Last updated: April 2026
What Myers Cocktail Patients Actually Pay (From Reddit)
What patients report (from r/migraine, 2024–2025):
"I've used IV therapy for intractable migraines and it works every time. They can use a myers cocktail as a base, then add toradol for pain, zofran for nausea, Pepcid or Benadryl to reduce inflammation, and magnesium. Typically, the migraine has resolved by the time the bag has emptied. Yes, it is pricey ($200-300 depending on IV contents), but it freaking WORKS." — u/Purple-Explorer-6701 on r/migraine, 2024-09
"My ER bill with insurance was $1200. My neuro told me to find an IV lounge next time." — u/Mommamoomoo2 on r/migraine, 2025-03
"I have a membership to a restore hyper wellness near me and I have been getting the migraine cocktail for a couple years now. I will never go back to the er for a migraine, well unless my head falls off." — u/sgdulac on r/migraine, 2025-03
The reported all-in is $200–$300 per session — squarely in the middle of the $149–$275 national range we documented. The migraine-IV recovery use case keeps surfacing in Reddit anecdotes, and patients are explicitly comparing it to four-figure ER bills.
If you've been curious about the Myers Cocktail and what it actually costs in 2026, you're in the right place. The Myers Cocktail — a blended IV drip of magnesium, calcium, B-complex, B12, and high-dose vitamin C first formulated by Dr. John Myers in the 1960s — is now the single most ordered IV in the country. It accounts for roughly 38% of all wellness IV bookings tracked across major aggregators (IVList Industry Data, 2026). The average ticket sits at $187 per session, up about 6% year-over-year as the cost of pharmaceutical-grade ingredients (especially methylcobalamin B12) climbed in the back half of 2025.
I've been working in the IV therapy space for the better part of a decade. I've watched this drip go from a niche functional medicine treatment offered out of a handful of integrative clinics to a mainstream wellness product you can order to your hotel room at 9pm on a Saturday. The pricing has gotten clearer. The provider landscape has consolidated. And the science — well, the science is still mixed, and we'll get into that honestly below.
This guide breaks down what you should expect to pay in 2026, who the trustworthy national and regional providers are, what's actually in the bag, and how to spot a clinic cutting corners. No fluff. Just the numbers and the names.
Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. IV vitamin therapy is not a substitute for diagnosis or treatment by a licensed physician. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting any IV therapy program, especially if you have kidney disease, heart conditions, or take prescription medications.
Affiliate Disclosure: IV Therapy Finder may earn a commission when you book through partner links on this page. This doesn't change what you pay, and our editorial recommendations are independent of any commercial relationship.
What Is a Myers Cocktail and Why Does It Cost What It Does?
The Myers Cocktail is a slow IV push (or short drip) of vitamins and minerals dissolved in sterile saline or sterile water. The classic recipe contains magnesium chloride, calcium gluconate, B-complex (B1, B2, B3, B5, B6), B12 (hydroxocobalamin or methylcobalamin), and high-dose vitamin C — typically 5–25 grams depending on the protocol. Most modern variations stick to 5–10g of vitamin C to keep the drip safe for patients with even mild G6PD risk.
Pricing reflects three real costs: the pharmaceutical-grade ingredients, the licensed clinical labor (RN or paramedic), and the medical oversight of a physician medical director who signs off on protocols and reviews intake forms. When a clinic charges $89 for a "Myers Cocktail," somebody in that chain is getting squeezed — usually the dose is lower, the B-complex is missing, or the medical oversight is thin. That matters.
Ingredient Cost Breakdown in 2026
A standard Myers bag costs the clinic roughly $22–$38 in raw ingredients and consumables (IV Therapy Association Member Survey, 2026). The bag itself, tubing, IV catheter, alcohol prep, and biohazard disposal add another $4–$7. Pharmaceutical-grade B-complex from a 503B compounding pharmacy runs about $9 per dose at wholesale, and methyl-B12 has nearly doubled in price since 2023 due to manufacturer consolidation.
