Miami Beach runs on nights that do not end early. South Beach, Brickell, Wynwood, and the Design District deliver a nightlife reputation that brings patients to TrufaMED the next morning — dehydrated, nauseated, and hoping for something faster than time and water. The Hangover Recovery IV is the most common request. It works, within reason, but the marketing around it has outrun the medicine. This is a physician’s accounting of what is actually in the bag, why it helps, when it does not, and how TrufaMED approaches the post-party drip differently than the wellness-retail crowd.
The Hangover Recovery IV at TrufaMED is $275 in-clinic or $325 mobile (hotel or residence delivery anywhere in Miami-Dade). It combines one liter of normal saline for rapid volume replacement, a B-complex and B12 push for metabolic support, electrolyte correction, and a physician-ordered anti-emetic (ondansetron) when nausea is present. It is administered by registered nurses under physician oversight in a Joint Commission-accredited setting. It shortens hangover symptoms for most patients by several hours. It does not undo the underlying alcohol toxicity — it supports the body through recovery faster than oral rehydration can.
A hangover is not a single physiologic event. It is the convergence of four overlapping biological insults that alcohol inflicts over an evening of drinking:
Dehydration. Alcohol suppresses antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin), which tells the kidneys to reabsorb water. With less vasopressin circulating, the kidneys excrete more water than the volume of fluid consumed. An evening of drinking leaves most patients several hundred milliliters to a full liter net-negative on volume status.
Electrolyte disturbance. The diuretic effect does not just pull water — it pulls sodium, potassium, magnesium, and phosphate with it. Low magnesium and low potassium contribute significantly to the next-day symptoms of fatigue, muscle cramps, and cardiac sensitivity.
Acetaldehyde toxicity. Alcohol is metabolized in two steps: first to acetaldehyde (by alcohol dehydrogenase), then to acetate (by aldehyde dehydrogenase). Acetaldehyde is significantly more toxic than alcohol itself and is responsible for much of the headache, nausea, and malaise of the hangover. Individual genetic variation in aldehyde dehydrogenase activity is why some patients flush and crash harder than others.
Inflammation and glutathione depletion. Alcohol metabolism generates reactive oxygen species and consumes glutathione, the body’s master antioxidant. The resulting systemic inflammation contributes to headache and general malaise.
A well-designed recovery IV addresses the first two mechanisms directly, supports the third and fourth indirectly, and buys the liver time to finish the metabolic cleanup.
The dominant therapeutic ingredient in any hangover IV is the fluid itself. One liter of 0.9% normal saline delivers rapid intravascular volume expansion — significantly faster than oral rehydration can accomplish in a patient who is also nauseated. Physiologically, this restores blood pressure, improves renal perfusion, and accelerates acetaldehyde clearance.
Alcohol metabolism is cofactor-intensive. Thiamine (B1) in particular is consumed at high rates during chronic or heavy alcohol intake — so much so that thiamine deficiency is a recognized medical emergency in hospitalized alcoholic patients (Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome). A B-complex push supports the metabolic machinery that is currently clearing the acetaldehyde. B12 contributes to neurologic function and red blood cell metabolism.
For patients presenting with nausea, a physician-ordered dose of ondansetron (Zofran) is added to the infusion. This is the same anti-emetic used in hospital emergency departments and chemotherapy suites. It is effective within minutes and has a clean safety profile in healthy adults. This is a prescription medication — it should not be administered without physician involvement, and at TrufaMED it is included in the hangover protocol only after the physician clears its use.
Given alcohol’s predictable effect of magnesium wasting, supplemental magnesium is commonly added to the infusion. This addresses both the muscle-cramping and some of the headache components of the hangover.
Patients with more severe symptoms may request additions — toradol for headache (when appropriate and cleared by the physician), glutathione push for antioxidant support, or high-dose vitamin C. These are ordered by the physician case-by-case.
See the full IV therapy menu for the complete list of TrufaMED formulations.
Patients frequently ask why they cannot simply drink electrolyte solutions and achieve the same result. The answer is mechanical. Oral fluids must be absorbed through the gastric and small intestinal mucosa, a process that is significantly impaired in patients with hangover-related gastritis or active nausea. Absorption can be slowed by 50% or more in a compromised GI tract. Intravenous fluid bypasses the gut entirely and delivers volume directly to the intravascular compartment — same effective dose in minutes rather than hours.
This does not mean everyone needs IV hydration for every hangover. For mild symptoms, water, electrolyte drinks, sleep, and time are usually sufficient. The IV makes sense when symptoms are significant enough to impair function, when nausea prevents oral intake, or when a patient has a time-constrained day ahead.
A disciplined medical practice is honest about when IV therapy is not the right answer:
TrufaMED will tell you when a drip is not the right move. That is what physician oversight means.
