City Guides
May 24, 2026
Updated: Jun 7, 2026

Best IV Therapy in Miami 2026

TheDripMap Team
TheDripMap Editorial
Best IV Therapy in Miami 2026

Miami''s IV therapy scene has grown dramatically over the past five years, driven by year-round tourism, an active nightlife and club culture, professional sports, and a wellness-conscious local population.

Why Miami is an IV therapy hotspot

Three forces drive Miami''s IV demand: tourism that fills South Beach hotels with weekend visitors, a year-round tropical climate that creates dehydration risk, and a deeply embedded aesthetic and wellness culture.

Pricing in Miami

  • Standard wellness drips: $175 to $350
  • South Beach mobile or hotel-room service: $300 to $500
  • Brickell and downtown: $175 to $300
  • Coral Gables and Aventura: $200 to $400
  • NAD+ protocols: $500 to $1,000+

Neighborhoods to know

South Beach is the highest-demand area, driven by hotels, clubs, and weekend tourism. Expect premium pricing.

Brickell serves the financial district with mid-market pricing and easier weekday booking.

Wynwood and Edgewater lean trendy and creative, targeting the design and tech community.

Coral Gables is the established affluent area with premium aesthetic-focused clinics.

Aventura serves north Miami''s residential affluent population with a strong beauty and NAD+ focus.

Most popular treatments in Miami

  • Hangover Recovery - South Beach weekend volume is enormous
  • Beauty Glow - driven by the local aesthetic medicine scene
  • Hydration - tropical climate makes basic hydration a year-round draw
  • Energy Boost - popular with the hospitality and entertainment workforce
  • NAD+ Plus - growing but smaller share than other premium markets

What to look for in a Miami clinic

The Miami market has high supply but also higher variation in quality. Apply the same evaluation criteria from our how to choose an IV therapy clinic guide. A few Miami-specific notes:

  • Spanish-speaking staff is widely available
  • Reviews mentioning specific staff names are more reliable than generic reviews
  • Off-Strip clinics often deliver equivalent service at meaningfully lower prices

Looking for a Miami IV clinic? Browse all clinics → or take our 60-second matching quiz.

Explore more IV therapy in Florida

For the full Florida clinic matching platform - including every city we cover across the state - see our Florida IV therapy matching platform.

The Miami IV therapy landscape

Miami runs on a particular kind of energy, and the IV therapy market here reflects every facet of it. Walk through South Beach on a Sunday morning and you will see mobile nurses wheeling kits into Ocean Drive hotel lobbies, restocking saline for clients who closed down a Lincoln Road club six hours earlier. The nightlife economy in South Beach and Wynwood is the single biggest demand driver, and it spikes hard during Art Basel in December, Miami Music Week, and Ultra Music Festival, when mobile operators routinely run 24-hour rotations.

But hangover drips are only one slice. Brickell's finance and law crowd books weekday in-office NAD+ and Myers' Cocktail appointments between meetings. Coral Gables, Coconut Grove, Bay Harbor, and Aventura support an affluent residential clientele that treats IV therapy like a standing wellness subscription. Doral anchors the Latin American business community, with bilingual clinics catering to executives flying in from Bogota, Mexico City, and Sao Paulo. Sunny Isles and Bay Harbor serve a heavy Russian and South American expat population that has driven demand for longevity-oriented protocols.

Then there is the elephant in the room: Miami is the post-cosmetic-surgery recovery capital of the United States. The city's plastic surgery economy, especially around BBL and Lipo 360, has built an entire parallel IV therapy vertical. Most clinics, whether in Doral, Brickell, or Miami Beach, now offer dedicated post-op packages with surgeon referral relationships. Cruise tourists out of PortMiami round out the mix with pre-sailing immunity boosts and post-cruise rehydration appointments, often booked the same day they disembark.

What IV therapy actually costs in Miami

Miami sits in the mid-to-upper tier of US pricing. Basic hydration drips generally run $175 to $300 in-clinic. A Myers' Cocktail lands around $225 to $375 depending on neighborhood. NAD+ infusions, the priciest standard offering, range from roughly $400 for low-dose introductory sessions to $900-plus for full 500mg or 1000mg protocols. Mobile pricing carries a meaningful premium: published rates from established Miami mobile operators put hangover and Myers' drips in the $285 to $349 range, with delivery fees of $50 for standard timing and up to $150 for priority arrival inside 90 minutes.

South Beach commands the highest mobile pricing in the metro because clinics are routing nurses into hotel rooms at hours when no one else is working. Brickell's commercial rents push in-clinic pricing up similarly. Coral Gables and Aventura concierge pricing tracks close behind. Doral tends to run slightly lower for standard wellness drips but spikes hard for post-surgical packages.

Cosmetic surgery recovery drips are typically priced as multi-session packages running $400 to $800-plus, and full post-op series can reach into four figures. Clinics that specifically cater to Latin American medical tourists post-BBL or post-Lipo 360 charge a noticeable premium over standard wellness offerings, justified by specialized protocols and in some cases on-site monitoring.

Florida regulation is relatively permissive: RNs can initiate and administer IV therapy under physician standing orders, with a board-certified medical director required for med spa oversight. Enforcement is complaint-driven, which has both expanded access and created the gray-market problems described below.

