Type 'IV therapy cost Phoenix' into a search bar and you will find almost everything except an actual number. Ranges from $99 to $400, 'starting at' prices that balloon once the add-ons appear, and clinics that make you call to find out what a drip costs. We think that is a silly way to treat people. So here is our full price list, an honest breakdown of what drives the cost of an infusion, the membership math worked out with real arithmetic, and how health savings accounts fit into the picture. No games, no asterisks, no call-for-pricing.
The real menu, published
Here is what every drip on our menu costs, the same numbers you will see on our services page and on the wall in the clinic. Pure Hydration, a full liter of balanced electrolytes, is $135. NAD+ is $150. The Rescue, our rough-morning formula with anti-nausea support, is $165. Immunity Plus, built around high-dose vitamin C, zinc, and glutathione, is $175. Our two flagship formulas, the Myers Cocktail and Peak Performance, are $215 each. If you want something faster than a drip, a B12 injection is $35 and takes about two minutes. There is no consultation fee to see those prices, no membership requirement to get them, and no surprise line items when you check out at the front desk in Anthem.
What actually drives the price of a drip
Three things separate a $135 bag from a $215 one. The first is what is in it: a liter of electrolyte fluid is inexpensive, while pharmaceutical-grade B vitamins, gram-level vitamin C, amino blends, and NAD+ cost real money at the supplier level, and quality between compounding pharmacies varies more than most clients realize. The second is time: a drip that runs 45 to 60 minutes occupies a chair, a licensed nurse, and clinic space for that hour, and nurses who can place a comfortable line on the first stick are not the cheap ones. The third is oversight. At our clinic a Board Certified Emergency Physician reviews every drip before it runs, and that layer of supervision is baked into the price. When you see a drip advertised dramatically cheaper than the market, one of those three things is usually being trimmed, and it is worth asking which.
Red flags at both ends of the price range
Phoenix has IV options from $99 strip-mall pop-ups to $400 concierge services, and price alone does not tell you which to trust. On the cheap end, ask three questions: what size is the bag, because a 500ml bag is half the hydration of a full liter and a common place to quietly cut cost; who is placing the line; and is any physician actually involved, or is a medical director just a name on the paperwork. On the expensive end, ask what specifically justifies the premium, because the answer is often a resort address or a nurse's drive time rather than anything in the bag. A fair Phoenix price for a full-liter vitamin infusion with real medical oversight generally lands between $135 and $250. Meaningfully above or below that, ask more questions before you sit down.
The membership math, worked out
If you come in more than occasionally, a membership usually wins, and here is the actual arithmetic instead of a vague 'save more.' Our Essentials plan is $89 a month and includes one signature IV, a free B12 injection with every visit, and 10% off anything extra. Pay-as-you-go, a Myers Cocktail plus a B12 runs $250; on Essentials, that visit costs you $89. Performance is $159 a month for two signature IVs, a monthly injection, and 15% off extras, which is well over $400 of menu value if you use it fully. Elite is $249 for four signature drips a month plus 20% off everything else, built for people who treat this as weekly maintenance.
Now the honest caveat, because this is where wellness memberships earn their bad reputation: a membership only saves you money if you actually come in. If you are a twice-a-year client, stay pay-as-you-go, and if you ask us at the desk, we will tell you exactly that instead of selling you a plan you will not use.
Using HSA and FSA dollars
Plenty of clients pay with health savings or flexible spending accounts, and we make that as easy as your plan allows. We cannot promise your administrator will cover IV wellness services, because every plan draws that line differently, but here is what we provide: itemized superbills through the member portal, and a printable HSA and FSA receipt template on our documents page. Take your receipt, submit it, and let your plan make the call. Some reimburse without a blink, some want a letter of medical necessity, and some decline. Check with your administrator before you assume either way, and keep every receipt regardless, because plans change their minds more often than people think.
The discounts we actually honor
Two standing discounts, no fine print. First responders and military get 15% off every visit, every time, with no verification hoops: mention your department or branch when you book and it is applied. This clinic was founded by a Navy veteran IV nurse and a working firefighter and paramedic, so that discount is not a marketing gimmick; it is the founding point. Second, new accounts get $25 off their first drip when they sign up on the website. Both come off the published menu prices above, not off an inflated number invented to make a discount look generous.
So that is the whole picture: real prices, what drives them, when a membership earns its keep, and how to use pre-tax dollars where your plan allows. If you want a specific answer for your specific situation, call us at (623) 282-1201, or take the two-minute quiz on the site and it will point you to the right drip at the right price. We are at 42201 N 41st Dr, Suite 122 in Anthem, Monday through Saturday, 9am to 6pm, and walk-ins are always welcome.