FREE NZ DELIVERY ON ORDERS OVER $70

Skip to content

Herbal Supplements

Herbal supplements bring together capsules, liquids, extracts, oils and teas made from botanicals that people use for everyday wellness, routine support and ingredient-specific goals.

  • Be well. Sinus Clear
    Harker Herbals

    Be well. Sinus Clear

    $43.90

    Harker Herbals Sinus Clear helps to support clear sinuses, dries excess mucus and soothes heavy heads.  Formulated with Echinacea to support the im...

    View full details
    $43.90

What herbal supplements can include

Some products focus on one herb, while others combine several botanicals in one formula. You may also notice a mix of teas, tinctures, oils, powders and capsules, which can make the range feel broad at first glance. That variety is useful because the best fit often comes down to the ingredient you want, the format you will actually use, and how simple or targeted you want your routine to feel.

Popular herbal formats

Capsules and tablets are often the easiest option when you want a straightforward daily routine. Liquids and tinctures can suit people who prefer flexible dosing or faster-to-take formats. Teas can feel gentler and more ritual-based, while oils and topical products are better suited to more specific product types. If you already know the ingredient you want, it can help to move into a more focused range such as Berberine, Green Tea Supplements, Mushroom Supplements, Black Seed Oil or Standardised Herbs.

Single herbs, blends and standardised extracts

Single-herb products keep the formula simple and are often chosen when you want a more direct ingredient focus. Blends bring several herbs together and can feel more rounded, especially when the ingredients are intended to work alongside one another. Standardised extracts are different again, because the label usually points to a measured level of a key active compound. If that matters to you, our Standardised Herbs collection is a helpful place to compare those options more closely.

What people often compare on the label

It is worth looking at the herb name, the format, the serving size, and whether the formula is a simple single ingredient or a more complex blend. Some people also look for standardised extract wording, caffeine content where relevant, or supporting ingredients that change the feel of the formula. Keeping those details in mind can make it much easier to narrow the range without overcomplicating the process.

Common questions

Are herbal supplements all the same?

No. The ingredient, concentration, format and supporting ingredients can vary a lot, so two products that sound similar may still suit different routines.

Is it better to buy one herb or a blend?

That depends on how focused you want the formula to be. A single herb keeps things simple, while a blend can be useful when you want several botanicals together in one product.

How do I know where to start?

If you know the ingredient you want, a focused collection is often the quickest next step. If you are still exploring, this broader range gives you room to compare formats and find a direction that feels right for you.