City Guides
May 30, 2026
Updated: May 30, 2026

IV Therapy Ottawa: Verified Wellness Lounges, Real 2026 Pricing, and the National Capital Region Guide

TheDripMap Editorial Team
TheDripMap Editorial
IV Therapy Ottawa: Verified Wellness Lounges, Real 2026 Pricing, and the National Capital Region Guide

Ottawa is quietly one of Canada's most interesting IV therapy markets. The capital sits at the bilingual crossroads of Ontario and Quebec, with a federal workforce that runs on long Parliament Hill hours, a fast-growing tech corridor in Kanata, a wellness-forward demographic in Westboro and the Glebe, and a steady cross-river flow from Gatineau. That mix has produced a small but discerning cluster of IV hydration and wellness lounges — some attached to long-running medical practices, others built fresh during the post-2022 boom in cosmetic and longevity medicine.

This is the 2026 guide we wish existed when we started mapping Ottawa for TheDripMap. It covers what IV therapy actually costs in the National Capital Region, who is legally allowed to administer it in Ontario, what to look for in a clinic that is doing things properly, where the verified options cluster, and how the experience differs between English-language downtown clinics and the bilingual or French-first practices serving Gatineau and east Ottawa.

Across Ontario, TheDripMap currently lists 63 verified IV therapy providers, with 13 of those operating inside the City of Ottawa. The Ottawa market is smaller than Toronto's, but the quality bar is high: the top six clinics in the city all hold 4.2 stars or better on Google, and several have hundreds of reviews accumulated over years rather than months.

What IV therapy costs in Ottawa (CAD bands)

Pricing in the National Capital Region is broadly in line with the rest of Ontario but tends to run slightly above Toronto for comparable drips, partly because Ottawa has fewer high-volume IV bars driving prices down through competition. Confirm pricing directly with each clinic — these are the bands we have seen across published Ottawa menus as of 2026.

  • Basic hydration drip (500–1000 mL saline with electrolytes): roughly $125–$200 CAD
  • Myers' Cocktail (B-complex, B12, magnesium, calcium, vitamin C): roughly $175–$275 CAD
  • Immune boost (high-dose vitamin C, zinc, B-complex): roughly $200–$325 CAD
  • Hangover / recovery (saline, anti-nausea, B-complex, toradol or equivalent): roughly $200–$300 CAD
  • Beauty / glow (glutathione + vitamin C, sometimes biotin): roughly $225–$400 CAD
  • NAD+ low-dose (100–250 mg): roughly $300–$550 CAD
  • NAD+ full session (500 mg+): roughly $600–$1,200 CAD per session, with multi-session packages discounted
  • Mobile / in-home surcharge: typically $50–$150 CAD on top of clinic pricing depending on travel zone

Two notes specific to Ottawa. First, several clinics that started as cosmetic injectables practices have added IV menus, and their pricing reflects med-spa rather than pure-hydration positioning — expect the higher end of each band at clinics whose primary business is Botox and filler. Second, a handful of integrative-medicine practices in Ottawa run physician-led IV protocols (high-dose vitamin C, chelation, Meyers variants for chronic fatigue) where pricing is closer to the per-hour fees of a naturopathic or functional-medicine consult and may not be posted publicly at all. For those, "Varies — confirm directly with clinic" is the honest answer.

CNO rules in Ontario: who can actually administer your IV

Ontario is one of the more clearly regulated provinces for IV therapy, and Ottawa clinics operate under the same rules as the rest of the province. Three regulatory bodies matter:

  • College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) — regulates physicians who order or oversee IV protocols.
  • College of Nurses of Ontario (CNO) — regulates RNs and RPNs who insert IVs and administer infusions.
  • College of Naturopaths of Ontario (CONO) — regulates NDs, who in Ontario can prescribe and administer IV therapy within a defined scope after additional certification.

