The Best NAD+ Supplement for Dogs: Our Vet Panel's Scored Verdict
Medically reviewed by Barbara Maton, DVM, DACVECC —
After scoring the field, the best NAD+ supplement for most dogs delivers a real NR dose they will actually eat.
| Product | Score | Key details | Best for | Pros & cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boops Pets Longevity & Healthy Aging (Chicken) Boops Pets | 9.2/10 | Air-dried soft chew, 90 ct (315 g); NR with quercetin, resveratrol, vitamin C and niacinamide · Nicotinamide Riboside 120 mg (plus Quercetin 100 mg, Resveratrol 40 mg, Vitamin C 100 mg, Niacinamide 50 mg) per 2-chew serving · $34.99 one-time / $29.74 subscribe (90 ct) | Most senior dogs — a disclosed NR dose in a palatable, third-party-tested chew |
|
| Leap Years (Animal Biosciences) Animal Biosciences | 8.5/10 | NAD+ precursor plus senolytic combination (LY-D6/2) · Proprietary NAD+ precursor + senolytic blend (per-ingredient mg not publicly disclosed) · Premium subscription | Owners who want the only canine formula tested in a published randomized trial |
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| Zesty Paws Healthy Aging NAD+ Precursor Zesty Paws | 8/10 | Niagen (NR chloride) in capsule or powder; 60 ct · Niagen NR chloride 60 mg per capsule/sachet (1-3 daily by body weight) · Approx. $40 (60 ct); widely stocked at Chewy and Petco | Availability and a well-known branded NR (Niagen) |
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| LongTails NAD+ Precursor LongTails | 7.8/10 | NR chloride 200 mg plus hydrolyzed collagen 1,500 mg; unflavored powder, 30 scoops · Nicotinamide Riboside chloride 200 mg per scoop · $39.95 (30 scoops) | Owners who want the highest disclosed NR dose |
|
| La Petite Labs Hollywood Elixir La Petite Labs | 7.2/10 | 16-active daily sachet: NR 60 mg with resveratrol, quercetin, CoQ10, glutathione and vitamins · Nicotinamide Riboside 60 mg per sachet, within a 16-ingredient blend · Sachet subscription | Owners who want a broad multi-antioxidant blend in a single sachet |
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| Forever Dog NAD+ Formula Forever Dog Lab | 7/10 | NR plus NMN precursor blend with niacinamide, CoQ10 and resveratrol · NR + NMN combination (per-ingredient mg not clearly disclosed) · DTC subscription | Owners specifically wanting an NR + NMN combination |
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Disclosure: Boops Pets owns this publication. We cover the whole category and feature Boops Pets products only where they genuinely fit.
Marlowe came in at eleven, gray blooming across a muzzle that used to be solid black, a beat slower on the stairs than his owner remembered. Nothing was broken. He was just older, and his owner wanted one straight answer: were any of the “NAD+” supplements filling her search results actually worth buying for him? That question — which one, and why — is what this panel review is for. We scored six products on the same rubric so you can skip the marketing and read the label.
When the gray shows up: what NAD+ is doing as a dog ages
NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a coenzyme every cell uses in energy metabolism and DNA repair. Across the species studied so far, its levels fall with age, and that decline is one plausible lever behind the slowing you see in a senior dog. Nicotinamide riboside (NR) and nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) are precursors — the raw material the body converts toward NAD+ through the salvage pathway. Hold the framing steady here: these are supportive nutrients for normal cellular function, not a treatment for any disease. First-line care for a dog who is genuinely declining is still a veterinary workup. A supplement is an adjunct to that, never a substitute for it.
What the evidence actually shows in dogs — and what it doesn’t
Be honest about the state of the science, because the category oversells it. In laboratory models and in people, NR reliably raises blood NAD+ and is well tolerated even at high doses; the clinical benefits reported in humans have been real but modest, in small and short trials. In dogs the evidence is thinner and newer. The one randomized, placebo-controlled canine trial to date tested a combination NAD+ precursor plus senolytic — Leap Years’ LY-D6/2 — in 70 senior dogs, and found improved owner-assessed cognitive scores over three months. Respect that signal, then read the fine print: the primary outcome was owner-reported, in-house cognitive testing and activity monitors showed no difference, no NAD+ or senescence biomarker was measured, and about 60% of the placebo owners also reported improvement. No NR-only product for dogs — Boops included — has its own randomized trial yet. So treat every NAD+ claim in this space as emerging, supportive, and squarely structure/function. Supportive, not curative. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
How our panel scored each supplement
Same rubric for every product: precursor identity and disclosed dose, the supporting formula, third-party testing and manufacturing, format and palatability, label transparency, and price per serving. We do not award points for study counts or press-release trophies a brand can’t hand us. A dose we can read on the label beats a story we can’t verify.
