Explore 5,320+ detailed herb profiles with safety data, evidence grades, and traditional uses.
Personalized Guidance
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
Plantago ovata (husk powder)
Ground psyllium husk — the #1 fiber supplement worldwide. FDA-approved for cholesterol reduction. 5-10g daily with 8+ oz water. Effective for IBS both directions.
Pterocarpus erinaceus
West African rosewood tree used in traditional medicine across Guinea, Mali, and Senegal for dysentery, fever, wounds, and anemia. Bark decoction is blood-red and prescribed for blood-building. Now endangered due to Chinese rosewood timber demand.
Pueraria lobata
TCM herb for releasing the exterior — Ge Gen releases tight neck/upper back muscles during colds. Also studied for alcohol craving reduction. Contains puerarin and daidzein (isoflavones). The invasive vine that ate the American South.
Camellia sinensis (post-fermented)
Post-fermented and aged Chinese tea — contains unique statins, lovastatin, and beneficial microorganisms. Studied for cholesterol, weight, and gut health. Earthy flavor.
Pulicaria crispa
Arabian and North African desert herb used in Saudi, Yemeni, and Sudanese traditional medicine for stomach complaints, colds, fever, and as poultice for wounds. Contains sesquiterpene lactones and flavonoids with antimicrobial activity.
Boerhavia diffusa
Meaning "that which renews the body," used in Ayurveda for kidney support, edema, urinary health, and as a rejuvenative tonic.
Machaeranthera alta
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Navajo.
Geum rivale
Native American medicinal plant used as antihemorrhagic, antidiarrheal, febrifuge, pediatric aid, cold remedy, cough medicine. Documented among Algonquin, Tete-de-Boule, Iroquois, Malecite.
Pellaea atropurpurea
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, kidney aid, preventive medicine. Documented among Mahuna.
Echinacea purpurea
Worlds most popular immune herb — E. purpurea is the most studied species. For colds, flu, and immune support. Whole plant is used (unlike E. angustifolia root-only). Clinical evidence for reducing cold duration by 1-4 days.
Echinacea sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as throat aid, toothache remedy. Documented among Comanche.
Coronilla varia
Native American medicinal plant used as antirheumatic (external), emetic, orthopedic aid. Documented among Cherokee.
Vernonia cinerea
Traditional medicinal plant used for ache(head), ache(stomach), alexipharmic, amebiasis, antidote, cancer, cholera, colic, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Rubus odoratus
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antirheumatic (external), cathartic, cough medicine, dermatological aid, emetic. Documented among Cherokee, Iroquois.
Agastache scrophulariifolia
Native American medicinal plant used as diuretic. Documented among Meskwaki.
Lythrum salicaria
One of the only herbs possessing both astringent and demulcent actions. Helps clear dysentery and diarrhea, reduces inflammatory bowel disorders, and improves kidney, bladder, and vision function.
Comarum palustre
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, analgesic, gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Chippewa, Ojibwa.
Thalictrum dasycarpum
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, veterinary aid, love medicine, febrifuge, gastrointestinal aid, hunting medicine. Documented among Lakota, Meskwaki, Ojibwa.
Solanum xanti
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, orthopedic aid. Documented among Kawaiisu.
Sarracenia purpurea
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid, urinary aid, diuretic, abortifacient, orthopedic aid, venereal aid. Documented among Algonquin, Quebec, Algonquin, Tete-de-Boule, Cree, Woodlands.
Callirhoe involucrata
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, cold remedy. Documented among Dakota.
Dalea purpurea
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Montana Indian.
Iodanthus pinnatifidus
Native American medicinal plant used as love medicine, poultice. Documented among Meskwaki.
Salvia dorrii
Native American medicinal plant used as anticonvulsive, other, stimulant, cold remedy, panacea, analgesic. Documented among Hopi, Okanagan-Colville, Paiute.
Sanicula bipinnatifida
Native American medicinal plant used as panacea, snake bite remedy. Documented among Miwok.
Angelica atropurpurea
Native American medicinal plant used as abortifacient, carminative, cold remedy, febrifuge, misc. disease remedy, oral aid. Documented among Cherokee, Delaware, Delaware, Oklahoma.
Symphyotrichum puniceum
Native American medicinal plant used as hunting medicine, abortifacient, diaphoretic, febrifuge, gynecological aid, orthopedic aid. Documented among Chippewa, Cree, Woodlands, Iroquois.
Osmorhiza purpurea
Native American medicinal plant used as love medicine. Documented among Songish.
Orthocarpus purpureoalbus
Native American medicinal plant used as cathartic, ceremonial medicine, gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Inula racemosa
Ayurvedic cardiorespiratory herb used for angina, asthma, and chest pain. Contains alantolactone with anti-ischemic and bronchodilator properties.
Prunus africana (extract)
Standardized to 14% triterpenes and 0.5% n-docosanol. The most clinically studied form for BPH — widely prescribed in Europe.
Androsace septentrionalis
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, panacea, venereal aid, witchcraft medicine. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Spiraea ?pyramidata
Native American medicinal plant used as tonic. Documented among Thompson.
Chrysanthemum cinerariifolium
Traditional medicinal plant used for insecticide.
Qualea grandiflora
Brazilian cerrado tree used in folk medicine of Goias and Minas Gerais for gastric ulcers, diarrhea, and skin infections. Bark decoction for throat infections. Contains squalene and betulinic acid. One of the most common cerrado tree species.
Crataegus submollis
Native American medicinal plant used as witchcraft medicine. Documented among Iroquois.
Aspidosperma quebracho-blanco
Traditional medicinal plant used for asthma, fever, malaria, stimulant, tonic.
Phyllanthus niruri
Pan-tropical kidney stone remedy — used in Brazilian, Indian, Chinese, and Caribbean traditional medicine. Dissolves calcium oxalate crystals. Also hepatoprotective (used for hepatitis B in Asia). Name means "stone breaker" in Portuguese and Spanish.
Filipendula rubra
Native American medicinal plant used as heart medicine, love medicine. Documented among Meskwaki.
Various plant sources
A flavonoid found in onions, apples, and berries. Used for allergy support (mast cell stabilizer), cardiovascular health, and anti-inflammatory properties.
Quercetin 500mg + Bromelain 100mg
Classic allergy formula — Quercetin stabilizes mast cells while Bromelain enhances quercetin absorption and provides its own anti-inflammatory action. Take 20 min before meals.
Quercetin dihydrate (500mg)
Standard quercetin capsule — 500mg 1-2x daily. The natural mast cell stabilizer for allergies. Take with bromelain for enhanced absorption. 20 min before meals.
Cinchona pubescens
Alternative cinchona species with higher quinine content than C. officinalis. Historical antimalarial. Tonic water originated as a way to make bitter quinine palatable (with gin). Modern tonic water has negligible quinine.
Crotalaria rotundifolia
Native American medicinal plant used as throat aid. Documented among Seminole.
Chrysothamnus sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as febrifuge, toothache remedy, venereal aid, cold remedy, oral aid, throat aid. Documented among Isleta, Jemez, Keres, Western.
Ericameria bloomeri
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Klamath.
Pseudognaphalium obtusifolium
Native American medicinal plant used as sedative, analgesic, antirheumatic (internal), cold remedy, cough medicine, misc. disease remedy. Documented among Alabama, Cherokee, Choctaw.
Polygala polygama
Native American medicinal plant used as cough medicine. Documented among Montagnais.
Page 53 of 75
Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
Your health profile is encrypted and never shared