Remedy Place
Editorial review, practical details, and booking context from Dip.
The Verdict
Finance wellness as a social product. The walk-in protocols are legitimate. The $9,000 membership is buying community as much as recovery. Yes, $9,000.
The Dip Review
Remedy Place is the most finance-adjacent wellness venue in New York City, and it does not pretend otherwise. Ice baths, infrared sauna, hyperbaric oxygen, NAD+ drips, cryotherapy, PEMF mats, two Manhattan locations, walk-ins from $30, annual memberships starting at $9,000. Yes, $9,000. The biohacking menu is real, not aspirational. The IV services are the most medically supervised of any comparable venue in the city. The protocols are evidence-adjacent rather than purely speculative, which in the longevity space puts them ahead of most of the competition.
The honest framing of that membership tier: the $9,000 is not primarily purchasing better ice baths than you could find elsewhere. It's purchasing social context, and for its target demographic (finance, tech, real estate, the Venn diagram where those three meet for coffee) that is a genuine product. The ice bath waiting area functions as a networking lounge. Members know each other. The community is real. Whether that's the wellness experience you want depends entirely on what you're at a wellness venue to get. Community reviews trend higher than our score because members are rating the social club. We're rating the wellness.
For most visitors, the walk-in model at $30 to $50 is the sensible entry: a functional ice bath and infrared session that works as a post-workout recovery protocol, no membership pitch required. The venue is clean, well-staffed, and operationally reliable. You can use it as a recovery tool and leave without joining anything. People looking for a community of serious health-optimization practitioners will find one. Both uses are valid, and Remedy doesn't make you feel weird about either.
The Vibe
High-income, performance-oriented, and consciously networking. Finance, tech, and real estate adjacent. The crowd treats wellness as professional investment rather than personal indulgence. The social club framing creates deliberate visibility — being seen here is part of the value proposition for members.
The Good
- IV drip services are the most medically credible of any NYC wellness venue
- Walk-in access at $30 makes individual protocols genuinely accessible
- Clean, well-staffed, reliably executed protocols
- The social club element is real — members form genuine connections
- Two Manhattan locations increases convenience for regulars
The Not So Good
- The $9,000 membership price is a statement as much as a service tier
- The design and atmosphere skew clinical and performative
- The social club framing creates a visibility dynamic that's uncomfortable for some visitors
- Longevity protocol marketing can feel oversold relative to the actual evidence base
The Details
Facilities
Ice baths (properly cold, typically 39–50°F), infrared sauna rooms, hyperbaric oxygen chambers, cryotherapy pods, PEMF mats, and IV drip suites. The IV services are medically supervised with on-site practitioners. The facility design is clinical-meets-luxury — white, bright, minimal, intentionally different from the ambient wood-and-stone of competitor wellness venues. Two locations have slightly different service menus.
Value
The walk-in tier is fairly priced for what it delivers. The membership tier is priced for the social value, not just the facility value — assess accordingly.
Know Before You Go
Pro Move
Walk-in for an ice bath and infrared session ($30–50) as a post-workout protocol. Skip the membership pitch unless the social networking dimension genuinely appeals to you. The walk-in ROI is solid; the membership ROI depends entirely on how much you value the community.
Not Ideal For
People who want a warm, atmospheric wellness experience. Anyone uncomfortable with visible status signaling. Solo visitors seeking anonymity.
When to Go
Mornings (pre-work) and lunch are the most active periods for recovery protocols. Evenings shift toward the social club dynamic — members lingering, introductions happening. Weekend afternoons have the most mixed crowd of regulars and curious walk-ins.
The Scene
Remedy Place is a reliable indicator of where NYC wellness meets finance culture. It's not the most authentic recovery venue in the city, but it's the most credible in the longevity-protocol category, and the social networking value is real for its target market. Trend direction: hype-driven growth with a strong membership core that sustains the brand beyond the initial buzz.
Who Goes
30–50, finance, tech, and real estate professionals. High-income, performance-oriented. Mix of members (who treat it as a regular social-professional habit) and walk-ins (who use it as a recovery tool). Behavior is networked — people know each other or are open to knowing each other. The ice bath waiting area functions like a club lounge.
Community Sentiment
Generally positive with a notable polarization — enthusiastic members and cynical first-timers occupy opposite poles. The IV drip service generates the most consistently positive reviews. The membership price point generates significant skepticism in broader wellness communities. Reddit discussions trend toward "is this worth it" with mixed consensus.
About Dip Scoring
Dip Index is our blended score, combining our editorial assessment with broader community consensus.





