IV therapy website design that books more drips.

An IV business sells trust in a needle, and most template sites sell a lifestyle instead. A site of your own sells the booking: a drip menu wired into your scheduler, coverage a mobile buyer can confirm before they call, and a search presence in the cities you serve that belongs to you, not a marketplace app.

Where IV businesses lose clients

Drip bar after drip bar, the same template

A small pool of Showit templates, Fiverr gigs, and Webflow clones supplies much of this vertical; one Etsy listing even markets itself as the first template built specifically for IV and wellness businesses. The result is interchangeable lifestyle-brand sites where nothing signals which clinic to trust with a needle.

A buried booking path on a slow mobile page

An agency serving this exact vertical puts it plainly: if the layout is cluttered, the booking path is buried, or the page loads slowly on a phone, that client is already gone. Outdated photos and a generic template signal a business not operating at the level of care someone expects from the people putting a line in their arm.

Invisible for IV therapy near me

The service is location-dependent by nature, mobile IV most of all, and the industry's own marketing guides converge on one warning: a site not built for local search is invisible to nearly everyone typing IV hydration near me or mobile IV plus a city name. A single homepage was never built to target five cities at once.

A storefront site for a business with no storefront

Plenty of operators are mobile or concierge: the drip goes to the client's home, hotel, or event. Yet their sites often read like fixed-location clinics, with service area, travel coverage, and group booking for bachelorette parties, sports teams, and corporate events buried or missing. Those are the first questions a mobile buyer asks, and they bounce when the answers aren't findable.

Single drips only, no reason to come back

One industry playbook observes that clinics often start strong and then struggle to sustain growth without systems that turn appointments into relationships. The recommended engine is memberships and multi-drip packages, yet most sites sell one drip at a time, so the hangover customer from March never becomes the monthly regular.

Renting jobs from the Hydreight marketplace

A large slice of mobile IV work flows through Hydreight's app, and Hydreight's own branded city pages rank in many of the markets its nurses serve. An operator riding the marketplace has no direct-booking asset of their own. The website is how you graduate from gig dispatch to a client list you actually own.

What your IV business gets

A drip menu built like a product catalog

Myers' cocktail, NAD+, immunity, hangover recovery: each infusion listed with ingredients, drip time, price, and add-on boosters, every row deep-linked into your live booking flow. Template sites tend to render the menu as a flat image or a PDF. This one is the conversion page.

A service area a mobile buyer can confirm

City and ZIP coverage, travel-fee logic, and a group and event request form for bachelorette parties, sports teams, and corporate wellness. Mobile IV buyers convert by dispatch request or a same-day call, and they only do either after confirming you come to them.

Booking built around your existing stack

Whether you run Mangomint, Jane, Vagaro, or IntakeQ, the site embeds or links straight into the scheduling flow you already use, with intake and consent forms staying inside the HIPAA-side tool. Clients arrive with paperwork done, and you never switch software.

A page for every city you cover

Dedicated pages targeting mobile IV therapy searches in each city you serve, aligned with your Google Business Profile. This is the near-me capture layer for a location-dependent service, and it is exactly the play Hydreight's own city pages run against independent operators today.

Memberships and packages, purchasable on-site

Monthly hydration memberships and multi-drip packages with their own checkout path, not just single sessions. The industry's own playbooks say recurring revenue is what carries these clinics past the launch plateau. The site sells the relationship, not just the drip.

Credibility before the booking ask

Medical director and RN credentials, safety protocol, and sourcing standards presented before anyone is asked to book. The purchase is a needle in a vein, and a site that reads like a lifestyle template fails the trust gate that comes before a first appointment.

Proof, not promises

The proof so far comes from outside your industry, and it is real: MBM Baseball Training, rebuilt around a booking path that works, named and live for you to open right now.

Questions

Can clients keep booking through Mangomint, Jane, Vagaro, or IntakeQ?

Yes. The site embeds or links straight into the scheduling and intake flow you already run, so nothing changes about how clients book or fill out forms. The site's job is getting more people to that flow, with every row of the drip menu deep-linked into it.

Most IV sites I see are Showit templates off Etsy. What does custom actually get me, and what does it cost?

The same fixed pricing as every build, published on the pricing page, and a one-page build exists for solo mobile operators starting out. A template gives you the same lifestyle-brand shell other drip bars are buying, usually with the menu as a flat image. Custom gets you what templates rarely do: a drip menu wired into your booking flow, per-city pages, and membership checkout. And the site is yours outright when it's done, not a monthly platform subscription.

I'm mobile-only with no storefront. How do I show up in the five cities I cover?

With a dedicated page for each city, built to target mobile IV therapy searches there and aligned with your Google Business Profile. That is the structure near-me searches reward, and it is the same play Hydreight's city pages already run in markets like yours. No honest builder promises a ranking; the build's job is structure that can rank and a dispatch path that provably works.

What about HIPAA? Can health questionnaires and consent forms live on the website itself?

They stay where they belong: inside the HIPAA-side booking and intake tool you already use, like IntakeQ or Jane. The site hands off cleanly into that workflow, so clients arrive with paperwork done and your website never holds health information it shouldn't.

I get most of my jobs through the Hydreight app right now. Can a website of my own actually bring direct bookings?

That is the exact situation a website exists to change. The marketplace can stay a source, but every job it sends you lives in its pipeline, and its own city pages rank in markets like yours. A site of your own captures what the app never hands over: the client searching your city directly, the group booking for an event, and the repeat customer who joins a membership instead of re-booking through someone else's app.

Have you built for IV clinics before?

The live proof is a session-based booking business in another industry: MBM Baseball Training, rebuilt and running, with packages and a booking form that was silently failing until the rebuild caught it. The IV-specific parts are new: Mangomint embeds, drip menus, per-city dispatch pages. The shape underneath, a service menu, packages, and a booking path that has to provably work, is the pattern the studio has already shipped.

I don't see my industry here.

The studio builds for every business, in any industry. Industry pages just go deeper where I can speak the language. Browse the industries page or book a call and tell me what you run.

What it costs

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