Top Vitamin Therapy Providers in London

Best Vitamin Therapy Practitioners in London

Catherine

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Catherine

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(143 reviews)
Location
London SE1 7AE, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Diana Ionescu

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Diana Ionescu
CQC

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(78 reviews)
Location
London SE22 8HN, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Renaaaaasaae Cleovoulou

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Renaaaaasaae Cleovoulou

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(61 reviews)
Location
London E1 6QG, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Shahnaz

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Shahnaz

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(52 reviews)
Location
London E17 7JH, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Shilraj Kishorsinh Jadeja

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Shilraj Kishorsinh Jadeja
CQC

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(50 reviews)
Location
London SE18 4LS, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Louiza Loizou

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Louiza Loizou

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(21 reviews)
Location
London N12 0PG, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Janis Hendrickson

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Janis Hendrickson

Aesthetics Practitioner

Rating
(221 reviews)
Location
London SE26 4QJ, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Emma Craythorne

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Dr Emma Craythorne
CQC

FRCP

Rating
(41 reviews)
Location
London W1G 0AR, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Adam Friedmann

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Dr Adam Friedmann
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(5 reviews)
Location
London W1G 7LH, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Kayley

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Kayley

Level 3 Diploma In

Rating
(48 reviews)
Location
London SE10 0YH, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Vitamin-therapy Treatment in London

Our dataset currently has 276 clinic(s), with approximately 213372 reviews and an average rating of 4.52.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Multiple tertiary NHS teaching hospitals (e.g., Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’, UCLH)
    • Extensive private hospital network (HCA Healthcare UK, The London Clinic)
    • Internationally recognised dermatology and plastic surgery consultants.

Local Aethetics Market:

    • Highly mature and saturated
    • Internationally competitive.

Goals of Vitamin-therapy Treatment

  • Correct confirmed or suspected vitamin or mineral deficiencies
  • Support energy levels or recovery in specific situations
  • Improve hydration when combined with fluids
  • Provide targeted nutrients for people who cant absorb them well orally
  • Sometimes, honestly, just to help people feel proactive about their health

Vitamin-therapy Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

  • Oral supplements work fine for most people and are far cheaper. Diet changes often do more long-term good than any drip. IV therapy may make sense when absorption is impaired, after illness, or with confirmed deficiency. For general wellness, lifestyle changes usually outperform drips over time. ([nhs.uk](https://www.nhs.uk/live-well/healthy-body/))

Pros of Vitamin-therapy Treatment

    Cons of Vitamin-therapy Treatment

      Cost of Vitamin-therapy Treatment in London

      • IV vitamin drips often range from GBP 75 to GBP 300 per session
      • Vitamin injections (e.g. B12) typically cost GBP 25 to 60 per shot
      • Packages or memberships may reduce per-session cost
      • Type and dose of vitamins used
      • Whether blood tests are included
      • Clinic location and medical oversight
      • Time spent monitoring during infusion
      • Marketing and branding, honestly

      Accessibility

      Public transport:

        • Extensive Underground, rail, and bus connectivity
        • Clinics clustered near major stations (Oxford Circus, Bond Street, South Kensington).

      Parking availability:

        • Limited central parking
        • Strong reliance on public transport and private chauffeur services.

      Clinic distribution:

        Heavy concentration in Central London (Harley Street, Chelsea, Kensington) with secondary clusters in affluent suburbs (Richmond, Hampstead, Canary Wharf).

      Airport proximity:

        Multiple international airports (Heathrow, Gatwick, London City, Stansted, Luton).

      Preparing for Your Vitamin-therapy Appointment

        Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

          There are no NICE guidelines supporting routine IV vitamin therapy for wellness. NICE and NHS guidance focus on diagnosing and treating deficiencies appropriately. MHRA regulates injectable products used. Vitamin therapy sits in a grey zone where evidence matters more than marketing. Anyway, still figuring it out. But honestly, eating well most days does more than most drips.

          Local regulatory authority:

            • Care Quality Commission (CQC) for England
            • General Medical Council (GMC) for doctors
            • Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) for nurse prescribers.

          Private insurance usage locally:

            • High for medically indicated dermatology and skin cancer treatment (BUPA, AXA, Aviva recognition common)
            • Cosmetic procedures largely self-funded.

          Cosmetic finance availability:

            • Widely available via FCA-regulated finance providers
            • 0% promotional finance common in competitive segments.

          Who Is a Good Candidate?

            Choosing a Clinic

              Current average rating citywide: 4.52

              Recovery & Long-Term Results

                Aftercare:
                • Oral supplements work fine for most people and are far cheaper. Diet changes often do more long-term good than any drip. IV therapy may make sense when absorption is impaired, after illness, or with confirmed deficiency. For general wellness, lifestyle changes usually outperform drips over time. ([nhs.uk](https://www.nhs.uk/live-well/healthy-body/))