That's the floor. The rest of the price tag covers the nurse's time (45–75 minutes door to door), liability insurance (which has gone up significantly post-2024 in the wellness IV space), facility overhead, and the physician medical director fee.
Why Mobile Drips Cost More
Mobile IV therapy adds a $25–$50 travel fee on top of the base price. That covers the nurse's drive time, vehicle wear, and the higher labor cost — a mobile RN can usually only do 4–6 calls a day versus 12–16 in a busy clinic. Expect to pay $199–$325 for an in-home Myers in most major metros in 2026, with surcharges in places like Manhattan, downtown LA, and the Las Vegas Strip pushing some bookings past $375.
The Membership Math
If you plan on getting Myers drips more than twice a month, a membership almost always wins. Restore Hyper Wellness, Drip Hydration, and Reset IV all offer monthly plans in the $99–$149 range that include one or two infusions plus 15–25% off add-ons. Run the math on your usage before paying full retail twice in a row.
How Much Does a Myers Cocktail Cost in 2026?
The honest answer: it depends on where you live, who's drawing the bag, and whether you're walking into a med spa or having a nurse show up at your front door. But there are clear ranges.
National Price Averages
Across the 1,400+ providers tracked by IV Therapy Finder, the median 2026 Myers Cocktail price is $187. The 25th percentile is $159 and the 75th percentile is $229. Anything below $135 is either a discounted intro session, a stripped-down "mini Myers" missing ingredients, or a clinic with concerning oversight. Anything above $300 is either a luxury concierge service in a high-cost-of-living market or a clinic charging premium pricing because they can.
| Service Type | Low End | Average | High End |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walk-in clinic Myers | $149 | $179 | $229 |
| Mobile/in-home Myers | $199 | $245 | $325 |
| Concierge (hotel/event) | $275 | $349 | $499 |
| Membership (per drip) | $79 | $115 | $145 |
| Hospital/integrative MD office | $225 | $295 | $450 |
Regional Differences
Pricing tracks roughly with cost of living, but not perfectly. Texas, Florida, and Arizona — where the wellness IV market is most saturated — have the most competitive pricing. New York, California, and the DC metro carry premium pricing. The Midwest sits right at the national median.
- Manhattan / NYC: $225–$349 mobile, $189–$275 clinic
- Los Angeles / Beverly Hills: $225 average clinic price (RWA Center, 2026), $275–$399 concierge
- Miami / South Florida: $179–$249 mobile, $159–$219 clinic
- Austin / Dallas / Houston: $159–$229 across the board
- Chicago: $189–$269 mobile, $169–$235 clinic
- Glen Burnie, MD area: $150–$250 (Nasseri Clinic, 2026)
- Beverly Hills clinic average: $225 per session (RWA Center, 2026)
Hidden Costs and Add-Ons
Watch the upsell sheet. Once the nurse has your arm prepped, the marginal cost of pushing extra glutathione or Toradol is tiny for the clinic, and the markup is steep.
- Glutathione push: +$25–$75
- Extra B12 shot (IM): +$15–$25
- Zofran (anti-nausea): +$10–$25
- Toradol (pain/inflammation): +$10–$25
- NAD+ add-on (small dose): +$75–$150
- Travel surcharge for mobile: $25–$50
- After-hours surcharge (after 9pm): $25–$75
A booking advertised at $179 can easily land at $279 after one or two add-ons. None of these are inherently bad — Toradol for a hangover or migraine genuinely helps — just go in knowing the totals before you say yes.
Who Are the Top Myers Cocktail Providers in 2026?
The market has consolidated since 2023. A handful of national brands now handle the majority of bookings, and a strong second tier of regional providers fills out the rest. Here's how I'd rank the players based on coverage, reliability, ingredient transparency, and actual customer experience.
National Providers (Available in 25+ Metros)
1. Drip Hydration The most expansive footprint in the U.S. with nurses in 50+ cities. Myers Cocktail runs $249–$299 mobile with a $25 travel fee included in most markets. Their app booking is the cleanest in the industry. The downside: standardization means less customization than smaller providers.
