How Nicotinamide Riboside Supports Healthy Aging In Your Dog
Ozzy FitoriaIf you've been researching longevity supplements for senior dogs, you've probably run into nicotinamide riboside, usually shortened to NR. It's one of the most-studied ways to support NAD+, a molecule at the center of how cells make energy. This guide explains what NR actually is, what the human and animal research does and doesn't show, what dose matters, and how to think about it for your dog, without the hype you'll find on most supplement pages.
The honest starting point: NR is not a cure or an anti-aging miracle, and no supplement extends a dog's lifespan. What a meaningful dose of NR can do is support a cellular system (NAD+) that the research links to energy and repair. Results, if you see them, show up slowly as behavior: more energy, more interest in walks, easier movement.
What is nicotinamide riboside (NR)?
NR is a form of vitamin B3 and a direct precursor to NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide), a coenzyme every cell uses. You can't usefully feed NAD+ directly, so the body builds it from precursors like NR. NAD+ powers the mitochondria (the cell's energy plants) and fuels the sirtuin and PARP enzymes involved in DNA repair. When NAD+ runs low, both of those systems are compromised.[1]
NAD+ has been shown to fall with age in multiple tissues in rodents, and in blood in humans.[2] An important honesty note most pages skip: this has not been demonstrated in a published canine study. No peer-reviewed research has tracked NAD+ decline in dogs specifically. The biology is highly conserved across mammals, so it's reasonable to expect the same pattern applies, but that's an expectation, not measured canine fact.
What the research on NR actually shows
NR is the most-studied NAD+ precursor in human research, with roughly three times the published human trial volume of NMN as of 2023.[3] Across 25+ published human trials, the consistent, replicated finding is that NR raises blood NAD+.[3][4][5] A precise note on that claim: the reliable result is a rise in blood NAD+. Results in muscle and other tissues have been less consistent, so "raises blood NAD+" is the honest version, and we'll leave it there rather than overstate.
In rodents, NR has been associated with improvements in mitochondrial-function markers and some metabolic measures.[6] Those are mechanistic, animal-model findings, not proof of a clinical outcome in dogs, and we're not going to dress them up as more than that.
LongTails NAD+ Precursor — the supplement behind this research. One scoop. Every ingredient your dog needs for healthy aging.
See the formula →NR as a NAD+ precursor: why we chose it
When people search for a "NAD+ booster" or "NAD precursor supplement" for their dog, the real question is which precursor has the evidence behind it. The two on the market are NR and NMN. Both are legitimate, but NR simply has more human research behind it today. We dig into that comparison in our guide to the best longevity supplements for dogs; the short version is that we build LongTails on NR because of the weight of human evidence.
Dose is the part most products get wrong
A precursor only works if there's enough of it. In human dose-ranging trials, NR raised blood NAD+ in a clear dose-dependent way: 100 mg per day lifted blood NAD+ by about 22%, and 300 mg per day by about 51%.[7] So the 100-300 mg range is the level shown to move the blood NAD+ biomarker in people.
To be precise about what that proves: raising the blood NAD+ biomarker is not the same as a proven health outcome (the human trials measuring physiological endpoints used much higher doses, around 1,000 mg/day). But it's a real, defensible bar, and it's one most dog supplements fail by burying a trace amount of NR inside a "proprietary blend." LongTails uses 200 mg of NR per scoop, inside that 100-300 mg range, with the dose printed on the label rather than hidden.[7]
Is NR safe for dogs?
In human trials, NR has shown clean tolerability, with no serious adverse events reported.[8][4] Direct canine safety data is limited, which is exactly why dose transparency and quality matter, and why you should talk to your veterinarian before starting any new supplement, especially if your dog has a health condition or takes medication. Start on schedule, watch your dog's response, and give it real time; NR works gradually by supporting cellular processes, so daily consistency matters more than any single dose.
How we use NR in LongTails
We built LongTails NAD+ around 200 mg of NR per scoop, the dose printed on the label, alongside 1,500 mg of hydrolyzed collagen (the second disclosed active), plus whole-food beef bone broth and freeze-dried beef liver for ancestral nutrition your dog will actually eat. Two fully disclosed actives, no proprietary blends, made in a cGMP facility in the USA, with a 90-day money-back guarantee, because the honest answer to "will this help my dog" is "give it real time and judge by the behavior you see." The goal isn't a miracle. It's more good days.
References
- Verdin E. NAD+ in aging, metabolism, and neurodegeneration. Science. 2015;350(6265):1208-13. DOI: 10.1126/science.aac4854. PMID: 26785480.
- Peluso A, Damgaard MV, Treebak JT, et al. Age-dependent decline of NAD+ (tissue-dependent). Nutrients. 2021. PMID: 35010977.
- Damgaard MV, Treebak JT. What is really known about the effects of nicotinamide riboside supplementation in humans. Science Advances. 2023;9(29):eadi4862. PMID: 37478182.
- Martens CR, et al. Chronic nicotinamide riboside supplementation is well-tolerated and elevates NAD+ in healthy middle-aged and older adults. Nature Communications. 2018;9:1286. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-03421-7. PMID: 29599478.
- Trammell SAJ, et al. Nicotinamide riboside is uniquely and orally bioavailable in mice and humans. Nature Communications. 2016;7:12948. DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12948. PMID: 27721479.
- Cantó C, et al. The NAD+ precursor nicotinamide riboside enhances oxidative metabolism (rodent). Cell Metabolism. 2012;15(6):838-47.
- Conze D, Brenner C, Kruger CL. 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;9:9786. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-46120-z. PMID: 31285245.
- Vreones M, et al. Oral nicotinamide riboside raises NAD+ and lowers biomarkers of neurodegenerative pathology in plasma extracellular vesicles. Aging Cell. 2022;22:e13754. DOI: 10.1111/acel.13754.
This article is for educational purposes and is not veterinary advice. Always consult your veterinarian before starting a new supplement, particularly if your dog has a medical condition or takes medication.