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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Leptospermum scoparium (UMF 15+)
UMF 15+ (or MGO 514+) medical-grade Manuka honey. Proven wound-healing properties. FDA-cleared Medihoney used in hospitals. The gold standard of medicinal honeys.
Leptospermum scoparium (lozenge)
Lozenges made with genuine Manuka honey — provides direct MGO antimicrobial action to the throat. Check for UMF/MGO rating on product. Delicious and effective.
Ipomopsis polycladon
Native American medicinal plant used as sedative, tonic. Documented among Navajo, Kayenta.
Ipomopsis multiflora
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, analgesic, dermatological aid, pulmonary aid. Documented among Navajo, Ramah, Zuni.
Lithospermum multiflorum
Native American medicinal plant used as panacea. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Mentzelia multiflora
Native American medicinal plant used as diuretic, psychological aid, tuberculosis remedy, emetic. Documented among Keres, Western, Navajo.
Schkuhria multiflora
Native American medicinal plant used as oral aid. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Hydrocotyle umbellata
Native American medicinal plant used as cough medicine, respiratory aid, sedative. Documented among Seminole.
Hackelia floribunda
Native American medicinal plant used as poison, orthopedic aid. Documented among Isleta, Navajo, Ramah.
Viburnum acerifolium
Native American medicinal plant used as anticonvulsive, diaphoretic, febrifuge, misc. disease remedy, oral aid, tonic. Documented among Cherokee, Chippewa, Iroquois.
Aristotelia chilensis
A Chilean berry with extremely high anthocyanin content — studied for blood sugar support, eye health, and anti-inflammatory properties.
Equisetum sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as poison, abortifacient, contraceptive, urinary aid, cough medicine, kidney aid. Documented among Aleut, Costanoan, Modesse.
Ambrosia hispida
Traditional medicinal plant used for ache(stomach), anodyne, apertif, cathartic, cold, diaphoretic, fever, flu, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Margaritaria discoidea
West African tree used in Ghanaian and Nigerian traditional medicine for malaria, pain, and as purgative. Bark decoction for fever. Contains securinine alkaloids with CNS stimulant properties. Used in traditional veterinary medicine.
Dryopteris marginalis
Traditional medicinal plant used for poison, vermifuge.
Markhamia tomentosa
West African tree used in Yoruba and Igbo traditional medicine for rheumatism, cough, and wound healing. Bark decoction for pain. Leaf preparations for skin conditions. Contains lapachol-type naphthoquinones with antimicrobial properties.
Ardisia japonica
Traditional medicinal plant used for bronchitis, circulation, conjunctivitis, detoxicant, expectorant, hemoptysis, hepatoma, lung, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Campanula aparinoides
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid. Documented among Iroquois.
Viola cucullata
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antidiarrheal, blood medicine, cold remedy, cough medicine, dermatological aid. Documented among Cherokee.
Rorippa islandica
Traditional medicinal plant used for deobstruent, detergent, digestive, diuretic, hepatic, scurvy, stimulant, tonic.
Gnaphalium uliginosum
Native American medicinal plant used as orthopedic aid, respiratory aid. Documented among Iroquois.
Senecio congestus
Native American medicinal plant used as poison. Documented among Eskimo, Inuktitut, Eskimo, Western.
Stachys palustris
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid, venereal aid. Documented among Chippewa, Delaware, Delaware, Oklahoma.
Equisetum palustre
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid, laxative. Documented among Ojibwa.
Althaea officinalis (flower)
The flowers of marshmallow — milder and prettier than the root. Used as a gentle soothing tea for sore throat and mild respiratory support.
Althaea officinalis (leaf)
The leaf of marshmallow — less mucilaginous than the root but still demulcent. Used for respiratory and urinary comfort, and as a gentle daily tea.
Althaea officinalis (480mg)
Standard marshmallow root capsule — for digestive, respiratory, and urinary soothing. Take 1 hour APART from other medications (delays absorption due to mucilage).
Althaea officinalis (extract)
Concentrated marshmallow root — higher mucilage content than tea form. Used for GI, respiratory, and urinary tract soothing. The most demulcent herb.
Althaea officinalis (cold infusion)
COLD infusion is best for maximum mucilage — steep in room temperature water 4-8 hours (overnight). The most soothing preparation for digestive and urinary comfort.
Castilleja lineata
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Navajo.
Ledum palustre
Traditional medicinal plant used for abortifacient, bronchitis, cold, cough, diuretic, expectorant, lactogogue, narcotic, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Chrysopsis mariana
Native American medicinal plant used as pediatric aid, sedative, tonic. Documented among Delaware, Delaware, Oklahoma.
Sanicula marilandica
Native American medicinal plant used as antidote, dermatological aid, emetic, kidney aid, laxative, pediatric aid. Documented among Iroquois, Malecite, Menominee.
Senna marilandica
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, cathartic, dermatological aid, febrifuge, heart medicine, misc. disease remedy. Documented among Cherokee, Iroquois, Meskwaki.
Peucedanum ostruthium
Traditional medicinal plant used for bronchitis, cancer, catarrh, diuretic, liqueur, stomachic, tumor.
Pistacia lentiscus (extract)
Standardized mastic gum extract from Chios, Greece. Clinical evidence for H. pylori, peptic ulcers, and digestive health. EU-protected origin.
Lepidium didymum
South American folk remedy for fracture healing — crushed whole plant applied as poultice to broken bones. Also used for respiratory infections and intestinal parasites. Contains glucosinolates. Widely used in Brazilian and Andean traditional medicine.
Camellia sinensis (ceremonial grade)
Ceremonial-grade matcha whisked with warm milk — the modern wellness café staple. Higher L-theanine than culinary grade. Calm, focused energy.
Camellia sinensis (blended)
Matcha blended with banana, spinach, and plant milk — combines L-theanine calm focus with smoothie nutrition. The fitness-friendly matcha format.
Tiquilia latior
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Navajo, Kayenta.
Bouteloua simplex
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, throat aid. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Astragalus mollissimus
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, emetic. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Podophyllum peltatum
Traditional medicinal plant used for aperient, bile, bilious, bowel, cancer, emetic, fever, hydragogue, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Gymnosporia senegalensis
Pan-African savanna tree used in traditional medicine from Senegal to South Africa for dysentery, wound healing, snakebite, and toothache. Root bark chewed for dental pain. Contains maytansine-related compounds (ansamacrolides) with antitumor activity.
Polygonum bistorta
Native American medicinal plant used as tonic. Documented among Aleut.
Salvia pratensis
A European wild sage species — milder than garden sage. Used for digestive support, sore throat gargle, and as a calming tea.
Zigadenus venenosus
Native American medicinal plant used as emetic, poison, analgesic, antirheumatic (external), dermatological aid, orthopedic aid. Documented among Chehalis, Haisla and Hanaksiala, Klamath.
Allium canadense
Native American medicinal plant used as carminative, cathartic, diuretic, ear medicine, expectorant, kidney aid. Documented among Cherokee, Mahuna.
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Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
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