Under CNO's standards, an RN or RPN initiating IV therapy must do so on the basis of a valid order from an authorized prescriber (typically a physician or, within scope, an ND or nurse practitioner). The CNO's Decisions About Procedures and Authority guidance and the Medication practice standard set out that nurses must have the knowledge, skill, and judgment for the procedure and must work within an organizational policy framework. The current version of these standards is published at cno.org.

The College of Naturopaths of Ontario regulates the Standard of Practice for Intravenous Therapy for NDs and requires additional training and authorization before a naturopath may administer IV. Their current standard is at collegeofnaturopaths.on.ca.

What this means for you as a patient in Ottawa:

  1. There should be a named medical director or supervising physician on file at the clinic, or the clinic should be physician-owned, or the clinic should operate under a regulated naturopath's scope. Ask. A good clinic answers in one sentence.
  2. The person inserting the IV should be a regulated health professional (RN, RPN, NP, MD, or appropriately certified ND), not a medical assistant or technician.
  3. A good-faith health intake — past medical history, medications, allergies, pregnancy status, kidney function questions — should happen before your first drip, not after. If a clinic skips this, leave.
  4. The clinic should have on-site emergency protocols (epinephrine, oxygen, suction) and staff trained in anaphylaxis management.

Health Canada also regulates the drug products being infused. Compounded preparations (custom mixes prepared by a pharmacy for a specific patient) must come from a licensed compounding pharmacy and are subject to provincial pharmacy regulation through the Ontario College of Pharmacists. If a clinic is mixing its own glutathione or high-dose vitamin C cocktails outside a pharmacy framework, that is a red flag worth questioning.

What to look for in an Ottawa clinic

A good clinic in Ottawa — or anywhere — generally has the following in plain view, either on its website or willingly answered on the phone:

  • Named medical director (an MD, NP, or in some cases an ND with IV authorization). "Our medical director is Dr. ___" should not be a hard question.
  • Regulated injectors. RN, RPN, NP, or authorized ND. Ask which college they are registered with.
  • Published or transparent pricing. The best clinics publish menus; the next-best will email or text a full menu when asked. Be cautious of clinics that refuse to quote until you book a consult.
  • Pre-treatment intake. First-visit forms covering medical history, allergies, current medications, and pregnancy status are not optional.
  • Sterile, single-use supplies. Catheters, tubing, and bags should be opened in front of you.
  • Emergency preparedness. Ask, "What happens if I have a reaction?" The answer should mention epinephrine, oxygen, and a defined protocol — not "we'd call 911."
  • Clean, well-reviewed Google presence. Ottawa clinics with hundreds of long-term reviews like Refined Image (344 reviews) or Somerset Health & Wellness Centre (274 reviews) have more accumulated patient feedback to read than a brand-new lounge with twelve reviews. Read the recent ones, including the one-stars.

Most common treatments in Ottawa

The Ottawa menus we have catalogued cluster around a familiar core set, though the proportions differ from Toronto. Federal-workforce stress, long winters, and the city's strong endurance-athlete community (Rideau Canal runners, Gatineau Park cyclists, cross-country skiers) push a few categories higher than the national average.

  • Hydration / Myers' Cocktail. The most ordered category city-wide. Often booked the morning after long flights, important Parliament sittings, or weekend events at TD Place.
  • Hangover / recovery. Sober-day-after demand cluster around the ByWard Market and the Glebe.
  • Immune / high-dose C. Popular through Ottawa's long flu season (typically late October through April).
  • Beauty + glow (glutathione, vitamin C, biotin combinations). Note the FDA and Health Canada warnings discussed in our glutathione IV therapy Toronto guide — the same cautions apply in Ottawa.
  • NAD+. Growing demand from tech workers in Kanata and the longevity-curious demographic in the Glebe and Westboro. Expect a multi-hour drip at full dose.
  • Athletic recovery. Often a saline-plus-amino-acids combination, sometimes with magnesium and B-complex, marketed to Ottawa's strong running and triathlon community.
  • Integrative / functional medicine IV. A few Ottawa clinics — particularly the long-standing integrative practices — offer physician-led protocols for chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia adjunct support, and similar indications. These are not the same product as a beauty-bar hydration drip and are priced and screened accordingly.

