Skip to content
Peptide Tracker app iconPeptide Calculator
CellularNAD®

NAD+ dosing reference

Common vial sizes, typical dose ranges, and a free reconstitution calculator pre-configured for NAD+. Not medical advice. Always verify against your vial label and your provider's protocol.

Vial sizes
100, 200, 500 mg
Typical dose
100–500 mg
Absolute max
1000 mg
BAC water
2, 3, 5 ml

NAD+ reconstitution

Pre-loaded with common NAD+ values — adjust to your vial.

Inputs

Peptide preset
Syringe

NAD+ common vial sizes: 100 mg, 200 mg, 500 mg. Typical dose range: 100500 mg. Clinical literature. Not medical advice.

  • That dose needs 200.0 units — more than fits in one U-100 syringe (100). Consider a higher concentration or split the dose.
Draw on U-100
200.0units

for a 100 mg dose

Concentration
50.0 mg/ml
Volume
2.000 ml
Per ml
100 u

Not medical advice. Always verify against your vial label and your provider's instructions. Re-check before drawing.

About NAD+

Cellular peptides support mitochondrial function (SS-31), redox balance (glutathione), and NAD+ levels (NAD+ precursors and full molecule). They are studied for energy, longevity, and recovery.

  • How it's used

    Subcutaneous, intramuscular, or IV (clinic-administered for NAD+). Cycles vary — weekly maintenance or short loading phases.

  • Storage

    Refrigerate reconstituted vials. NAD+ degrades quickly — use within manufacturer-specified window.

  • Watch for

    • NAD+ infusions: flushing, chest pressure, nausea — slow administration mitigates
    • Local site reaction with subcutaneous injection
    • Effects often subtle and cumulative over weeks

Brand names & aliases

NAD+ is also sold or referenced as NAD®. These are registered trademarks of their respective owners and are listed for clinical clarity only — Peptide Calculator Log is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by these companies.

NAD+ vs other Cellular peptides

2 compounds compared

Reference dose ranges for the cellular category. Tap any compound to open its full reference page.

CompoundBrand namesTypical doseVial sizesStatus
NAD+NAD®100500 mg100, 200, 500 mgResearch
GlutathioneGSH®100600 mg200, 600, 1200 mgResearch

Dose ranges summarized from FDA-approved labels (for approved compounds) and peer-reviewed research (for the rest). See the resources page for source databases.

NAD+ FAQ

Answers, not hype.

  • NAD+ (also marketed as NAD®) is a peptide in the Cellular category. It is a research peptide and is not FDA-approved for human use. The dose ranges shown (100–500 mg) are summarized from peer-reviewed research literature where evidence is preliminary.

  • NAD+ most commonly ships in 100, 200, 500 mg vials. Typical reconstitution volumes are 2, 3, 5 ml of bacteriostatic water — choose the volume to land on a syringe-friendly unit count for your target dose.

  • Use the formula concentration = vial mg ÷ BAC water ml, then volume = dose mg ÷ concentration, then units = volume × 100 (for U-100). For example, a 100 mg vial reconstituted with 2 ml gives 50.00 mg/ml — at the typical low dose of 100 mg that resolves to 200.0 units. The free reconstitution calculator on this site verifies the math against your specific vial.

  • No. NAD+ is a research peptide and is not FDA-approved for human use in the United States as of April 2026. Any use must come through a licensed healthcare provider, typically via a compounding pharmacy.

  • Side-effect profiles for research peptides are characterized in published research rather than an FDA label. Most users report mild local reactions at the injection site, occasional fatigue, and headache in the first few doses. Long-term human safety data is limited for most research compounds. Discuss with your prescribing provider before starting.

  • No. The values shown are reference numbers summarized from authoritative sources — FDA-approved labels for approved compounds and peer-reviewed research for the rest. They are not personalized recommendations. Always follow your prescribing provider's instructions and verify every calculation against your vial label.

Other Cellular peptides

References & sources

Research peptide

NAD+ is a research peptide. It is not FDA-approved for human use. The ranges shown above are summarized from peer-reviewed clinical and pre-clinical literature, where evidence remains preliminary. Discuss any use with a licensed healthcare provider.

See the resources page for the full list of databases this site cross-checks against.

Track NAD+ in the app

History, reminders, body-map injection rotation, Apple Watch logging, and a doctor-ready PDF — all bundled with the calculator.

Download on theApp Store