Explore 5,320+ detailed herb profiles with safety data, evidence grades, and traditional uses.
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Our Herbal Support Finder matches you with herbs based on your wellness goals, health profile, medications, and allergies — with safety checks built in.
Every recommendation includes interaction and contraindication checks
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Robinia pseudoacacia honey
Light, mild honey from black locust flowers — the lowest glycemic index honey. Stays liquid longest. Used for sore throat, wound healing, and as a prebiotic.
Euterpe oleracea
A Brazilian superfruit rich in anthocyanins and antioxidants, used for cardiovascular and metabolic support.
Malpighia emarginata
A tropical cherry with 50-100x more vitamin C than oranges. Used as a natural vitamin C source for immune support.
Phyllanthus emblica
One of the richest natural sources of vitamin C. Key ingredient in Triphala and Chyawanprash. Used for hair, skin, immune, and digestive health.
Malus domestica (ACV gummy)
ACV in gummy format — the viral supplement that made ACV mainstream. Contains much less acetic acid than liquid. More of a trend product than a therapeutic dose.
Aronia melanocarpa
One of the highest-antioxidant berries known — rich in anthocyanins. Used for cardiovascular health, blood sugar balance, and immune support.
Atractylodes macrocephala
A premier TCM herb for strengthening the Spleen and drying dampness. Used for digestive weakness, fatigue, and fluid metabolism.
Wolfiporia cocos
Korean poria mushroom used for edema, urinary difficulty, insomnia, and digestive complaints. Different layers of the fungal body have distinct therapeutic properties.
Balanites aegyptiaca
Sahelian multipurpose tree used across Africa and Middle East for diabetes, intestinal worms, and as fish poison. Contains diosgenin (steroid precursor) and balanin saponins. Fruit mesocarp for bilharzia/schistosomiasis in Egyptian folk medicine.
Berberis vulgaris
A berberine-containing shrub used traditionally for digestive health, liver support, and urinary comfort.
Berberis vulgaris (fruit)
The tart red berries of barberry — used in Persian cuisine (zereshk polo) and as a vitamin C-rich tea. Milder berberine content than the root.
Berberis vulgaris (root)
The root bark of barberry — rich in berberine. Used for digestive infections, liver support, and metabolic health. Same active as goldenseal.
Hordeum vulgare
Young barley grass juice powder — rich in chlorophyll, enzymes, vitamins, and minerals. Used as a nutritive green superfood supplement.
Hordeum vulgare (juice powder)
Juice extracted from young barley grass then dried — more concentrated than whole grass powder. Rich in SOD (superoxide dismutase) enzyme and chlorophyll.
Laurus nobilis
The culinary bay leaf — also medicinal for blood sugar support, digestive health, and respiratory comfort. Rich in cineole and linalool.
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (extract)
Standardized arbutin extract from Uva Ursi. Short-term urinary antiseptic — 1-2 week courses maximum. Requires alkaline urine pH to be active.
Vaccinium myrtillus
A European berry rich in anthocyanins, traditionally used to support eye health and circulation.
Rubus occidentalis
The leaf is used similarly to Red Raspberry for uterine toning. The berries are exceptionally rich in anthocyanins and ellagic acid.
Nigella sativa + Raw Honey
Traditional Middle Eastern remedy — black seed mixed into raw honey. Combines the immune benefits of both. Popular in Islamic and Ayurvedic medicine.
Clitoria ternatea
A stunning blue flower tea that changes color with pH (add lemon = purple). Used for cognitive support, eye health, hair care, and as a natural food colorant.
Bovine thymus gland
Desiccated thymus gland from cows — used in European biological medicine for immune modulation. Contains thymosin peptides. Quality varies widely.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Deactivated yeast — rich in B-vitamins, chromium, selenium, and protein. Traditional lactation support. Different from nutritional yeast (which is fortified).
Clitoria ternatea
A Southeast Asian flower known for its vivid blue color that changes to purple with acid (lemon). Used for cognitive support, eye health, and as a natural colorant.
Clitoria ternatea (latte)
Blue butterfly pea flower steeped in milk — changes from blue to purple with acid (lemon). Viral social media drink that's also medicinal for cognitive support.
