IV Therapy in Richmond Hill
Compare 16 clinics. In-clinic and mobile.
Looking for IV therapy in Richmond Hill? Compare 16 top-rated clinics offering hydration drips, NAD+, immune support, hangover recovery, and beauty treatments. Read reviews, see prices, and book your session in-clinic or mobile, whichever you prefer.
Providers in Richmond Hill
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Signature Beauty Lounge Richmond Hill is one of two GTA locations offering physician-designed IV Drip Therapy by Dr. Gregory Pugen, board-certified in anti-aging and regenerative medicine. Located at 2457 Yonge Street, 1st Floor inside the Holiday Inn Conference Centre, the clinic offers premium IV infusions alongside laser facials, HydraFacial, Botox, and dermal fillers in an upscale spa-like lounge. IV protocols target energy, immunity, skin brightening, anti-aging, and recovery. Skin Fitness membership available.
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IV Therapy in Richmond Hill, Ontario
Drive north up Yonge Street from Toronto's Steeles border and within twenty minutes you cross into a different wellness market entirely. Richmond Hill β long defined by its school catchments, its Hillcrest Mall corridor, and the affluent enclaves spilling east toward Bayview β has quietly become one of York Region's most active IV therapy markets. It is not the dense, walk-up-and-go scene of downtown Toronto. It is a calmer, more appointment-driven, more medically conservative version of it, and that shapes both pricing and what to expect when you walk in.
TheDripMap lists 16 IV therapy providers in Richmond Hill, with broader York Region coverage spanning Markham, Vaughan, Aurora, and Newmarket. The per-capita density along the Yonge corridor north of Highway 7 has been growing steadily since 2024.
What IV Therapy Costs in Richmond Hill β 2026 CAD Bands
Pricing in Richmond Hill is on average slightly lower than downtown Toronto but higher than what you would pay further north in Aurora or Newmarket. Based on rates published by clinics operating in Richmond Hill, Markham, and Vaughan as of 2026, here are the realistic CAD bands.
- Basic hydration drip (saline + electrolytes, ~500 mL): $120β$180 CAD
- Myers' Cocktail (B-complex, B12, magnesium, calcium, vitamin C): $180β$260 CAD
- Immune boost (high-dose vitamin C, zinc, B-complex): $200β$300 CAD
- Beauty / glow drip (glutathione, biotin, vitamin C): $220β$350 CAD
- Hangover / recovery (anti-nausea + hydration + B-vitamins + electrolytes): $200β$290 CAD
- NAD+ infusion (250 mg starter dose, 2β4 hours): $400β$650 CAD
- NAD+ high dose (500 mg+): $650β$1,200 CAD
- Athletic / performance drips: $200β$320 CAD
- Vitamin B12 injection (IM, not IV): $25β$55 CAD
- Glutathione push (standalone): $80β$150 CAD
Most clinics offer a package discount of roughly 10β15% if you commit to a series of four or six drips. A handful run quarterly memberships in the $150β$220/month range that bundle one Myers' or hydration drip per month with discounts on add-ons. Mobile IV therapy in York Region typically adds $50β$120 CAD travel and call-out fee on top of the base drip price, and many mobile services have a two-person minimum inside Richmond Hill.
A note on the high end: NAD+ pricing in Ontario has compressed slightly over the last 18 months as more clinics added it, but it remains the single most expensive line item on most menus. If a clinic is quoting $250 for a "full" NAD+ infusion, ask exactly how many milligrams you are getting β many low-cost offerings are 100 mg or less, which is a sub-therapeutic dose for most published protocols.
CNO and CPSO Rules in Ontario Applied to York Region
Ontario is one of the more strictly regulated provinces in Canada for medically delegated acts, and IV therapy falls squarely inside that framework. Two regulatory bodies set the rules every Richmond Hill clinic must follow.
College of Nurses of Ontario (CNO)
Under the Nursing Act, 1991 and the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991, the initiation of an IV, the administration of substances by injection or inhalation, and venipuncture are all classified as controlled acts. A Registered Nurse can perform these acts but generally requires either a direct order from a prescriber (physician or Nurse Practitioner) or a properly documented medical directive that authorizes the act for a specified patient population. The CNO's practice guidance is clear: the order or directive must be specific, must be signed by an authorized prescriber, and must include the assessment criteria, the intervention, and any contraindications.
In practical terms: if you walk into a clinic in Richmond Hill and an RN starts your IV, there has to be either a physician or NP who has either seen you (in person or by telemedicine) and written an order, or there has to be a medical directive in the chart that the RN is following. If the clinic cannot tell you which prescriber is responsible for your treatment, that is a serious red flag.
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO)
CPSO policies on delegation, medical directives, and out-of-hospital premises set the standard for the physician's role. Notably, if the clinic is performing IV moderate sedation or any procedure that meets the threshold of an Out-of-Hospital Premises (OHP), it must be inspected and licensed by CPSO under the Out-of-Hospital Premises Inspection Program (OHPIP). Routine vitamin IVs in most cases do not trigger OHPIP, but moderate sedation, IV ketamine, or certain aesthetic combinations can. If you are receiving anything more involved than a standard vitamin or hydration drip, ask whether the clinic operates as a CPSO-inspected OHP.
