Your gut is more than a digestive tube. It holds roughly 70% of your immune cells, makes most of your serotonin, and decides how well you absorb every nutrient you eat. When the gut lining gets inflamed or damaged — from stress, processed food, alcohol, antibiotics, or chronic illness — the effects show up everywhere: bloating, acid reflux, fatigue, skin breakouts, brain fog, even mood swings.

Modern medicine offers strong tools for serious gut disease, but for everyday digestive trouble many people turn to something older: plants. Used in traditional medicine systems for thousands of years, certain herbs have a real, mechanistic effect on the gut lining — coating it, calming it, or feeding the cells that rebuild it.

This guide covers the nine most useful gut-healing herbs, ranked by how much evidence supports their use and how easy they are to add to daily life. We also flag where the science is still thin so you can make an informed decision.

How Gut-Healing Herbs Actually Work

Most herbs that help the gut do one of three things:

Some herbs do more than one. Licorice, for example, is both a soother and an anti-inflammatory. The best gut formulas combine herbs that hit different mechanisms.

01 Slippery Elm Bark Ulmus rubra
Best for: acid reflux, irritated gut lining

Slippery elm has been used by Indigenous peoples in North America for centuries as a digestive soother. When the powdered inner bark meets water, it forms a thick, slick mucilage — the same compound that coats and protects irritated tissue in the throat, stomach, and intestines.

The evidence: small studies and clinical experience suggest slippery elm — usually combined with other soothing herbs like marshmallow root or licorice — may help reduce symptoms of GERD and irritable bowel. A 2022 narrative review of fibers and botanicals for upper-GI conditions concluded the data on slippery elm alone is still limited, so think of it as a well-tolerated, traditional remedy with promising but not yet definitive research behind it.1

How to use: Brew as a loose-leaf tea (1–2 tsp per 8–10 oz boiling water, steep 10–15 minutes) or stir 1 tsp powder into water before meals. Slippery elm can slow the absorption of medications — take it at least an hour apart from prescriptions.

02 Marshmallow Root Althaea officinalis
Best for: dry, irritated mucous membranes

Marshmallow root works on the same principle as slippery elm — it is loaded with mucilage polysaccharides that turn into a soothing gel in water. The difference is sustainability: marshmallow is cultivated, abundant, and less ecologically vulnerable than slippery elm, which is sometimes overharvested in the wild.

Herbalists reach for marshmallow when the gut feels dry, scraped, or sensitive — sometimes after antibiotics, NSAIDs, or stomach flu. It is gentle enough for most daily use and has a mild, lightly sweet flavor.

How to use: Cold infusion works best. Steep 1 tablespoon of dried root in 16 oz cool water overnight, then strain and sip.

03 Licorice Root (DGL) Glycyrrhiza glabra
Best for: heartburn, gut inflammation, antiviral support

Licorice is one of the most-used herbs in Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western herbalism. For the gut, it does two useful things: it stimulates mucus production along the stomach lining (a natural protective layer) and it tones down inflammatory signaling.

Deglycyrrhizinated licorice (DGL) is the form most often used long-term — the glycyrrhizin has been removed, which avoids potential blood-pressure side effects. Whole licorice is fine in small culinary or tea-blend amounts. If you have high blood pressure, kidney disease, or are pregnant, stick to DGL and check with your doctor.2

How to use: 1 tsp dried root in a tea blend, 1–2 cups daily. DGL chewable tablets before meals are common for reflux.

04 Ginger Zingiber officinale
Best for: nausea, slow digestion, mild bloating

Ginger has some of the strongest clinical evidence of any digestive herb. Its active compounds — gingerols and shogaols — speed gastric emptying, calm nausea (including motion sickness and chemotherapy-related nausea), and reduce inflammation in the gut wall.

How to use: Fresh ginger tea (a few thin slices in hot water, 10 minutes), 500–1000 mg dried ginger capsules, or sliced raw ginger added to meals.

05 Chamomile Matricaria chamomilla
Best for: nervous stomach, gas, indigestion at night

The most underrated gut herb. Chamomile relaxes the smooth muscle of the digestive tract, reduces spasm, and quiets the brain-gut axis — which is exactly the link that ramps up when stress turns your stomach into knots. It also has measurable anti-inflammatory effects.