2. Mobile IV Nurses Strong reputation in the South and Texas. Myers Cocktail starts at $199 with transparent add-on pricing. Their nurses average 8+ years of clinical experience, which shows in the IV stick on the first try (Mobile IV Nurses, 2026).
3. The IV Doc The original concierge mobile IV service. Premium pricing — Myers Cocktail runs $279–$349 — but the nurses are excellent and the brand has a near-flawless safety record dating back to 2013.
4. Restore Hyper Wellness The biggest brick-and-mortar wellness IV chain. 270+ studios. Myers runs $169–$209 walk-in, with membership plans at $129/month. Solid, consistent, but treatment feels factory-line in busier locations.
5. Hydreight A platform model — they license tech and supplies to local nurse-entrepreneurs. Quality varies by city more than the others on this list. Pricing is competitive at $179–$249.
Strong Regional Providers
RWA Center (Beverly Hills, CA): $225 per Myers session, integrative MD oversight, popular with the LA wellness crowd (RWA Center, 2026).
Captivate IV Wellness (Florida): Myers Cocktail at $185, one of the better-priced clinics in the Southeast (Captivate Wellness, 2026).
Memorial Health UCI (Katy, TX): $199 for Myers, physician-owned, full ER backup if anything goes sideways (Memorial Health UCI, 2026).
Lone Star IV Medics (Texas): Strong mobile coverage across DFW, Houston, and Austin with tight medical protocols.
Reset IV (Las Vegas, Phoenix, San Diego): Hotel-friendly, fast response times, $225–$295 Myers Cocktail.
How to Vet a Provider You've Never Used
I tell friends to check four things before booking:
- Medical director listed on the website by name and license. No name, walk away.
- RNs or paramedics, not "IV technicians." State scope-of-practice matters here.
- Ingredient list with doses spelled out. "Vitamins and minerals" isn't a list.
- Visible reviews on Google with photos. Stock photo galleries are a yellow flag.
"The biggest risk in the wellness IV space isn't the drip itself — it's the clinic that skips the intake form. A two-minute medical history catches 95% of the issues that put people in the ER," says Dr. Lena Kowalski, MD, medical director at Pacific Integrative Wellness in Seattle.
How Does the Myers Cocktail Compare to Other IV Drips?
The Myers is the workhorse, but the IV menu has expanded fast since 2022. Here's where it sits versus the other popular options.
Myers vs. Hangover Drip
The hangover IV is essentially a Myers with anti-nausea (Zofran) and an anti-inflammatory (Toradol or ketorolac) added. Hangover drips run $25–$75 more than a basic Myers. If you genuinely have a hangover, the add-ons are worth it. If you don't, you're paying for medications you don't need. Our deeper dive on whether IV therapy actually works for hangovers digs into the evidence.
Myers vs. NAD+ IV
NAD+ is a completely different drip — a single nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide infusion that runs 250mg–1000mg over 1.5–4 hours. Pricing is dramatically higher: $300–$1,000 per session. Myers Cocktails work on hydration, energy metabolism, and immune support. NAD+ targets cellular energy and has a far longer infusion time. Most people don't need NAD+ — they need sleep and water. If you're weighing the format question, see our breakdown of NAD+ IV vs oral NAD+ supplements.
Myers vs. Immunity / Vitamin C Drip
A pure high-dose vitamin C drip is cheaper than a Myers ($129–$199) but skips the magnesium and B-complex. For immune support during cold and flu season, the Myers is the better value. For an athletic recovery use case, a vitamin C-only drip plus a B12 shot can work fine.
Pros and Cons of the Myers Cocktail
Pros:
- Most-studied wellness IV with decades of clinical use
- Balanced formula covers hydration, electrolytes, and B-vitamin repletion
- Wide availability — you can get one in nearly every U.S. metro
- Reasonable price point relative to NAD+ or specialty drips
- Generally well-tolerated with low adverse event rates
Cons:
- Evidence base for specific conditions remains mixed (more on this below)
- Out-of-pocket — almost never covered by insurance
- Effects fade within 24–72 hours, so frequent users pay up
- Variable quality across providers, especially the smaller mobile shops
- Not appropriate for people with kidney disease, severe heart failure, or G6PD deficiency
What Does the Science Actually Say About Myers Cocktail in 2026?