Health Canada and Compounding
Health Canada also plays a role. The compounded sterile preparations used in many IV drips are regulated under the Food and Drugs Act and provincial pharmacy regulation. Clinics should be sourcing from a licensed compounding pharmacy, and the bag, the additives, and the lot numbers should be documented in your chart. You are entitled to ask.
What to Look For in a Richmond Hill Clinic
The market here is mixed. Some operators are medically conservative, run by physicians or NPs with hospital backgrounds. Others are aesthetic-first lounges that added IV as a service line and may take a more retail approach. Both can be perfectly safe if the underlying clinical governance is sound, but the patient experience and the depth of intake will feel very different.
The checklist before booking your first appointment:
- Ask who the most responsible prescriber is. Get the name. If the front desk cannot tell you which physician or NP signs off on protocols, walk out.
- Ask whether you will be assessed before your first drip. Some form of intake β even if abbreviated β should happen before any IV is started. A good clinic will ask about pregnancy, kidney function, allergies, current medications, and any history of cardiac or thyroid disease.
- Confirm the registered nurse is in good standing. You can verify any RN or NP licence on the CNO Find a Nurse register. Verify any physician on the CPSO doctor search.
- Ask about the compounding pharmacy. A clinic with nothing to hide will tell you which licensed pharmacy compounds their bags and additives.
- Ask what the contraindications are for the drip you are considering. If the answer is "none," that is itself a red flag β every IV has them.
- Make sure they will give you a copy of your chart on request. Ontario's Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA) gives you that right.
- Check the rating, the volume of reviews, and the freshness of those reviews. A clinic with two reviews from 2022 is harder to evaluate than one with hundreds of recent ratings.
Most Common Treatments in Richmond Hill Clinics
The drip menus along the Yonge corridor have converged in 2026 around roughly the same dozen formulations.
Hydration / Saline
Plain isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl) or lactated Ringer's, typically 500 mL to 1,000 mL. Useful for genuine dehydration β illness, post-exercise, post-travel. Will not cure a hangover on its own, but it does help with the symptomatic dehydration component.
Myers' Cocktail
The original "vitamin drip," developed by the late Dr. John Myers and popularized after his death by Dr. Alan Gaby. Magnesium, calcium, B-vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B5, B6), B12, and vitamin C in saline. The most-ordered drip in most Ontario clinics. Clinical evidence is mixed β some support in fibromyalgia and migraine in small studies, with most reported benefit being patient-subjective.
Immune Drips (high-dose vitamin C)
Typically 7.5 g to 25 g of vitamin C in saline. Critical safety point: anyone receiving more than ~15 g of IV vitamin C must be screened for G6PD deficiency first β high-dose vitamin C can cause hemolysis in G6PD-deficient patients. This is not optional. If a clinic offers high-dose vitamin C without ordering or asking about G6PD status, that is a serious gap.
NAD+
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide is the buzziest drip on the menu and the most variable in dosing. Therapeutic protocols in the published literature range from 250 mg to 1,000 mg per infusion, given over 2 to 4 hours because faster rates cause significant flushing, chest tightness, and nausea. Anyone offering you a "30-minute NAD+ drip" is almost certainly under-dosing or pushing it dangerously fast.
Glutathione
Usually pushed as a separate IV push at the end of the main drip (it precipitates with vitamin C, so the two cannot share a bag). Common doses are 600 mg to 2,000 mg. Health Canada has issued guidance over the years about unregulated glutathione products marketed for skin lightening β make sure your clinic is using a Health Canada-acceptable source.
B12 / Lipo / MIC Injections
These are intramuscular, not IV. Cheap, fast, well-tolerated. Clinical value depends entirely on whether you actually have a B12 deficiency, which is a blood test, not a guess.
Richmond Hill Neighbourhoods and Wellness Clusters
Richmond Hill's IV therapy clinics cluster in three main areas:
- The Yonge / Highway 7 corridor (south Richmond Hill into north Thornhill). The densest cluster. This is where Signature Beauty Lounge Richmond Hill, the highest-rated and only fully claimed Richmond Hill clinic on our directory, sits at 2457 Yonge Street, 1st Floor. The corridor benefits from heavy commuter traffic, parking, and the spillover demographic from north Toronto.
- Around Hillcrest Mall and the Major Mackenzie / Yonge intersection. A second, smaller cluster, often inside medical aesthetics or wellness suites tied to the surrounding office plazas.
- Oak Ridges and Bayview Hill. Lightest density β mostly individual practitioners working out of mixed-use plazas. If you live this far north, mobile IV therapy is often more practical than driving south.
