If you're a woman in your forties or fifties and you've started reading about NMN, you've probably noticed two things. The marketing is loud. And almost none of it is written for you.
Most NMN content was written by, and for, men over 50 in California. That doesn't mean the supplement is only relevant to them — it means the conversation has skipped a question worth asking honestly: what is the research actually studying, and what would a careful woman over 40 want to know before buying?
This is that article. We sell NMN, so we have an interest in your buying it. We've still tried to write the piece we'd want our sister or our mother to read first.
What NMN is (the boring, accurate version)
NMN — nicotinamide mononucleotide — is a small molecule the body uses as a precursor to NAD+. NAD+ is a coenzyme that sits in the middle of how your cells produce energy and repair themselves.
The reason NMN became a research subject is straightforward: NAD+ levels in human tissue decline with age. The decline is gradual, it varies between individuals, and the curve is steeper from roughly the late thirties onward. That biology is well-documented. What is not yet established at the standard of evidence required for medicinal claims is whether topping NAD+ back up via NMN supplementation reverses, slows, or affects specific outcomes in women over 40.
That distinction matters. We will not tell you NMN will "balance your hormones" or "ease your menopause" or "give you energy". Those claims are not permitted for a food supplement in the UK, and the human research is not yet at a level where they would be honest.
What we can tell you is this: NAD+ biology is real, the decline with age is real, and the research being done is serious. The studies are getting bigger and more rigorous each year. That's why a calm, well-formulated NMN supplement has become a normal part of many over-40 wellness routines.
Why women over 40 are asking different questions
Women's physiology in the perimenopausal and post-menopausal window is different in ways the supplement industry mostly ignores.
Metabolic rate shifts. Body composition changes through this window. Many women become more interested in supplements that support general cellular health rather than acute, stimulant-style effects.
Bone, joint and skin biology all undergo changes that women notice before the calendar says "menopause". The supplement industry frequently overpromises here. We won't.
Drug interactions. Many women over 40 are taking other things — HRT, statins, thyroid medication, antidepressants. NMN's safety profile in healthy adults is encouraging in the studies done so far, but interactions with prescription medications have not been comprehensively studied. If you are on prescription medication, ask your GP before adding any supplement. We mean this — it's not a legal flourish.
Cost-per-day matters more. Most women buying NMN over 40 are not biohackers. They want to know whether the supplement is worth the money over six or twelve months. That's a fair question and we answer it below.
What the research is actually looking at
Most human NMN trials to date are small (20–80 participants), short (8–24 weeks), and mixed-sex or male-only. The endpoints they measure include:
NAD+ blood levels — does the supplement raise them? In most trials, yes, in a dose-dependent way.
Physical function markers — walking pace, grip strength, treadmill performance. Mixed and modest results, sometimes in older subgroups.
Sleep and recovery markers — some signals, methodologically variable.
Safety and tolerability — consistently good at doses up to 1,000 mg/day.
What you will not yet find: large, long-duration, female-specific trials with definitive outcomes. That's not a reason to avoid NMN. It's a reason to be honest about what you're buying — a credible precursor molecule with promising early research, not a guaranteed effect.
We update this article quarterly as new research lands. (Last reviewed: May 2026.)
How to choose an NMN supplement if you're a woman over 40
- Purity. Look for a brand that publishes a third-party certificate of analysis (COA) for each batch. The COA should confirm NMN purity (≥99% is standard) and screen for heavy metals and microbial contaminants. If a brand doesn't publish a COA, treat that as the answer to your question.
- Dose. Most adult studies use between 250 mg and 1,000 mg per day. As a general structure: 500 mg/day is a sensible baseline. 1,000 mg/day is the higher end used in research and often chosen by people who want to start at the top of the studied range.
- Form. Powder-in-a-capsule NMN has historically had variable absorption. Liposomal formulations encapsulate the molecule in a phospholipid shell, which the research suggests improves bioavailability.
- Brand transparency. The supplement industry has a long history of opaque sourcing. The brands worth your money will tell you where the NMN is manufactured, how it's tested, and what's in the capsule besides the active ingredient.
- Cost-per-day, not cost-per-bottle. A £50 bottle that lasts 30 days is £1.67/day. A £75 bottle that lasts 60 days is £1.25/day. Work out the daily cost and decide whether it's a price you'd happily pay for the next six months.
- Subscribe & Save as a sanity check. A brand that offers a discounted subscription is usually signalling that it stands behind the product.
Two practical scenarios
Scenario 1 — "I'm 42, I exercise, I eat well, I'm curious." A reasonable place to start is 500 mg of a well-formulated NMN, taken in the morning, for three months. Pay attention to sleep, recovery and general energy. Track loosely — don't obsess. After three months, you'll have enough sense of whether you want to continue.
Scenario 2 — "I'm 51, I'm post-menopausal, I'm careful with what I take." Talk to your GP if you're on any prescription medication. If you're cleared and you want to try NMN, start at 500 mg/day and reassess at three months. You can step up to 1,000 mg if you'd like to.
In both cases: it is a food supplement, not a medicine, and it is part of a healthy lifestyle — not a substitute for one.
Where Ivvion fits
We make two NMN supplements:
Essential — 500 mg/day, capsule form, third-party tested, manufactured in the UK.
Elite — 1,000 mg/day, liposomal formulation for higher absorption, third-party tested, manufactured in the UK.
We also run a 3-minute quiz that asks five honest questions and recommends one of them. If you'd rather read more first, our NMN UK pillar guide covers the science in more depth.
A note on what we won't say
We will not tell you NMN will give you more energy. We will not tell you it will ease menopause symptoms. We will not tell you it will improve sleep or focus or skin or any other outcome you might be hoping for. UK advertising rules forbid these claims for food supplements, and on top of the rules, we think you'd rather we be straight with you than sell you a feeling.
What we will say is: the underlying biology is real, the research is moving in interesting directions, and a well-made NMN is — for a lot of women over 40 — a sensible addition to a routine you've already built. That's the whole pitch.
Food supplement. Not a medicine. Does not diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. If you are pregnant, breastfeeding, on prescription medication, or have a medical condition, consult your GP before taking any supplement.