptoms

SubQ Titration Protocol

Community
Dose
25-100 mg (gradual increase)
Frequency
Twice weekly
Duration
8+ weeks
Route
Subcutaneous

Weeks 1-2 at 25 mg, weeks 3-4 at 50 mg, weeks 5+ at 100 mg; gradual increase to manage side effects

Anti-aging and general wellness (IV NAD+)

Clinical
Dose
250-500 mg per session
Frequency
1-2 times per week during loading; monthly for maintenance
Duration
Loading phase 4-8 sessions; maintenance ongoing

Infused over 2-4 hours; rate titrated to patient tolerance; nausea and flushing are rate-dependent

Neurodegenerative disease research (IV NAD+)

Clinical
Dose
500-1000 mg per session
Frequency
Daily for 7-10 days during intensive protocols
Duration
7-10 day intensive courses; repeat as indicated

Higher doses used in addiction and neurology protocols; longer infusion times (4-8 hours) reduce side effects

NAD+ reconstitution & storage

IV NAD+ should be diluted in 250-500 mL normal saline and administered via slow IV infusion over 2-8 hours depending on dose and patient tolerance

IV NAD+ solutions should be prepared fresh and used within 24 hours; lyophilized NAD+ powder stored at -20C protected from light and moisture; oral NR/NMN supplements stored at room temperature in airtight containers away from heat and light

NAD+ dosing FAQ

How much bacteriostatic water should I add to a 15 mg vial of NAD+?

The community standard is 2 mL of bacteriostatic water for a 15 mg NAD+ vial. That gives a concentration of 7.50 mg/mL, so a 50 mg dose is 666.7 units on a U-100 insulin syringe. Adding 1 mL instead doubles the concentration to 15.00 mg/mL and halves the draw to 333.3 units. Less water = smaller injection volume but harder to measure precisely.

How many syringe units is a 50 mg dose of NAD+?

On a standard U-100 insulin syringe, a 50 mg dose of NAD+ is 666.7 units when the 15 mg vial is reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water (7.50 mg/mL). If you use 1 mL of bac water instead, draw 333.3 units (15.00 mg/mL).

What is the standard NAD+ dose?

Community-reported protocols for NAD+ typically use 50 mg–100 mg every other day via Subcutaneous. 50 mg is a common starting dose. Home-use alternative to IV; gradual titration from 25 mg recommended to assess tolerance

Where do you inject NAD+?

NAD+ is typically injected subcutaneous. Common sites reported in the literature and by users include: Antecubital vein (IV infusion), Any peripheral IV access site. Rotate sites with each injection to reduce localized irritation.

Can I use sterile water instead of bacteriostatic water for NAD+?

Bacteriostatic water (containing 0.9% benzyl alcohol as a preservative) is strongly preferred for multi-dose vials like NAD+ because it inhibits microbial growth and lets a single vial be used over multiple weeks. Sterile water has no preservative and should generally be reserved for single-use preparations only.

More on NAD+

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Medical Disclaimer

This website is for educational and informational purposes only. The information provided is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before using any peptide or supplement.