Spotlight: Signature Beauty Lounge Richmond Hill
Signature Beauty Lounge Richmond Hill is currently the highest-rated IV therapy and beauty wellness destination in Richmond Hill in our directory, with a 4.9-star average across 270 reviews. The clinic is located at 2457 Yonge Street, 1st Floor, and is a claimed listing on TheDripMap β meaning the clinic owner has verified ownership, confirmed their service menu, and is responsible for keeping their information current.
The published specialties are broad: Beauty + glow, Immune support, Energy + NAD+, Hydration, Anti-aging, Skin brightening, Hangover recovery, and General wellness. That breadth is consistent with the operating model along the Yonge corridor β clinics here tend to combine medical aesthetics, injectables, and IV therapy under one roof rather than running as pure IV-bar concepts.
Why we feature them: the combination of long-running review volume (270 reviews is substantial for a single Richmond Hill location), a 4.9 average, and a verified claim is what we look for in a flagship local listing. As with any clinic, you should still go through the seven-point checklist above on your first visit. A claim doesn't replace your own due diligence β it just means the basic facts on the listing have been confirmed by the operator.
How Richmond Hill Compares to Downtown Toronto, Markham, and Vaughan
The honest answer: Richmond Hill is a thinner market than Toronto, comparable to Vaughan, and noticeably bigger than Markham right now.
- Toronto has more choice, more competition, and slightly lower entry-level pricing β but the highest-volume operators downtown can feel rushed.
- Richmond Hill has more parking, often longer appointment slots, and the highest-rated single clinic in York Region.
- Markham is the thinnest local market; many Markham residents drive into Richmond Hill or Vaughan.
- Vaughan is comparable to Richmond Hill in size, slightly more spa-oriented in feel.
If you live in central Richmond Hill and you are price-sensitive, it is worth comparing one Richmond Hill quote against one downtown Toronto quote β but factor in the parking and the 401 commute before you assume Toronto is cheaper. For a deeper read on the downtown market, see our Toronto guide.
Mobile IV Therapy Serving Richmond Hill
Mobile IV in York Region has expanded considerably since 2024. Several Toronto-based mobile providers now serve Richmond Hill, and a handful of Richmond Hillβnative operators have launched in the last 18 months. Typical service radius covers Richmond Hill, Vaughan, Markham, Aurora, and Thornhill.
What you should expect:
- A two-person minimum is common (some operators require this; others waive it for a higher single-person rate).
- Travel fees of $50β$120 on top of the drip price.
- An RN or NP arriving with a sealed compounded bag, supplies, and sharps container.
- A pre-visit intake form, ideally with a telemedicine prescriber review before the visit.
- A signed order or medical directive on file before the IV is started.
Red flags for mobile in particular: anyone offering same-day, in-home IV without any prior intake; anyone unwilling to name the most responsible prescriber; anyone bringing IV bags in an unsealed cooler bag.
Insurance Coverage for IV Therapy in Richmond Hill
OHIP does not cover elective IV vitamin therapy. Some extended health plans will reimburse IV therapy if it is administered or supervised by a Naturopathic Doctor (ND) and your plan covers naturopathic services. Check your plan booklet β coverage is plan-specific. The clinic will give you a receipt with the practitioner's licence number for submission. For the full Canadian picture see our insurance coverage guide.
Explore More
- NAD+ in Toronto Β· Myers Cocktail in Toronto Β· Mobile IV in Toronto Β· Glutathione in Toronto
- Toronto β the GTA hub with the full directory
- IV Therapy Insurance Canada β naturopathic-doctor coverage angle
- Nearby cities: Markham Β· Vaughan Β· North York
Iron Infusion in Richmond Hill
A subset of Richmond Hill IV clinics offer iron infusions for diagnosed iron-deficiency anemia, as a medical service distinct from the wellness drip menu. The Richmond Hill market includes both physician-led practices along Yonge Street and naturopathic clinics through the Oak Ridges and Bayview Hill corridors, with iron sucrose and iron isomaltoside protocols typically available by consultation. If you have a recent ferritin or CBC result documenting deficiency, bring it with you, and ask whether the session is billable through your extended health benefits when administered by a naturopathic doctor. For broader context on when IV iron is appropriate, see Iron IV Therapy: when you need it and what to expect.
Group and Event IV in Richmond Hill
Richmond Hill sees consistent bachelorette and bridal-party IV demand sourced primarily from the York region, with York Region wedding venues, the Hillcrest Mall corridor, and Oak Ridges country properties driving the booking calendar through the summer wedding months. The typical formats are a group booking at a clinic with a multi-chair suite, or a mobile provider that comes to a Markham or Vaughan venue, a private home, or a north GTA hotel suite. Most clinics quote per person with a minimum head count of three to six guests, with a small travel premium for off-site service. For the wider GTA mobile picture, see Mobile IV Therapy across the Toronto GTA.
Browse IV Treatments in Richmond Hill
Most Richmond Hill clinics offer these popular treatment protocols. Tap any drip for the full breakdown: benefits, who it's for, cost, and how to find a provider near you.