Eschscholzia californica
A gentle, non-addictive sedative herb native to the American West, used for sleep support and nervous tension. NOT an opiate.
Calophyllum brasiliense
South American rainforest tree used in Brazilian and Costa Rican traditional medicine for wound healing, ulcers, and pain. Resin applied to wounds. Bark decoction for rheumatism. Contains calophyllolide and brasiliensic acid with anti-HIV research interest.
Physalis peruviana
An Andean superfruit rich in withanolides (like ashwagandha) and vitamins. Used for blood sugar support, immune health, and as a nutritive food.
Carum carvi
A culinary seed used medicinally for digestive comfort, particularly for bloating, gas, and colic.
Apium graveolens
Cleansing diuretic herb used for rheumatic conditions, gout, and arthritis. Seeds help kidneys dispose of urates and waste products, and have urinary antiseptic properties.
Apium graveolens (juice)
Trending health drink — provides apigenin, luteolin, and phthalides. Used for blood pressure support, anti-inflammatory effects, and digestive health.
Apium graveolens
Used in Ayurvedic and Western traditions for joint comfort, urinary support, and blood pressure balance.
Centaurium erythraea
European bitter tonic — one of the most bitter herbs in the pharmacopoeia. Stimulates digestive juices and appetite. Used for dyspepsia, flatulence, and loss of appetite. Gentle fever reducer.
Prunus serotina
Traditional cough remedy bark — the base of classic cough syrups. Contains prunasin which converts to HCN in small amounts (antitussive). Do NOT use wilted leaves.
Cichorium intybus
Roasted chicory root — the classic coffee substitute/additive (New Orleans style). Rich in inulin prebiotic fiber. Supports gut microbiome and liver function.
Various green plants
The green pigment of plants — used as an internal deodorizer, detoxifier, and nutritive. Commercial forms are usually copper chlorophyllin.
Chlorophyllin (liquid)
Copper chlorophyllin drops in water — the trending green water. Used for internal deodorizing, detoxification, and as a daily nutrient boost. Most products are semi-synthetic.
Chrysanthemum morifolium
A cooling TCM herb used for eye health, headaches, and clearing heat. Commonly enjoyed as a pleasant floral tea across East Asia.
Chrysanthemum morifolium
One of the most popular herbal teas in China — cooling, eye-supporting, and headache-relieving. A pleasant daily drink.
Passiflora caerulea (flavonoid)
A flavonoid from passionflower and honey — studied for aromatase inhibition (reducing estrogen conversion). Used in men's health and hormonal balance.
Polyherbal Ayurvedic Formula
An ancient Ayurvedic jam-like formula based on Amalaki (Amla) with 30-80 herbs. Used as a daily immune tonic and rejuvenative. India's most popular herbal supplement.
Amla-based Ayurvedic jam
India's #1 herbal supplement — 1-2 tsp daily of this Amla-based jam with 30-80 herbs. The ultimate Ayurvedic immune and rejuvenative tonic. 3000+ year history.
Salvia sclarea
A European sage used in aromatherapy for menstrual comfort, labor support, and mood balance. The essential oil is more commonly used than the tea.
Salvia sclarea (essential oil)
Essential oil for women's health — used in aromatherapy for menstrual cramps, labor support, and emotional balance. Strong estrogen-like effects.
Symphytum officinale
TOPICAL USE ONLY. Traditionally used as a poultice for muscle and joint comfort. Contains pyrrolizidine alkaloids — internal use is dangerous.
Crossopteryx febrifuga
West African tree whose bark is one of the most commonly used antimalarial remedies across the Sahel. Used in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Ghana for malaria, fever, diarrhea, and wounds. Contains alkaloids and tannins. Name 'febrifuga' references fever use.
Murraya koenigii
An Indian culinary herb (NOT curry powder) used for digestive support, blood sugar balance, and hair health. Rich in carbazole alkaloids.
Ophiocordyceps sinensis
Prized Tibetan medicine fungus parasitizing ghost moth larvae, used for kidney strengthening, lung support, fatigue, and libido. Among the world's most expensive biological products.
Sambucus nigra (flower)
Elder flowers — used differently from berries. A gentle diaphoretic for fever support and a pleasant cordial. Traditional for hay fever.
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Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
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