Editorial · Longevity · NAD+
IV NAD+ clinics in London: what to check
Oliver Mackman · Editorial director · Best Business Loans Ltd (16833937)
Published Mon Jun 01 2026 01:00:00 GMT+0100 (British Summer Time) · 5 min read
London has the densest cluster of private wellness and longevity clinics offering IV NAD+ in the UK. Because the market changes faster than an editorial cycle can verify, this post focuses on how to assess a London clinic rather than on a fixed ranking. The checks that matter are CQC registration, the registration of the administering practitioner, how the NAD+ is compounded, transparent course pricing, and proper screening. IV NAD+ is not a licensed medicine; it is a private clinical service. The evidence for benefit is early. This is editorial, not medical advice.
London is where most UK searches for an IV NAD+ clinic end up, because the capital has the densest cluster of private wellness and longevity providers. This post is about how to assess a London clinic, not a ranking of them. It is editorial commentary, not medical advice or a recommendation of any provider.
Why we do not publish a fixed list here
The London IV NAD+ market moves quickly. Clinics open, rebrand, change practitioners and adjust pricing faster than an editorial cycle can verify, and a list that looks authoritative one month can be stale the next. Rather than present a fixed ranking that ages badly, this post gives you the checks to apply to any clinic you are considering. Where our clinic directory or UK longevity clinics editorial names providers, those reflect the time of review and should be confirmed directly.
The checks that actually matter
When you assess a London clinic offering IV NAD+, the meaningful signals are regulatory and procedural, not marketing.
CQC registration. A clinic providing this kind of service in England should be registered with the Care Quality Commission. You can check the CQC register yourself.
Practitioner registration. The person administering the drip, and whoever prescribes it, should be GMC or GPhC registered. Ask, and verify on the relevant register.
Compounding. The NAD+ has to come from somewhere. Ask which pharmacy compounds it and confirm that pharmacy is GPhC registered.
Screening. A serious clinic screens your suitability before agreeing to treat you, rather than selling a session to anyone who books. A questionnaire and a conversation with a clinician are a good sign.
Transparent course pricing. IV NAD+ is usually sold as a course. Ask for the full course cost, not a single-session headline. See NAD+ cost in the UK.
Keep the evidence in proportion
It is easy to be swept along by confident clinic marketing in an affluent London setting. Keep the evidence in proportion. IV NAD+ is not a licensed medicine, and the human trial base for clinical benefit is early and limited, as set out in IV NAD+ in the UK. Studies suggest effects on NAD+ biology; studies do not prove the anti-ageing outcomes the category is sold on. A clinic claiming proven results is going beyond what the literature supports.
The quieter alternatives
If the cost or the multi-hour format of a London drip does not appeal, the same molecule is available through other routes. A quicker NAD+ injection is offered by some clinics, and oral NAD+ precursor supplements are the lowest-cost route, managed yourself rather than in a clinic chair.
A note before you book
Whichever clinic you choose, a suitably qualified healthcare professional should be assessing whether IV NAD+ is appropriate for you, taking account of your medication and medical history. That decision belongs with a clinician who knows your circumstances, not with a website. We do not recommend a specific London clinic.
Read next
The NAD+ sub-hub maps every route. For the drip in detail, see IV NAD+ in the UK. For the broader market, UK IV therapy and UK longevity clinics give the wider picture.