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NAD+ Side Effects: Complete Safety Guide

NAD+ Side Effects: Complete Safety Guide

SM
Reviewed by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD
Updated March 2026 Β· 12 min read
Quick Answer
NAD+ side effects are typically mild and temporary. The most common include nausea, flushing, headache, and fatigue. IV therapy causes the most noticeable effects during infusion, but these usually resolve within minutes to hours. Serious side effects are rare.
Key Takeaways
  • Most side effects are mild β€” Nausea, flushing, and headache are common but temporary
  • Delivery method matters β€” IV has the most side effects; supplements have the fewest
  • IV effects happen during infusion β€” Slowing the drip usually resolves discomfort
  • Serious reactions are rare β€” Severe breathing difficulty or chest pain warrant immediate attention
  • Some people should avoid NAD+ β€” Pregnant women, those with active cancer, certain others
  • Long-term data is limited β€” NAD+ therapy is relatively new

Side Effects by Delivery Method

Side effects vary depending on how you take NAD+. IV therapy introduces NAD+ most rapidly, so it causes the most noticeable effects.

IV Therapy Side Effects

IV therapy causes side effects because NAD+ floods your bloodstream quickly:

  • Flushing β€” Warmth across face, chest, or body; skin may appear red (most common)
  • Nausea β€” Mild to moderate queasiness; resolves when drip slows
  • Chest tightness β€” Pressure sensation (not a cardiac event); slowing infusion helps
  • Headache β€” Can persist a few hours after session
  • Lightheadedness β€” Feeling dizzy or “floaty”
  • Anxiety/restlessness β€” Temporary agitation; resolves as infusion completes

Injection Side Effects

NAD+ injections cause fewer and milder effects because absorption is gradual:

  • Injection site reactions β€” Pain, redness, small bump (most common)
  • Mild nausea β€” Less intense than IV
  • Temporary fatigue β€” Often improves with subsequent doses
  • Headache β€” Less common than with IV

Supplement Side Effects (NMN/NR)

Oral supplements have the fewest side effects:

  • GI upset β€” Stomach discomfort, nausea at high doses; take with food
  • Flushing β€” Less than niacin but possible
  • Insomnia β€” If taken late; switch to morning dosing

Common Side Effects Explained

Flushing

What it feels like: Warmth spreading across face, neck, chest. Skin may turn pink/red with tingling.

Why it happens: NAD+ affects blood vessel dilation and histamine release. This is physiological, not allergic.

Duration: 30-60 minutes during IV; milder with other methods.

What helps: Slow drip rate, stay cool, cold cloth. Harmless and resolves on its own.

Nausea

What it feels like: Queasiness, unsettled stomach. Actual vomiting is uncommon.

Why it happens: Rapid NAD+ introduction affects the GI system.

Duration: Resolves when drip slows (IV) or within 30-60 minutes (injections).

What helps: Eat before treatment, stay hydrated, deep breaths, ginger tea.

Chest Tightness

What it feels like: Pressure or squeezing in chest. Similar to anxiety. Uncomfortable but not painful.

Why it happens: NAD+ temporarily affects smooth muscle tissue.

Duration: Usually resolves within minutes of slowing IV.

When to worry: Sharp chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or pain radiating to arm/jaw warrants immediate medical attention.

Headache

What it feels like: Dull to moderate head pain, sometimes with pressure.

Why it happens: May relate to blood flow changes or hydration status.

Duration: Can persist several hours after treatment.

What helps: Hydrate well before/during/after. OTC pain relievers if needed.

Serious Side Effects (Rare)

Serious reactions are uncommon. Know these warning signs:

Seek immediate medical attention for:
  • Severe difficulty breathing (not just mild shortness of breath)
  • Sharp chest pain (not just tightness)
  • Severe allergic reaction (hives, throat swelling, difficulty swallowing)
  • Fainting or loss of consciousness
  • Severe, uncontrolled vomiting

Who Should Avoid NAD+ Therapy

NAD+ isn’t appropriate for everyone. Consult a healthcare provider if any apply:

  • Pregnancy/breastfeeding β€” No safety data exists
  • Active cancer β€” NAD+ supports all cell growth; discuss with oncologist
  • Certain heart conditions β€” Get medical clearance first
  • Medication interactions β€” Disclose all medications (BP meds, diabetes drugs, chemo)
  • History of severe allergic reactions β€” Proceed cautiously

How to Minimize Side Effects

Before Treatment

  • Hydrate well β€” Drink plenty of water the day before and morning of
  • Eat something β€” Light meal 1-2 hours before prevents nausea
  • Avoid alcohol β€” Skip for 24+ hours before treatment
  • Get adequate sleep β€” Being rested helps your body handle it

During Treatment

  • Communicate β€” Tell your provider immediately if uncomfortable
  • Slow drip rates β€” Most effects resolve when infusion slows
  • Stay calm β€” Deep breathing and distraction help

Starting Out

  • Begin with lower doses β€” 250mg IV rather than 1000mg
  • Choose experienced providers β€” They know how to manage effects
  • Space sessions β€” Give your body time to adjust

Learn More About NAD+ Therapy

Compare delivery methods, costs, and find providers.

View NAD+ Guide β†’

Long-Term Safety

NAD+ therapy is relatively new. Short-term studies show NAD+ precursors are well-tolerated with no serious adverse events at standard doses. However, we lack long-term data (years to decades).

Theoretical concerns: Since NAD+ supports all cell growth, there’s concern it could theoretically promote undetected cancer. No human evidence supports this, but those with cancer history should be cautious.

Monitoring: For long-term use, consider regular provider check-ins, periodic blood work, and reporting unusual symptoms.

Frequently Asked Questions

IV side effects typically resolve within minutes to a few hours. Headaches may persist longer. Injection and supplement side effects are usually briefβ€”under an hour. Effects lasting more than 24 hours should be reported to your provider.
Most are not. Flushing, nausea, headache, and fatigue are uncomfortable but not dangerous. Serious effects (severe breathing difficulty, true chest pain, severe allergic reactions) are rare but warrant immediate attention.
No. Some people tolerate NAD+ with minimal effects, especially at lower doses or with gradual delivery methods. Others are more sensitive. Individual responses vary.
Most people can, but assess how you feel first. If lightheaded, fatigued, or “foggy,” wait until you feel normal. Some clinics recommend brief observation before driving.
Many people report side effects diminish with subsequent treatments. Your body may adapt. However, some people remain sensitive regardless of experience.
No. NAD+ is not FDA-approved for any medical condition. It’s available as a supplement and through compounding pharmacies. The FDA hasn’t evaluated NAD+ therapy claims.

References

  1. Conze D, Brenner C, Kruger CL. Safety and Metabolism of Long-term NIAGEN Administration. Sci Rep. 2019.
  2. Martens CR, et al. Chronic nicotinamide riboside supplementation is well-tolerated. Nat Commun. 2018.
  3. Airhart SE, et al. An open-label study of nicotinamide riboside pharmacokinetics. PLoS One. 2017.
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