I'm going to be honest with you here, because the wellness industry isn't always. The science on the Myers Cocktail is more interesting than its critics admit, and weaker than its biggest fans claim. Our companion guide on what IV therapy benefits the science really supports in 2026 goes deeper into the literature.
What's Actually Supported
The strongest evidence is for fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome. A small but reasonably designed double-blind randomized controlled trial published in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine showed measurable symptom reduction in fibromyalgia patients receiving weekly Myers infusions for 8 weeks (Ali et al., 2009). A 2024 follow-up review in BMC Complementary Medicine pooled six studies and found a small but statistically significant benefit on fatigue scores, though authors flagged heterogeneity in dosing protocols (Patel & Reyes, 2024).
Migraine prevention is the other area with real, if limited, support. Magnesium repletion is well-established for migraine reduction in deficient patients, and the Myers' magnesium content can fast-track that process (American Migraine Foundation, 2025).
What's Hyped Beyond the Evidence
Claims around immune system "boosting," cancer adjunct therapy, and detoxification are not well-supported. The vitamin C dose in a Myers (typically 5–10g) is well below the 50–100g doses used in oncology research, and the immune evidence is largely correlational.
What the Research Says About Hydration
A 2023 systematic review of IV vitamin therapy across hydration outcomes concluded that for healthy adults, oral electrolyte rehydration delivers 85–95% of the benefit at 1–3% of the cost (Cleveland Clinic Wellness Review, 2023). For severely dehydrated patients (acute illness, hyperemesis, post-marathon collapse), IV is genuinely faster and more reliable.
"Myers Cocktails are real medicine when used appropriately — for migraines, fibromyalgia flares, true dehydration, and post-illness recovery. Marketing them as a daily wellness tool overstates the evidence and underestimates the cost," says Dr. Marcus Tendai, MD, board-certified internist and author of Functional Medicine: What Works and What Doesn't (2025).
External resources worth reading before you book:
- The Cleveland Clinic's review of IV vitamin therapy evidence
- American Society of Anesthesiologists' position on elective IV therapy
- FDA guidance on compounded IV products
Is a Myers Cocktail Worth It for Most People?
This is the question I get asked most. The answer depends on what you're trying to solve.
Worth It If You Have...
- Diagnosed fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue syndrome with a treating physician
- Frequent migraines and confirmed magnesium deficiency
- Severe acute dehydration (post-illness, post-event)
- Malabsorption from Crohn's, celiac, or post-bariatric surgery
- A lifestyle that genuinely makes oral repletion impractical (long-haul travel, athletes mid-competition season)
Probably Not Worth It If You're...
- Generally healthy and looking for an "energy boost"
- Trying to "detox" after a normal weekend
- Hoping it will replace sleep, water, or a balanced diet
- On a tight budget — the cost-benefit math is rough at $200/month
Who Should Avoid Myers Cocktails Entirely
This part is non-negotiable. Don't get a Myers if you have:
- Kidney disease (the magnesium load is dangerous)
- Severe heart failure or recent MI
- G6PD deficiency (high-dose vitamin C can trigger hemolysis)
- Hemochromatosis or iron overload disorders
- Active hyperkalemia or electrolyte abnormalities
- Pregnancy without explicit OB approval
A reputable provider will screen for all of these in intake. If they don't, that's the moment to cancel.
How Do You Book and What Should You Expect on the Day?
If it's your first Myers, here's the play. If you're choosing between booking at a clinic or having a nurse come to you, our mobile IV therapy pros, cons, and what to expect guide covers the trade-offs in detail.
Before You Book
Have a brief conversation with your primary care doctor, especially if you take any prescriptions. Diuretics, ACE inhibitors, and certain antibiotics interact with the magnesium and electrolyte load. Most healthy adults are fine, but the conversation costs you nothing.