Three treatments worth knowing about in Miami

Hangover and recovery drips. This is Miami's bread and butter. A standard hangover bag combines a liter of saline or lactated Ringer's with B-complex, magnesium, and an anti-nausea push like ondansetron, sometimes with Toradol for headache. South Beach and Wynwood operators market these aggressively as morning-after packages, and several mobile providers will deliver to hotel rooms in the 6am to 9am window post-club. Published Miami pricing sits around $285 in-room with delivery fees on top. Honest caveat: rehydration is real, but IV fluids do not detoxify alcohol any faster than your liver already does. You feel better mostly because you were dehydrated.

Post-surgical recovery drips. Miami is the BBL capital and one of the top US plastic surgery destinations, so post-op IV protocols are a major revenue stream. Typical bags combine hydration, vitamin C, glutathione, arnica, B12, and sometimes Toradol or other physician-ordered additives. Many clinics maintain surgeon referral relationships and offer multi-session packages running $400 to $800-plus per session. Honest caveat: anything administered in the first 72 hours post-op should be coordinated with your surgeon, and the venue matters as much as the bag. See the safety section below.

NAD+ for jet-lagged executives. Brickell finance partners, cross-Atlantic frequent flyers, and the constant Latin American business commute drive steady demand. Clinics position NAD+ as a longevity, energy, and jet lag intervention, with sessions priced $400 to $800 depending on dose. Infusions are slow, typically two to four hours, and many providers cap at 250mg or 500mg per visit to manage tolerability. Honest caveat: human evidence for IV NAD+ is still thin. The mitochondrial and longevity research is interesting but mostly preclinical. Treat it as experimental wellness, not established medicine.

Mobile vs in-clinic IV therapy in Miami

Mobile makes sense more often in Miami than in almost any other US city. The hotel-room post-club booking in South Beach is the obvious case. Wynwood after Art Basel openings, post-BBL recovery in residential houses in Doral or Hialeah, yacht charters anchored off Biscayne Bay, and group bookings for bachelorette and bachelor weekends in Miami Beach are all standard mobile use cases. Several established Miami mobile operators run 24-hour or near-24-hour service, which is largely a function of the nightlife economy.

In-clinic remains the better choice in specific situations. First-time recipients benefit from the controlled environment. NAD+ infusions, because of their length and the nausea many people feel mid-drip, are easier to manage in a clinic chair. And anything in the immediate post-surgical window, where vitals monitoring matters, belongs in a licensed clinical space rather than a residential bedroom.

Expect mobile travel fees of roughly $50 to $150 within central Miami, with surcharges for Aventura, Sunny Isles, Doral, and the further reaches of the metro. Priority arrival windows under 90 minutes carry the highest fees.

How to choose a Miami IV clinic without getting burned

Florida's permissive regulatory environment combined with Miami's medical tourism volume has created real safety problems alongside the legitimate market. The biggest red flag is the unlicensed recovery house arranging post-op IV therapy without RN supervision or proper physician oversight. Local news investigations have documented deaths at unlicensed South Florida recovery homes following BBL and Lipo 360 procedures, and Miami Fire Rescue has responded to cases involving unmonitored medication administration in those settings. This is the single most important risk category in the Miami market.

Other warning signs: med spas that cannot name a board-certified medical director, NAD+ priced under $300, mobile providers without professional liability insurance, post-op packages priced suspiciously low, and clinics targeting Spanish-speaking medical tourists with cash-only pricing and no written treatment records.

What to ask before booking. Get the medical director's name and verify their Florida license at flhealthsource.gov. Confirm your nurse is an RN, not an unlicensed assistant. Ask where bags are compounded. If you are post-surgical, ask specifically about post-op protocols, what additives are included, and what the plan is if a complication arises during or after the session. The good news is that Miami has a deep bench of well-run clinical IV operators across South Beach, Brickell, Coral Gables, Aventura, and Doral. Screen for credentials, avoid the recovery-house gray market, and the experience is genuinely worth it.

Top IV Therapy Clinics in Miami

Out of 18 clinics listed on TheDripMap in Miami, these are the highest-rated based on aggregated patient reviews. Tap any clinic to see services, real pricing, and book a session.

1. ELIXR IV Therapy

4.9 ⭐ (69 reviews)

2. REVIV Miami Brickell

4.8 ⭐ (54 reviews)

3. EverLiv IV Therapy

New listing

4. DRIP Health & MedSpa Miami Lakes

New listing

5. Solea Brickell SPA

New listing

6. Novaskin Med Spa Brickell

New listing

7. The DRIPBaR South Miami

New listing

8. Drip Hydration Miami

New listing

Compare every IV therapy clinic in Miami →

Frequently asked questions about IV therapy in Miami

How much does IV therapy cost in Miami?

Prices vary by clinic and treatment. Most Miami clinics charge between $150 and $350 for a standard hydration drip, and $400 to $800+ for NAD+ protocols.

Are there mobile IV therapy services in Miami?

Yes - 5 of the 18 clinics in Miami offer mobile IV therapy that comes to your home, office, or hotel. Mobile bookings usually carry a $50-$100 travel fee on top of the drip price, and most providers serve a 20-mile radius from their base.

What are the most common IV treatments in Miami?

Hydration drips, Myers' Cocktail, NAD+ protocols, immune-support cocktails (high-dose vitamin C + zinc), and energy boosters (B12, B-complex) are the most commonly available treatments in Miami.

How do I choose the right IV clinic in Miami?

Look for: an MD or registered nurse supervising the practice, transparent pricing on the clinic website, a written intake form covering medications and conditions, fresh IV bags with documented expiry, and reviews mentioning the specific drip you want. Avoid clinics that won't tell you who is inserting your IV or what is in the bag.