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You're Taking NAD+, But Without This Conversion Step, Most of It Never Reaches Your Cells

Updated on Jun 15, 2026
You're Taking NAD+, But Without This Conversion Step, Most of It Never Reaches Your Cells
Medically reviewed by Dr Pedram Kordrostami— Written by Dr. Dominic Gartry, MD
Updated on Jun 15, 2026

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You researched this. You did the work. You listen to the right podcasts, you read the studies, and you made the decision to start supporting your NAD+ levels.

So why do you still feel like you're running at 70%?

Here is something most supplement companies will never tell you, because it is bad for business.

The supplement you are taking right now has to survive a long, difficult journey before it ever becomes usable NAD+ inside your cells. Most of it does not make it.

And the reason has nothing to do with the quality of the product you bought.

It has to do with how NAD+ is actually made inside the human body.

Your cells cannot use NAD+ directly

This is the part that surprises most people who have already spent months on NR or a generic NAD+ supplement.

Your cells do not absorb NAD+ from a capsule the way you absorb water when you drink it. NAD+ is a large molecule. It cannot cross the cell membrane intact. So when you swallow a NAD+ supplement, your body has to break it down first, convert it into something smaller, and then rebuild it from scratch inside each cell.

That process requires multiple steps. Each step is a place where something can go wrong.

NR became popular for good reason. It enters the conversion pathway earlier than NAD+ itself, and the research behind it is real. But NR still has to convert into something called NMN before your body can actually use it to make NAD+.

That conversion step happens in your bloodstream. And after the age of 40, the enzyme that drives that conversion becomes less efficient — not broken, but measurably slower than it was in your twenties and thirties.

So even with a quality NR product, you are working against a conversion step that gets harder to complete as you age. Some gets through. But the older you get, the more you leave on the table.

Why this matters more the older you get

Your NAD+ levels at 50 are roughly half of what they were at 20.

Not because you are doing something wrong. Because this is what happens to every human body. The enzymes that build and recycle NAD+ slow down. The demand from your cells stays the same. The supply drops.

That gap is what researchers believe drives a significant portion of what we call "feeling older." The fatigue that hits differently than it did ten years ago. The slower recovery. The brain that takes longer to get going in the morning. The sense that your body is working harder to do the same things it used to do easily.

This is not a mindset problem. It is a chemistry problem.

And the older you get, the more that aging conversion step becomes the limiting factor — regardless of what you are taking upstream of it.

NMN bypasses the step that slows everything down

NMN is what NR has to become before your body can make NAD+.

When you take NMN directly, you are skipping the conversion step that gets slower and less reliable with age. You are handing your cells a molecule they can use immediately, through a dedicated transporter in the cell membrane that was only identified by researchers at Washington University in 2019.

That transporter, called Slc12a8, pulls NMN directly into cells. It does not require the intermediate conversion step. It does not rely on the enzyme that slows down as you age.

This is why the research on NMN has produced results that are particularly compelling for people over 40. Not because NR was wrong. But because NMN meets your cells where they are right now, at this age and stage of life, rather than asking them to complete a conversion step they are increasingly less equipped to finish.

The second problem: most NMN is low-grade

Here is where it gets more complicated.

NMN is harder to manufacture correctly than most supplements. The synthesis process is technically demanding. If done poorly, you end up with a product that has the right label but the wrong purity. Contaminants. Degraded compound. A capsule that looks identical to a high-quality product but delivers a fraction of the actual NMN.

This is not theoretical. Third-party testing of supplements sold on major retail platforms has found that a significant number of products do not match their label claims.

So even if you have made the right decision to switch from NR to NMN, you may still be getting a product that is not what it says it is.

This is why purity verification matters more for NMN than almost any other supplement category. Independent, third-party Certificate of Analysis testing. Not a quality claim on a website. Actual documentation.

What the research actually shows

A 2022 clinical trial published in Frontiers in Aging looked at NMN supplementation in healthy older adults over 60 days. It found significant increases in blood NAD+ levels compared to placebo. Participants reported improvements in physical performance measures.