Ottawa neighbourhoods and wellness clusters

Ottawa is a city of distinct quartiers, and the IV therapy supply has settled around five of them.

Westboro. Wellness-forward, athletic, professional. Yoga studios, smoothie bars, and longevity-focused practices have clustered along Richmond Road and Wellington West. Expect higher-touch lounges with beauty and NAD+ on the menu.

Hintonburg and Wellington West. Adjacent to Westboro and increasingly indistinguishable from it for wellness retail. Newer entrants tend to land here.

ByWard Market and downtown core. The visible market for hangover recovery, business-traveller hydration, and after-work beauty drips. Convenient to Parliament Hill, the Westin and Fairmont hotels, and the federal office buildings along Sussex Drive and Wellington Street.

The Glebe and Old Ottawa South. Older, established, slightly higher household income, integrative-medicine friendly. NDs and longevity-focused practices have a real presence here.

Kanata and Stittsville. West-end tech corridor (Shopify, Nokia, the federal labs). Demand patterns lean toward energy, focus, and NAD+ rather than beauty. A handful of clinics serve the west end exclusively, partly to spare the 20–30 minute drive into the core.

The east end (Orléans, Beacon Hill) and the south (Riverside South, Barrhaven) are under-served relative to population, which is why mobile IV providers have built sustainable routes in those neighbourhoods.

English vs French clinic experiences in the National Capital Region

Ottawa is functionally bilingual, and the NCR includes the Outaouais region across the river. A few practical notes for francophone patients or anyone planning to cross into Gatineau:

  • Most central Ottawa IV clinics will conduct intake and consent in English by default. Many staff are conversational in French; some clinics, particularly in Vanier and the east end, operate comfortably in both languages.
  • Quebec has separate regulators. Across the river, the Ordre des infirmières et infirmiers du Québec (OIIQ) regulates nursing practice, and the Collège des médecins du Québec (CMQ) regulates physicians. A clinic operating in Gatineau is under Quebec rules, not Ontario rules — which means different consent forms, sometimes different pharmacy supply chains, and different scope-of-practice details for NDs (who are not regulated as primary care providers in Quebec the same way they are in Ontario).
  • TheDripMap currently lists 0 verified IV therapy providers in Gatineau. That does not mean none exist — it means we have not yet completed verification for any Gatineau clinic. If you operate one and want to be added, you can claim or submit your clinic.
  • If you require service in French, ask the clinic directly: "Est-ce que la consultation et le consentement peuvent se faire en français?" — and listen for whether the person who picks up the phone can answer in French.

Mobile IV in Ottawa

Mobile IV (where a nurse or paramedic comes to your home, hotel, or office) is a real and growing segment in Ottawa, but the regulatory bar is the same as in-clinic. The person inserting your IV must still be a regulated professional acting on a valid order. A mobile-IV provider should be able to tell you:

  • The name of their medical director or ordering physician
  • The college registration of the nurse coming to your address
  • What emergency equipment they bring (at minimum, epinephrine, blood-pressure cuff, pulse oximeter)
  • Whether your address falls inside their travel zone (most Ottawa providers cover the core plus Kanata, Orléans, and Barrhaven; some include Gatineau)
  • Cancellation policy and travel surcharge

Expect mobile pricing to run $50–$150 CAD above clinic pricing in central Ottawa, with surcharges that scale outward. Hotel concierge bookings (Westin, Fairmont Château Laurier, Lord Elgin) are common and usually arranged within 2–4 hours of request.

