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
Factors in your age, sex, conditions, medications, and allergies
Angelica hendersonii
Native American medicinal plant used as antidote. Documented among Mewuk.
Chamomile + Lavender + Rosemary (steam)
Herbs steeped in steaming water for facial steam — opens pores, delivers volatile compounds to skin and sinuses. Traditional beauty and respiratory remedy.
Opopanax chironium
Traditional medicinal plant used for antiseptic, cancer, medicine, spasm, stimulant.
Reynoutria multiflora (Zhi)
Steam-processed He Shou Wu — traditional 9x steaming with black beans transforms the raw laxative root into a blood/kidney nourishing tonic. ONLY use processed form. For premature graying, low back pain, and infertility. Raw form is laxative and hepatotoxic.
Hibiscus sabdariffa
A tart, ruby-red flower tea enjoyed worldwide, studied for blood pressure and cardiovascular support.
Hibiscus sabdariffa (cold brew)
Cold-brewed hibiscus — retains more anthocyanins than hot-brewed. The preferred preparation for blood pressure support (3+ cups daily in studies). Delicious over ice.
Hibiscus sabdariffa (tea)
The ruby-red flower tea enjoyed worldwide — Mexican Agua de Jamaica, West African Bissap, Egyptian Karkade. Clinical evidence for blood pressure support (3 cups/day).
Hydnocarpus wightiana
Traditional medicinal plant used for leprosy.
Rorippa palustris
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, eye medicine. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Teucrium divaricatum var. canescens
A medicinal plant (Teucrium divaricatum) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Lithospermum canescens
Native American medicinal plant used as sedative. Documented among Menominee.
Scutellaria incana
Native American medicinal plant used as abortifacient, antidiarrheal, breast treatment, gynecological aid, kidney aid. Documented among Cherokee.
Arabis holboellii
Native American medicinal plant used as toothache remedy. Documented among Thompson.
Cryptantha sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as dietary aid, disinfectant. Documented among Navajo, Navajo, Kayenta.
Alcea rosea
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Shinnecock.
Prunus ilicifolia
Native American medicinal plant used as cough medicine. Documented among Diegueno, Mahuna.
Navarretia atractyloides
Native American medicinal plant used as burn dressing. Documented among Costanoan.
Ocimum tenuiflorum (500mg)
Standard Tulsi capsule — 500mg extract. The convenient daily adaptogen format for those who don't want tea. 1-2 capsules daily.
Ocimum tenuiflorum (extract)
Standardized Tulsi extract — concentrated ursolic acid and eugenol. The most studied form for stress resilience, blood sugar, and cognitive support.
Ocimum tenuiflorum (tincture)
Alcohol-extracted Tulsi — concentrated adaptogen drops. 30-60 drops 2-3x daily. Faster acting than capsules for acute stress. The portable adaptogen format.
Homalomena occulta
Vietnamese and Chinese traditional medicine rhizome for chronic low back pain, joint stiffness, rheumatism, and leg weakness. Name means 'thousand year health.' Contains sesquiterpenoids and oplopanone. Used in elderly patients for mobility support.
Gleditsia triacanthos
Native American medicinal plant used as adjuvant, anthelmintic, gastrointestinal aid, misc. disease remedy, pulmonary aid, panacea. Documented among Cherokee, Creek, Delaware.
Apis mellifera (raw)
Raw unprocessed honey — contains enzymes, propolis, pollen, and hydrogen peroxide generation. The world's oldest wound dressing. Cough suppressant equal to dextromethorphan.
Lonicera sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as pulmonary aid, cough medicine, dermatological aid, disinfectant, orthopedic aid, antidiarrheal. Documented among Chippewa, Costanoan, Iroquois.
Ranunculus uncinatus
Native American medicinal plant used as antirheumatic (external), disinfectant, herbal steam, orthopedic aid, poison. Documented among Thompson.
Aesculus hippocastanum
Seed extract used to support vein health and circulation, particularly for leg comfort. Only standardized extracts are safe.
Aesculus hippocastanum (300mg)
Standard horse chestnut extract capsule — 300mg providing 50mg aescin. For chronic venous insufficiency and varicose veins. Clinical evidence comparable to compression stockings.
Aesculus hippocastanum (extract)
Standardized to 16-20% aescin. Clinical evidence comparable to compression stockings for CVI. The most studied herbal vein supplement.
Equisetum arvense (440mg)
Standard horsetail capsule — for hair, skin, nail, and bone health via bioavailable silica. Take with thiamine (B1) supplement as horsetail depletes it.
Equisetum arvense (extract)
Standardized extract of horsetail — provides bioavailable silica for bone, hair, nail, and connective tissue support. More concentrated than tea form.
Siegesbeckia orientalis
Traditional medicinal plant used for abscess, ague, alterative, analgesic, anodyne, antidote(spider), apertif, arthritis, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Mimulus glabratus
A medicinal plant (Mimulus glabratus) from the Scrophulariaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Jatropha macrantha
Peruvian male vitality herb — traditional Amazonian remedy for erectile dysfunction and low libido. Name means "male power." Contains steroids and alkaloids. Less studied than Maca or Tongkat Ali but traditionally valued. Often combined with Maca.
Astragalus membranaceus (extract)
Standardized astragalus extract — concentrated polysaccharides and astragalosides for deep immune tonic and energy support. Take as a tonic, not during acute illness.
Gaylussacia sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as psychological aid, sedative, gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Chickasaw, Rappahannock.
Ligusticum scoticum
Native American medicinal plant used as poison. Documented among Eskimo, Western.
Hyacinthus orientalis
Traditional medicinal plant used for poison.
Bacterial fermentation (Streptococcus)
A naturally occurring polysaccharide in joints, skin, and eyes. Oral HA supplements support joint cushioning, skin hydration, and eye comfort.
Scutellaria churchilliana
A medicinal plant (Scutellaria churchilliana) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Hypoxis colchicifolia
Southern African relative of African potato (H. hemerocallidea) used in Zulu medicine for urinary conditions, testicular swelling, and dizziness. Contains hypoxoside and rooperol. Less studied than African potato but widely used in KwaZulu-Natal.
Inga feuillei
A medicinal plant (Inga feuillei) from the Fabaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Citrus ichangensis
A medicinal plant (Citrus ichangensis) from the Rutaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Desmodium illinoense
Native American medicinal plant used as adjuvant. Documented among Meskwaki.
Horseradish + Garlic + Onion + Ginger + Cayenne + ACV
Intensified fire cider with horseradish, onion, and sometimes turmeric, oregano, rosemary. The most potent folk immune tonic. 1-2 tbsp daily in winter.
Coffee + Lion's Mane + Chaga
Coffee blended with Lion's Mane (focus) and Chaga (immune). Half the caffeine of regular coffee. The functional beverage category leader.
5 Mushroom dual-extract tincture
Five medicinal mushrooms dual-extracted in one tincture — Reishi, Turkey Tail, Chaga, Cordyceps, Lion's Mane. The broadest-spectrum immune mushroom format.
Calocedrus decurrens
Native American medicinal plant used as herbal steam, gastrointestinal aid, cold remedy. Documented among Klamath, Mendocino Indian, Paiute.
Medeola virginiana
Native American medicinal plant used as anticonvulsive, panacea, pediatric aid, witchcraft medicine. Documented among Iroquois.
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Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
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