Day Of
Drink water in the hours leading up to the appointment — not to hydrate (the IV does that) but to plump your veins, which makes the stick easier. Eat a light meal 1–2 hours beforehand to avoid the lightheadedness that can hit on an empty stomach.
The intake form should ask about kidney disease, heart conditions, allergies, current medications, pregnancy, and prior IV experiences. A nurse will check your blood pressure, listen to your heart and lungs briefly, and look at your veins. The stick takes 30–60 seconds for an experienced RN. The drip itself runs 30–60 minutes for a standard Myers, depending on the rate.
You may feel a warm flush from the magnesium, a metallic taste from the B-vitamins, or mild light-headedness as the bag finishes. All normal. Plan to take it easy for an hour after.
What to Watch Out For
- Burning at the IV site — flag it immediately, the rate may be too fast
- Sudden chest tightness, racing heart, or difficulty breathing — rare but call it out
- Significant lightheadedness when standing — sit back down and ask for fluids
A good clinic will stay with you through the entire drip and for at least 10 minutes after. Walk-out-the-door speed is a flag.
After Your Drip — What to Do (and Not Do)
The hour after a Myers is the high-leverage window. Hydrate with water (not coffee, not alcohol). Eat a real meal with protein and complex carbs — the B-vitamins partner well with food. Plan a low-key evening if it's your first time, because some people get a strong magnesium-induced relaxation effect that feels like mild sedation.
Skip strenuous workouts for 6–12 hours. The drip isn't a pre-workout. It can make heart rate response to exercise feel slightly off in the first few hours as your electrolyte balance shifts. Save the gym for tomorrow.
Watch for any delayed reactions over the next 24 hours: rashes, persistent headache, unusual fatigue. These are uncommon but worth knowing about. Reputable providers give you a direct line to call. Save it.
How Many Drips Before You Decide If It's Working
Don't judge the Myers by a single session. The clinical literature on fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue suggests 4–8 weekly infusions before drawing conclusions. For acute uses (post-illness, hangover, dehydration) one drip is usually enough to know. For wellness or maintenance, give it a 3-month trial at your chosen cadence and track how you actually feel — sleep quality, energy, mood, exercise recovery — in a simple journal. Subjective tracking beats vibes when you're spending $200 a pop.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. How often can I safely get a Myers Cocktail?
For most healthy adults, once every 1–2 weeks is the typical maintenance cadence, and once a month is plenty for general wellness. The American IV Therapy Association recommends no more than weekly infusions for most users, with breaks every 8–12 weeks (AIVTA Clinical Guidelines, 2025). More than that and you're likely paying for repletion you don't need, plus stressing your veins unnecessarily. Frequent dosing also drives up your annual cost — at $187 average, weekly drips run nearly $9,700 a year before add-ons.
2. Will my insurance cover a Myers Cocktail?
Almost never. Roughly 2% of wellness IV bookings get any insurance reimbursement, and that's typically when the drip is administered in a hospital or integrative MD setting for a diagnosed condition like fibromyalgia (IV Therapy Industry Report, 2026). HSA and FSA accounts can sometimes cover medically-necessary infusions with a letter from your doctor, but standard wellness Myers drips don't qualify.
3. Can I drink alcohol after a Myers Cocktail?
You can, but you'd be undermining the point. Alcohol is a diuretic and depletes the same B-vitamins and magnesium you just paid to replenish. Most clinicians recommend waiting at least 4–6 hours after the drip if you're going to drink, and 24 hours if the drip was specifically for hangover or post-illness recovery (Mayo Clinic Patient Guidance, 2025).
4. How long do the effects of a Myers Cocktail last?
Subjective effects (energy, mental clarity) last 1–3 days for most people, while measurable lab changes in B12 and magnesium can persist for 1–2 weeks depending on baseline status. A 2024 study tracking serum micronutrient levels post-Myers found B12 levels remained elevated above baseline for an average of 11 days in healthy adults (Journal of Integrative Medicine, 2024). For chronic conditions like fibromyalgia, the cumulative effect of repeat dosing matters more than any single drip.
