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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Pluchea foetida
Native American medicinal plant used as febrifuge. Documented among Choctaw.
Ailanthus altissima
Antidiarrheal herb used to treat dysentery and duodenal ulcers. Also used as an astringent and anthelmintic.
Anthemis cotula
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, anticonvulsive, antirheumatic (internal), dermatological aid, diaphoretic, emetic. Documented among Cherokee, Iroquois, Karok.
Astragalus praelongus
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, emetic. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Hypericum perforatum
One of the most studied herbs for mood support. Extensively researched for mild to moderate emotional wellness. Has critical drug interactions.
Hypericum perforatum (300mg)
Standard SJW capsule — 300mg extract (0.3% hypericin) 3x daily. The most studied dose for mild-moderate depression. CRITICAL drug interactions — check all medications.
Hypericum perforatum (extract)
Standardized to 0.3% hypericin. Clinical evidence comparable to SSRIs for mild-moderate depression. CRITICAL drug interactions — the most interaction-prone herb.
Hypericum perforatum (0.3% hypericin)
German standardized extract — 300mg 3x daily (0.3% hypericin). Matches SSRIs for mild-moderate depression in meta-analyses. LI 160 and WS 5572 are the most-studied extracts. Full effect takes 4-6 weeks. THE most drug-interacting herb known.
Hypericum perforatum (tea)
Dried St. John's Wort steeped as tea — milder than capsules but still has drug interactions. 2-3 cups daily. Yellow tea turns reddish. Same interaction warnings apply.
Antennaria dioica
Native American medicinal plant used as eye medicine. Documented among Gosiute.
Phyllanthus niruri
Famous tropical kidney stone herb — used worldwide in folk medicine. Emerging clinical evidence for preventing calcium oxalate stone formation.
Phyllanthus niruri
A tropical herb whose name means "stone breaker" — traditionally used worldwide for kidney stones, gallstones, and liver support. Promising research.
Collinsonia canadensis
A traditional Eclectic medicine herb used for venous support, hemorrhoids, and urinary gravel.
Collinsonia canadensis
Eclectic medicine vein and hemorrhoid herb — for varicose veins, hemorrhoids, and venous congestion. Strengthens vascular tone. Also used for kidney stones (hence "stone root") and laryngitis. Fresh root tincture is most potent.
Erodium sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Hualapai.
Hypericum crux-andreae
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, eye medicine. Documented among Choctaw.
Hypericum multicaule
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, eye medicine. Documented among Alabama.
Lesquerella rectipes
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, eye medicine, respiratory aid, toothache remedy. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Ashwagandha + Rhodiola + Holy Basil + Schisandra
Four-adaptogen formula for comprehensive stress resilience. Each adaptogen works through different HPA axis pathways for synergistic cortisol regulation.
Forestiera pubescens
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, disinfectant, emetic. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Viola striata
Native American medicinal plant used as witchcraft medicine. Documented among Iroquois.
Acer pensylvanicum
Native American medicinal plant used as respiratory aid, veterinary aid, emetic, laxative, orthopedic aid, antihemorrhagic. Documented among Abnaki, Algonquin, Quebec, Iroquois.
Chimaphila maculata
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antirheumatic (internal), cancer treatment, cold remedy, dermatological aid, emetic. Documented among Cherokee, Nanticoke.
Desmodium incanum
Jamaican male vitality tonic for back pain, erectile dysfunction, and kidney complaints; root decoction is most common form.
Struchium sparganophorum
West African aquatic herb used in Yoruba (Nigeria) traditional medicine for malaria, fever, and headache. Leaves eaten as bitter vegetable. Related to bitterleaf (Vernonia) but aquatic habitat. Contains sesquiterpene lactones and flavonoids.
Stryphnodendron adstringens
Brazilian cerrado tree bark widely used for wound healing, burns, gastric ulcers, and vaginal infections. Contains prodelphinidin tannins (up to 30%). Brazilian phytomedicine — standardized extract for wound healing. Applied topically as gel or decoction wash.
Ziziphus jujuba var. spinosa (seed)
TCM premier insomnia herb — nourishes Heart blood and calms the Shen. For insomnia with palpitations, anxiety, and night sweats. Key ingredient in Suan Zao Ren Tang (Jujube Seed Decoction), one of TCMs most important sleep formulas. Dose: 15-30g in decoction.
Abies lasiocarpa
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, ceremonial medicine, cold remedy, dermatological aid, emetic, febrifuge. Documented among Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Crow.
Erigeron peregrinus
Native American medicinal plant used as orthopedic aid, other, stimulant. Documented among Cheyenne.
Athyrium filix-femina
Native American medicinal plant used as febrifuge, reproductive aid, venereal aid. Documented among Iroquois.
Trifolium dubium
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, emetic, hemostat. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Citrus sudachi
A medicinal plant (Citrus sudachi) from the Rutaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Hemigraphis alternata
Siddha wound-healing leaf applied to cuts, bruises, and hemorrhoids; also used for kidney stones and urinary infections in Tamil folk practice.
Celtis laevigata
Native American medicinal plant used as throat aid, venereal aid. Documented among Houma.
Acer saccharum
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, dermatological aid, eye medicine, pulmonary aid, cough medicine, expectorant. Documented among Iroquois, Mohegan, Potawatomi.
Pinus lambertiana
Native American medicinal plant used as carminative, eye medicine, laxative, pediatric aid, cathartic. Documented among Kawaiisu, Mendocino Indian, Miwok.
Rhus ovata
Native American medicinal plant used as cold remedy, cough medicine, analgesic, gynecological aid. Documented among Cahuilla, Coahuilla, Diegueno.
Sulforaphane (from broccoli)
Broccolis secret weapon — the most potent natural Nrf2 activator known. Upregulates 200+ detoxification and antioxidant genes. For cancer prevention, autism (clinical trials), and detoxification. Broccoli sprouts have 100x more than mature broccoli.
Potentilla recta
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, internal medicine. Documented among Okanagan-Colville.
Eriogonum umbellatum
Native American medicinal plant used as burn dressing. Documented among Klamath.
Lupinus sulphureus
Native American medicinal plant used as eye medicine. Documented among Okanagan-Colville.
Eriogonum umbellatum
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, venereal aid, gastrointestinal aid, disinfectant, emetic, cold remedy. Documented among Kawaiisu, Mahuna, Navajo, Kayenta.
Pfaffia paniculata
A Brazilian adaptogen called "para todo" (for everything). Used for energy, immune support, and hormonal balance. Contains pfaffic acid and ecdysteroids.
Rhus sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as abortifacient, analgesic, anthelmintic, anticonvulsive, carminative, cathartic. Documented among Iroquois, Winnebago.
Rhus glabra
Sumach is used for all excessive watery states where discharges need to be toned and healed. It tones the entire alimentary canal, heals internal ulcers, and helps regulate blood sugar.
Taxus sumatrana
A medicinal plant (Taxus sumatrana) from the Taxaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Ferula sumbul
Traditional medicinal plant used for antispasmodic, apertif, hysteria, nerves, nervine, sedative, spasm, stimulant, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Corallorrhiza maculata
Native American medicinal plant used as basket medicine, hunting medicine, love medicine, tuberculosis remedy, veterinary aid, witchcraft medicine. Documented among Iroquois, Navajo, Kayenta, Nevada Indian.
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Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
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