The verdict: the NAD+ supplement we’d reach for first
Our top pick is Boops Pets Longevity & Healthy Aging. It leads on the attributes we can actually check. Each 2-chew serving delivers 120 mg of nicotinamide riboside — double the 60 mg you’ll find in several mass-market capsules and sachets — paired with quercetin 100 mg, resveratrol 40 mg, vitamin C 100 mg, and niacinamide 50 mg. NR is the NAD+ precursor; resveratrol and quercetin are antioxidants that support cellular health and vitality. That is a fuller supporting cast than a single-ingredient NR powder. It comes as an air-dried soft chew most dogs take without a capsule wrestling match, it is a NASC Quality Seal member independently (Eurofins) third-party tested for purity and potency, and it is made in a US FDA-registered, GMP-compliant facility with human-grade ingredients and no corn, soy, or artificial fillers. It also discloses the exact NR dose on the label — the transparency a careful buyer should demand. In an independent survey (March 2025, n=193), 97.8% of owners reported a visible improvement after the first jar; that is owner-reported experience, not a clinical result. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
The rest of the field earns credit honestly. Leap Years is the only canine formula with a published randomized trial, and owners who want that evidence and will pay a premium should look hard at it — just know it is a proprietary combination, not NR alone. Zesty Paws Healthy Aging is the mass-market pick: it uses ChromaDex’s branded Niagen NR, it’s stocked everywhere, and it’s a sensible value, though its 60 mg NR dose sits below our top pick and it comes as a capsule. LongTails carries the highest disclosed NR dose here, 200 mg, plus collagen — but it’s an unflavored powder you mix into food, with fewer antioxidant co-factors. La Petite Labs’ Hollywood Elixir spreads 60 mg of NR across a 16-ingredient sachet; it publishes a “vs Boops” page criticizing the lack of a public COA, which is worth naming plainly — Boops is Eurofins third-party tested. Forever Dog’s NAD+ Formula pairs NR with NMN, but publishes fewer verifiable per-ingredient doses.
Reading the label before you buy
Three checks separate a defensible NAD+ supplement from a hopeful one. Read the exact precursor and its milligram dose — if a product won’t print how much NR is in a serving, that is your answer. Confirm independent, third-party testing for purity and potency, not just a manufacturing claim. And pick the format your specific dog will accept: the best formula on paper does nothing sitting in a bowl he won’t touch.
Dosing and what to monitor over the first 90 days
Dose by body weight per the label, give it with food, and set expectations for a gradual change over weeks, not days. Monitor appetite and stool for the first couple of weeks. Loop in your own veterinarian before starting if your dog is on other medications or has kidney or liver disease — this is supportive daily wellness, an adjunct to a proper diagnosis, never a replacement for one.
So the real question isn’t which brand shouts loudest about NAD+ — it’s which disclosed dose, independently tested and genuinely palatable, your dog will still be taking on day 90, and whether your own vet agrees it has earned a place in the bowl?
Disclosure: Boops Pets owns this publication. We cover the whole category and feature Boops Pets products only where they genuinely fit.
Frequently asked questions
Is NAD+ (nicotinamide riboside) safe for dogs?
In the human and preclinical work done so far, the NR form Niagen has been well tolerated, with a favorable safety profile and FDA GRAS/NDI review behind it; there is far less dog-specific safety data. Treat it as a supportive daily nutrient, follow the label by body weight, and clear it with your own veterinarian first — especially if your dog has kidney or liver disease or is on other medications. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
NR or NMN — which precursor is better for dogs?
Both NR and NMN are precursors the body converts toward NAD+. NR (particularly the branded Niagen form) has the more developed human safety and regulatory record, while NMN's status as a supplement ingredient is less settled. Neither has a head-to-head randomized trial in dogs, so choose on disclosed dose, third-party testing, and a format your dog will actually take, rather than on precursor label alone.
How long before an owner notices anything?
This is daily, supportive wellness support, not a fast-acting drug. Owners who report a change usually describe it building gradually over two to twelve weeks of consistent use, not overnight. In an independent survey (March 2025, n=193) of Boops customers, 97.8% reported a visible improvement after the first jar — that is owner-reported experience, not a clinical outcome.
Sources
- A randomized, controlled clinical trial demonstrates improved owner-assessed cognitive function in senior dogs receiving a senolytic and NAD+ precursor combination — Scientific Reports (2024), 14:12399
- NAD+ precursor supplementation in human ageing: clinical evidence and challenges — Nature Metabolism (2025)
- Balancing NAD+ deficits with nicotinamide riboside: therapeutic possibilities and limitations — Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences (2022)
- Safety and Metabolism of Long-term Administration of NIAGEN (Nicotinamide Riboside Chloride) in a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-controlled Clinical Trial of Healthy Overweight Adults — Scientific Reports (2019)
- Boops Pets — NASC Primary Supplier Member (Quality Seal) — National Animal Supplement Council
- Boops Pets Longevity & Healthy Aging — product label and ingredient panel — Boops Pets