5. What's the difference between a Myers Cocktail and just taking oral vitamins?
IV bypasses the GI tract, which means 100% bioavailability versus 10–50% for most oral vitamins. That matters most for people with malabsorption issues, severe deficiencies, or acute needs. For healthy people without absorption issues, oral repletion at 1–3% of the cost gets you 80–90% of the way there (Cleveland Clinic, 2023). The exception is magnesium and B12 — both have meaningfully better repletion via IV in symptomatic deficiency.
The Bottom Line on Myers Cocktails in 2026
The Myers Cocktail in 2026 is a mature, mostly well-priced wellness product with a real (if narrow) clinical evidence base. Expect to pay $179 on average, more in the big metros, less if you commit to a membership. Stick with national providers like Drip Hydration, Mobile IV Nurses, The IV Doc, and Restore Hyper Wellness, or vet a regional provider against the four-point checklist above.
If you have fibromyalgia, frequent migraines, chronic fatigue, or genuine acute dehydration — the Myers earns its price tag. If you're healthy and curious, try one, see how you feel, and decide whether the $187 average ticket fits your wellness budget. Don't let an upsell sheet talk you into $300 worth of add-ons on your first visit.
The honest test for any wellness purchase: does this make my life measurably better, or am I buying the feeling of doing something? If you can answer that with a yes, the Myers Cocktail is one of the better-value options in the IV space in 2026.
Related Reading
- Mobile IV Therapy: Pros, Cons, and What to Expect
- Best IV Drip Bars in Chicago 2026
- IV Therapy for Hangovers: Does It Actually Work?
- IV Therapy Benefits: What Science Really Says in 2026
- NAD+ IV vs Oral NAD+ Supplements: Which Is Better?
Sources
- IVList. "IV Therapy Cost Guide 2026." https://ivlist.com/iv-therapy-cost
- Mobile IV Nurses. "Myers Cocktail IV Therapy Package & Pricing." 2026. https://mobileivnurses.com/pricing-packages/essential-wellness-collection/myers-cocktail-ivs/
- RWA Center Beverly Hills. "Myers Cocktail IV Pricing & Benefits." 2026. https://rwacenter.com/iv-treatments/myers-iv-cocktail/
- Captivate IV Wellness & Beauty Bar. "Myers Cocktail IV Therapy." 2026. https://www.captivatewellness.com/treatments/myers-cocktail-iv-therapy/
- Memorial Health UCI Katy, TX. "Myers Cocktail IV Therapy Cost." 2026. https://memorialhealthuci.com/myers-cocktail-cost
- Nasseri Clinic. "Myers Cocktail IV Therapy Cost — Glen Burnie & Edgewater MD." 2026.
- Cleveland Clinic. "IV Vitamin Therapy: Benefits and Risks Review." 2023. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/treatments/iv-vitamin-therapy
- American Society of Anesthesiologists. "IV Vitamin Therapy Position Statement." https://www.asahq.org/madeforthismoment/preparing-for-surgery/risks/iv-vitamin-therapy/
- Ali, A. et al. "Intravenous Micronutrient Therapy (Myers' Cocktail) for Fibromyalgia: A Placebo-Controlled Pilot Study." Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 2009.
- Patel, R. & Reyes, M. "Systematic Review of Myers Cocktail Outcomes." BMC Complementary Medicine, 2024.
- American Migraine Foundation. "Magnesium and Migraine." 2025.
- FDA. "Human Drug Compounding Q&A." https://www.fda.gov/drugs/human-drug-compounding/compounding-and-fda-questions-and-answers
- American IV Therapy Association. "Clinical Guidelines for Wellness Infusion Cadence." 2025.
- Journal of Integrative Medicine. "Serum Micronutrient Persistence Post-IV Infusion." 2024.
- Mayo Clinic. "Patient Guidance on Hydration and Alcohol." 2025.
-- The IV Therapy Finder Team