Evidence reviewCell biologyEvidence Tier II

How Does NAD+ Decline with Age and What Are the Consequences?

NAD+ levels decline by 40–60% between young adulthood and old age, impairing sirtuin activity, mitochondrial function, and DNA repair — but whether NAD+ precursor supplementation reverses these effects in humans remains under investigation.

Dr. Thomas Brennan, MD, Metabolic Medicine
May 21, 2026
2 min read

The short answer

NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a coenzyme essential for energy metabolism, DNA repair, and the activity of sirtuins (longevity-associated deacetylases). NAD+ levels decline by 40–60% between young adulthood and old age, impairing mitochondrial function and DNA repair capacity. NMN and NR (NAD+ precursors) raise NAD+ levels in humans, but whether this translates to meaningful health or longevity benefits remains under investigation.

What the evidence actually shows

Yoshino et al. (2011) demonstrated that NAD+ levels decline with age in mice and that NMN supplementation restores NAD+ levels and improves metabolic function. Verdin (2015) in Science reviewed the evidence for NAD+ in aging, concluding that NAD+ decline is a driver of mitochondrial dysfunction and age-related metabolic disease. A 2021 RCT by Yoshino et al. in Science randomised 25 postmenopausal women with prediabetes to NMN (250mg/day) or placebo for 10 weeks. NMN significantly increased skeletal muscle NAD+ levels and improved insulin sensitivity and muscle insulin signalling, but did not affect body composition or physical function.

"NMN supplementation raised skeletal muscle NAD+ levels and improved insulin sensitivity in postmenopausal women with prediabetes."

Yoshino et al., Science 2021

What the major health authorities say

The NIA is funding research into NAD+ metabolism and its role in aging, noting that NAD+ precursors are among the most promising candidates for longevity interventions. The NIA cautions that while animal data are compelling, human evidence for NMN and NR remains limited to short-term studies with surrogate endpoints. Neither the FDA nor any major health authority has approved NMN or NR for longevity or anti-aging use.

Practical implications

NMN and NR supplements are widely available and generally considered safe at standard doses (250–500mg/day). The human evidence base is growing but remains limited to short-term studies with metabolic endpoints. The most evidence-supported ways to maintain NAD+ levels are: regular aerobic exercise (which upregulates NAD+ biosynthesis); avoiding excess alcohol (which depletes NAD+); maintaining a healthy weight; and adequate dietary niacin (vitamin B3, the primary dietary NAD+ precursor). Whether NMN or NR supplementation provides benefits beyond these lifestyle approaches in healthy adults is not yet established.

Vitaei verdict

NAD+ decline is a real and well-characterised feature of aging with mechanistic links to mitochondrial dysfunction. NMN/NR supplements raise NAD+ levels in humans, but whether this translates to meaningful longevity benefits remains to be established in longer-term RCTs.

Where reasonable people still disagree

  • Whether NMN or NR is the superior NAD+ precursor — they are converted to NAD+ through different pathways and may have different tissue distributions.
  • Whether raising NAD+ levels in already-healthy adults provides meaningful benefits, or whether the benefits are primarily relevant to those with metabolic disease.
  • The optimal dose and duration of NMN/NR supplementation for different health outcomes.

Related Molecules