A 2021 study in npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease found that NMN supplementation increased NAD+ levels and improved muscle insulin sensitivity in older women.

Research from Washington University School of Medicine showed that NMN administration improved energy metabolism, physical activity, and insulin sensitivity in older mice to levels comparable to much younger animals.

These studies used NMN specifically because it allows researchers to deliver NAD+ precursors without the conversion variability that comes with earlier-pathway compounds. When you want consistent, measurable results in an older population, removing that variable matters.

That is a meaningful signal.

What you actually feel when NAD+ levels rise

The first thing most people notice is not dramatic. It is subtle.

It is that the afternoon does not hit as hard. You get to 3pm and you still have something left. You are not reaching for a second coffee or waiting for the day to end.

Then, usually in the second or third week, the mornings change. You wake up and the lag is shorter. The brain gets going faster. You feel less like you are dragging yourself into the day.

Physical recovery also shifts. Not in a dramatic, overnight way. But workouts stop feeling like they take three days to fully recover from. You feel ready sooner.

Sleep quality tends to improve for many people, without any sedative effect. Deeper sleep, less restlessness, waking up feeling like sleep actually did something.

These are not marketing claims. They are what the customers who have tracked this consistently report, and they align closely with what the research says should happen when NAD+ levels are meaningfully restored.

Why most people stop too early

This is important.

NAD+ restoration is not like taking a painkiller. You are not fixing a single symptom. You are replenishing a foundational molecule that touches hundreds of biological processes.

The research shows that meaningful changes in how you feel typically begin around weeks two to four. Some people notice earlier. Some later. It depends on how depleted your baseline levels were, how efficiently your cells begin using the restored NAD+, and individual biology.

The people who stop after ten days because they do not feel a dramatic difference are stopping before the protocol has had time to work.

If you are already paying attention to your long-term health, already doing the hard things, already committed to staying ahead of the decline that is coming for everyone who does nothing, then a 30-day commitment is a reasonable test.

What makes one NMN supplement different from another

Not all NMN is the same. These are the things that actually matter.

Purity, verified by an independent lab. Not a number on a label. An actual Certificate of Analysis from a third party that has no financial relationship with the company.

Manufacturing standard. GMP-certified facilities follow strict protocols for contamination control, ingredient accuracy, and batch consistency. A supplement made outside this standard can vary significantly from batch to batch.

Dosage. The clinical research on NMN has used doses in the range of 250mg to 500mg per day. Products dosed significantly below this range are not matching what the studies used.

Stabilization. NMN is sensitive to heat and moisture. A product that has not been formulated and packaged to protect the compound can degrade before you ever open the bottle.

These are not premium features. They are the baseline of a product that is actually going to do what you are taking it for.

The honest version of what this is

This is not a shortcut. Taking NMN will not fix a bad diet, a broken sleep schedule, or a body that is under constant stress.

What it will do, if you are already doing the foundational work, is fill a gap that your body can no longer fill on its own.

Your cells are running processes right now that require NAD+. Repairing DNA. Regulating your circadian rhythm. Converting food into usable energy. Managing inflammation. Activating the proteins linked to longevity that researchers have been studying for the last two decades.

All of those processes slow down when NAD+ drops. And NAD+ has been dropping since you were in your late twenties.

NR was a genuine step forward when it emerged. NMN is simply a step further in the right direction — one that matters more the older you get. It meets your biology where it actually is right now, not where it was twenty years ago.

If you have already decided that staying ahead of this matters to you, the only question left is whether the product you are using is actually doing the job.

About the medical reviewer

Dr Pedram Kordrostami

Graduated from Queen Mary Medical School London in 2016. Worked in the national health service (NHS) until 2022 in various specialities including general medicine, Dermatology, and A&E.

His passion now lies in anti-aging science and emerging longevity research.

Medically reviewed by
Dr Pedram Kordrostami

Graduated from Queen Mary Medical School London in 2016. Worked in the national health service (NHS) until 2022 in various specialities including general medicine, Dermatology, and A&E.

His passion now lies in anti-aging science and emerging longevity research.

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