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.
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Ludwigia bonariensis
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, dermatological aid, pediatric aid. Documented among Hawaiian.
Cassytha filiformis
Pan-tropical parasitic vine used in Bahamian, Hawaiian, and West African folk medicine for kidney stones, hypertension, and diabetes. Contains aporphine alkaloids (cassythine, actinodaphnine). Called 'love vine' in Caribbean for aphrodisiac properties.
Nepeta racemosa
A medicinal plant (Nepeta racemosa) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Teucrium marum
A Mediterranean herb used in homeopathy and folk medicine. Different from true Germander (T. chamaedrys) which is hepatotoxic. Professional use only.
Cestrum nocturnum
Tropical American shrub used in Filipino, Indian, and Latin American folk medicine. Leaf decoction for epilepsy (Philippines). Flower infusion as mild sedative. CAUTION: All parts contain solanaceous alkaloids and saponins. Berries are toxic.
Cinnamomum verum (extract)
Standardized CEYLON cinnamon — 250x less coumarin than Cassia. CinSulin water extract is the most studied form for blood sugar support.
Hymenopappus tenuifolius
Native American medicinal plant used as veterinary aid. Documented among Lakota.
Physaria chambersii
Native American medicinal plant used as eye medicine. Documented among Paiute, Shoshoni.
Cibotium chamissoi
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antirheumatic (external), blood medicine, dietary aid, sedative. Documented among Hawaiian.
Matricaria chamomilla (bath)
Strong chamomile tea added to bathwater — for skin soothing, relaxation, and as a gentle remedy for infant fussiness. Traditional European baby bath.
Matricaria chamomilla (capsule)
Standardized chamomile extract capsule — more concentrated apigenin than tea. Used for anxiety, sleep, and GI support when tea isn't convenient.
Matricaria chamomilla (Egyptian origin)
Egyptian-grown chamomile is considered the highest quality variety due to its high essential oil content. Same species as German Chamomile.
Matricaria chamomilla (essential oil)
Steam-distilled chamomile oil — blue color from chamazulene (anti-inflammatory). Used for skin healing, eczema, stress relief, and muscle relaxation.
Matricaria chamomilla (extract)
Standardized chamomile extract — concentrated apigenin for sleep, anxiety, and digestive support. More potent than tea but same gentle profile.
Matricaria chamomilla
One of the most widely used and gentle herbs, traditionally enjoyed as a calming tea to support relaxation, digestive comfort, and sleep.
Matricaria chamomilla (glycerite)
A glycerin-based (alcohol-free) chamomile extract safe for children. Used for teething, colic, digestive upset, anxiety, and sleep in kids.
Chamaemelum nobile
A close relative of German Chamomile with similar calming properties, often preferred in aromatherapy and essential oil form.
Matricaria chamomilla (tea bag)
Pre-packaged chamomile tea bag — the world's most popular calming tea. Steep 5-10 minutes covered. Choose whole-flower bags for best quality and flavor.
Matricaria chamomilla (tincture)
Alcohol-extracted chamomile — more concentrated than tea. 30-60 drops in water for anxiety, sleep, and digestive support. The portable chamomile format.
Michelia champaca
Traditional medicinal plant used for alterative, angina, anodyne, asthma, bronchitis, carbuncle, cephalgia, cholera, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Castela emoryi
A Sonoran Desert herb used in Mexican and Native American traditions for intestinal parasites and digestive infections.
Activated charcoal + lemon + sweetener
Trendy activated charcoal drink — striking black color. Binds toxins but also binds medications and nutrients. Drink well away from medications and supplements.
Argythamnia cyanophylla
Native American medicinal plant used as panacea. Documented among Navajo, Navajo, Ramah.
Sinapis arvensis
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, disinfectant, emetic. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Centaurium venustum
Native American medicinal plant used as febrifuge, misc. disease remedy, pulmonary aid. Documented among Luiseno, Miwok.
Pulsatilla chinensis
Traditional medicinal plant used for amebiasis, antiphlogistic, diarrhea, hematochezia, hemostatic, trauma, tumor(lung), wound.
Cinnamomum cassia
TCM variety of cinnamon — warming kidney yang tonic. Contains MORE coumarin than Ceylon cinnamon. Prefer Ceylon for daily supplementation; Cassia for TCM formulas.
Trichosanthes kirilowii
Traditional medicinal plant used for abscess, alexiteric, antitussive, anxiety, astringent, boil, bronchitis, cancer, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Conioselinum chinense
Native American medicinal plant used as urinary aid. Documented among Micmac.
Podophyllum pleianthum
A medicinal plant (Podophyllum pleianthum) from the Berberidaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Leonurus japonicus
The TCM species of motherwort — used for menstrual irregularity, postpartum recovery, and blood circulation. Contains leonurine.
Polystichum polyblepharum
A medicinal plant (Polystichum polyblepharum) from the Dryopteridaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Aquilegia triternata
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, ceremonial medicine. Documented among Navajo, Kayenta.
Opuntia leptocaulis
Native American medicinal plant used as narcotic. Documented among Apache, Chiricahua & Mescalero.
Polystichum acrostichoides
Native American medicinal plant used as antirheumatic (external), antirheumatic (internal), emetic, febrifuge, gastrointestinal aid, pulmonary aid. Documented among Cherokee, Iroquois, Malecite.
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.
Chrysophyllum albidum
West African fruit tree used in Nigerian (Yoruba, Igbo) traditional medicine. Bark decoction for malaria and yellow fever. Seed powder for vaginal infections. Leaf for wound healing. Fruit is popular seasonal snack across Nigeria.
Nepeta cilicia
A medicinal plant (Nepeta cilicia) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Pectis papposa
Native American medicinal plant used as laxative, carminative, eye medicine. Documented among Pima, Zuni.
Cinnamomum verum
A warming spice with a long history of use for digestive support and blood sugar balance. Ceylon cinnamon preferred over Cassia for supplements.
Cinnamomum verum (essential oil)
Cinnamon bark essential oil — extremely potent antimicrobial. MUST dilute heavily (0.5-1%). Used for oral health, respiratory support, and immune function.
Cinnamomum verum (Ceylon 500mg)
Ceylon cinnamon capsule — the safe variety for daily use (negligible coumarin). 500mg-1g twice daily with meals for blood sugar support. ALWAYS choose Ceylon over Cassia.
Cinnamomum verum
True cinnamon — contains 0.004% coumarin (250x less than Cassia). Safe for daily supplementation without liver risk. For blood sugar support, antioxidant protection, and anti-inflammatory benefits. Multiple thin layers when rolled (vs single thick Cassia).
Osmunda cinnamomea
Native American medicinal plant used as antirheumatic (external), febrifuge, snake bite remedy, tonic, analgesic, cold remedy. Documented among Cherokee, Iroquois, Menominee.
Cinnamomum verum + raw honey
Traditional folk remedy combining Ceylon cinnamon with raw honey. Used for sore throat, blood sugar support, and immune health. Popular home remedy worldwide.
Cinnamomum verum (tea)
Ceylon cinnamon sticks steeped in hot water — the safest daily cinnamon preparation. Sweet, warming flavor. Use Ceylon (not Cassia) for daily drinking.
Physalis heterophylla
Native American medicinal plant used as burn dressing, emetic, gastrointestinal aid, venereal aid, dietary aid. Documented among Iroquois, Lakota.
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Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
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