How TheDripMap verifies Ottawa clinics

We list a clinic in the Ottawa directory only after we can confirm at minimum:

  1. The clinic publicly offers IV therapy (not just nutritional injections or aesthetics).
  2. A legitimate business address and phone are reachable.
  3. The clinic operates under a regulated professional framework (named medical director, RN/NP/ND involvement, or physician-owner).

We pull initial data from public sources, then verify by direct outreach. Verified clinics are marked clearly. Claimed clinics — currently four across the platform, including Signature Beauty Lounge Downtown Toronto and Richmond Hill — have additional editorial review and direct owner contact.

The highest-rated unclaimed Ottawa clinics on TheDripMap as of this writing include ElevateRx Medical Aesthetics (5.0 stars, 154 Google reviews), Refined Image Ottawa (4.9, 344 reviews), Skin Logic Ottawa (4.9, 120 reviews), Somerset Health & Wellness Centre (4.9, 274 reviews), NutriChem Compounding Pharmacy & Clinic (4.3, 115 reviews), and Ottawa Integrative Health Centre (4.2). NutriChem in particular is notable in the Ottawa landscape because it is both a licensed compounding pharmacy and a clinic, which is a regulatory structure worth understanding if you are evaluating compounded IV products. Always confirm current menus and pricing on the clinic's own website or by phone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is IV therapy legal in Ottawa?

Yes. IV therapy is legal across Ontario when administered by a regulated health professional acting on a valid order from an authorized prescriber. The applicable rules come from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO), the College of Nurses of Ontario (CNO), and, for naturopaths, the College of Naturopaths of Ontario (CONO).

Are IV drips covered by OHIP in Ottawa?

No. Elective wellness, hydration, beauty, and NAD+ IV therapy are not covered by the Ontario Health Insurance Plan. Some private health insurance plans reimburse a portion of naturopathic IV visits if your plan includes ND coverage and the clinic provides an itemized receipt under a registered ND's name — check your specific plan.

How much does a Myers' Cocktail cost in Ottawa?

In Ottawa, a Myers' Cocktail typically runs roughly $175–$275 CAD as of 2026, depending on the clinic and the exact formulation. Confirm pricing directly with the clinic before booking.

Do I need a doctor's referral to get IV therapy in Ottawa?

You do not need a referral from your family doctor, but the clinic itself must operate under a valid order from a prescriber (physician, NP, or authorized ND). Most clinics handle this internally — your first visit includes an intake and consent that satisfies the requirement.

Is NAD+ IV safe?

NAD+ infusions are generally well tolerated when administered correctly, but they require a slow infusion rate to manage side effects like chest tightness, flushing, or nausea, which most patients experience to some degree during the drip. Patients with serious cardiovascular, kidney, or psychiatric conditions, and those who are pregnant, should not receive NAD+ without specialist evaluation. NAD+ is also not a Health Canada–approved drug for any specific indication; it is administered as an off-label or nutritional intervention.

What is the difference between an IV at a med spa and an IV at an integrative medicine clinic?

A med-spa IV is typically a packaged wellness drip (hydration, beauty, hangover) administered by an RN under standing orders from a medical director, with a short intake. An integrative-medicine IV is more often a physician- or ND-led, individualized protocol — frequently higher-dose vitamin C, chelation, or chronic-condition adjunct therapy — with a full clinical workup, blood work, and longer appointments. Different products, different price points, different reasons to use them.

Can I get IV therapy if I am pregnant?

Most IV wellness clinics will decline elective IV therapy during pregnancy. If you are pregnant and your physician has specifically recommended hydration or anti-nausea IV therapy for hyperemesis gravidarum or similar, that should be coordinated through your obstetric provider, not a wellness lounge.


Ready to find a verified IV therapy clinic in Ottawa? Browse all verified Ottawa providers on TheDripMap, or take our 60-second quiz to match a drip to what you actually need. If you are not sure whether a specific Ottawa clinic is operating under proper regulatory oversight, the questions in this guide are a good starting point — and the answers should be easy.

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