This is the part the retail IV industry often glosses. Intravenous volume expansion is not risk-free. Patients who should not receive the Hangover Recovery IV without physician clearance or modified protocol include:
At TrufaMED, every Hangover Recovery IV is preceded by a physician screening. This is standard practice in a Joint Commission-accredited setting — TrufaMED is Florida’s only Joint Commission-accredited urgent care. Patients with any of the above conditions get an individualized protocol, a modified drip, or a direct conversation about whether IV therapy is the right approach.
The most common hangover-IV use case at TrufaMED is the hotel room the morning after. Our mobile IV therapy service delivers to hotels and residences across Miami-Dade. Typical delivery zones:
Mobile Hangover Recovery IV is $325 — the $50 mobile premium covers RN travel, setup, and teardown. Same physician screening applies. We bring everything needed.
| Option | Best For | In-Clinic / Mobile |
|---|---|---|
| Hangover Recovery IV | Standard post-drinking recovery with nausea and dehydration | $275 / $325 |
| Rehydrate+ IV | Pure dehydration, no significant nausea, athletic-style recovery | $225 / $275 |
| Myers’ Cocktail | Broader micronutrient repletion for post-travel or extended recovery | $275 / $325 |
| Superstar IV | Comprehensive recovery with glutathione and antioxidant support | $375 / $425 |
| Pain Relief IV | Hangover with severe headache or migraine component | $315 / $365 |
For a deeper discussion of delivery mechanics, see how IV hydration actually works.
Does: Shortens hangover duration by several hours for most patients. Relieves nausea within 15 to 30 minutes when ondansetron is included. Restores blood pressure and mental alertness faster than oral rehydration. Lets you reclaim most of a day you would otherwise lose.
Does not: Undo the neurologic impact of binge drinking. Prevent the next hangover if you drink the same way again. Protect the liver from repeated alcohol insult. Replace a visit to urgent care if symptoms are severe — vomiting that will not stop, chest pain, confusion, persistent headache, or fever are emergencies, not hangovers.
If your symptoms go beyond a typical hangover, come in as an urgent care visit. The clinical team is the same. The evaluation is what changes.
In-clinic: check in at our Surfside location, complete a brief screening questionnaire, have baseline vital signs recorded. A physician clears the protocol. A registered nurse places the IV and begins the infusion. Total time 45 to 60 minutes. Red light therapy is included at no cost during the infusion.
Mobile: the nurse arrives at your hotel or residence at the scheduled time. Same intake, same screening, same infusion. The nurse remains present throughout. Total time 60 to 75 minutes door-to-door.
Our clinical team is experienced with hundreds of hangover recovery drips per month across South Florida.
Most patients notice meaningful nausea relief within 15 to 30 minutes once ondansetron takes effect. Overall energy and mental clarity improvement typically builds over the 45-minute infusion and continues through the following one to two hours.
Yes. We deliver to hotels throughout South Beach, Mid-Beach, Miami Beach, Brickell, and Sunny Isles. Mobile Hangover Recovery is $325. Most same-day bookings are accepted if scheduling allows.
No. The IV is designed to be administered after you have finished drinking. The only requirement is that you are not still actively intoxicated at the time of the physician screening — IV fluids while still significantly impaired is a different clinical conversation.
In healthy adults with normal cardiac and renal function, one liter of saline is well tolerated. Risk is meaningfully higher in patients with congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, or severe hypertension. This is why physician screening is mandatory at TrufaMED.
If you cannot keep any oral fluids down, you are likely volume-depleted and an IV is appropriate. If vomiting is persistent (more than six hours), bloody, or accompanied by confusion, chest pain, or fever, this is not a hangover — come in as urgent care for evaluation.
Patients sometimes ask for a pre-event IV to “pre-load” fluid and electrolytes. There is minimal evidence this prevents the hangover. A Rehydrate+ IV the morning of an event for someone who is already dehydrated from travel or poor sleep is reasonable; a pre-drinking IV specifically to enable heavier drinking is not supported and is not a recommendation we make.
TrufaMED mobile service operates during clinic hours: Monday through Friday 9 AM to 9 PM, Saturday 11 AM to 11 PM, Sunday 12 PM to 8 PM. Late-morning and afternoon delivery is the most common window for post-party bookings. Schedule in advance when possible for morning guaranteed slots.
Standard Hangover Recovery IV does not include NAD+. If you want NAD+ added to a hangover protocol, that becomes a custom infusion — the NAD+ IV program has its own pricing ($350 for 250mg in-clinic). Combining them is possible under physician order.
No. IV fluid does not accelerate alcohol clearance below the kinetic rate of hepatic metabolism. If you still have measurable alcohol in your bloodstream, only time will clear it. Do not assume an IV will let you drive sooner.
Yes. Group mobile IV delivery for bachelor parties, bachelorette weekends, and private events is a common booking pattern. Each patient completes individual screening and physician clearance. Group scheduling is coordinated through our mobile IV service.