How to use: 1–2 tsp dried flowers in 8 oz hot water, steep 5 minutes, drink after meals or before bed.

06 Peppermint Mentha × piperita
Best for: IBS, cramping, gas

Peppermint oil capsules have some of the best clinical evidence for IBS in the herbal world. The menthol in peppermint relaxes the gut wall, reducing cramping and gas pressure. Enteric-coated capsules let the oil reach the small intestine before it dissolves — a notable upgrade over peppermint tea for serious IBS.

Note: Peppermint can worsen reflux because it relaxes the lower esophageal sphincter. If reflux is your main issue, skip peppermint and lean on slippery elm, licorice, or chamomile.

07 Fennel Seed Foeniculum vulgare
Best for: bloating and gas after meals

If you've ever been handed candied fennel seeds after dinner at an Indian restaurant, that is gut wisdom in action. Fennel relaxes the smooth muscle in the digestive tract and helps gas pass instead of building up. It also has a mild antimicrobial effect on gut bacteria.

How to use: Chew ½ teaspoon of seeds after a heavy meal, or steep 1 tsp crushed seeds in hot water for 10 minutes.

08 Turmeric Curcuma longa
Best for: chronic gut inflammation

Curcumin, turmeric's active compound, is a well-studied anti-inflammatory. Multiple trials suggest curcumin can help with ulcerative colitis remission and may support general gut-lining repair. The catch: curcumin absorbs poorly on its own. Pair it with black pepper (piperine) or fat, or use a phospholipid-bound formula, for it to do much.

How to use: Golden milk (½ tsp turmeric + black pepper + fat in warm milk), curcumin capsules with piperine, or generous use in cooking.

09 Aloe Vera (Inner Leaf) Aloe barbadensis
Best for: constipation, dry gut, inflammation

Aloe vera inner-leaf gel contains soothing polysaccharides similar to those in slippery elm and marshmallow. Several small trials suggest aloe juice may help reduce IBS and ulcerative colitis symptoms. Important: buy aloe juice processed to remove anthraquinones (labels often say "decolorized" or "purified") — those are strong laxatives and not what you want for daily use.

How to use: 1–2 oz of decolorized inner-leaf aloe juice on an empty stomach.

Built From This Guide

Klara Tea — Slippery Elm + Licorice in One Brew

Two of the most-studied gut-soothing herbs in this guide, combined into a single loose-leaf tea you can drink daily. No sugar, no caffeine, no fillers — just the herbs.

See Klara Tea →

How to Use Gut Herbs Every Day

Most herbal benefits show up with consistent, daily use — not occasional megadoses. A few simple ways to work them in:

How long until you feel a difference?

For acute issues like bloating or mild cramping, herbs like chamomile, ginger, and peppermint can help within an hour. For chronic gut issues — reflux, IBS, leaky-gut symptoms — most people need 3–6 weeks of daily use before noticing meaningful change. The gut lining turns over every few days, but it needs consistent inputs to rebuild fully.

Safety, Side Effects & When to See a Doctor

Herbs are powerful, which means they can interact with medications and underlying conditions. A few specific cautions:

See a healthcare provider if you have any of these red flags: blood in stool, persistent vomiting, unexplained weight loss, severe abdominal pain, fever with GI symptoms, or symptoms that don't improve after 4–6 weeks of self-care. Herbs are great for support — they are not a substitute for diagnosis of conditions like celiac, inflammatory bowel disease, or H. pylori infection.

FAQ

What is the single best herb to heal the gut?

There is no single answer — it depends on the symptom. For reflux and an irritated stomach lining, slippery elm and licorice are the most useful. For IBS-type cramping and bloating, peppermint and fennel. For nervous-stomach or stress-driven gut issues, chamomile. Most thoughtful herbal formulas pair a mucilaginous herb (coats and protects) with a carminative or anti-inflammatory herb (calms and rebuilds).

Can I take these herbs together?

Yes — and most herbalists do. Traditional gut blends often combine slippery elm + marshmallow + licorice (all soothers and inflammation-tamers), or chamomile + fennel + peppermint (carminatives). Just keep doses moderate and watch for individual sensitivities.

Are gut-healing herbs safe in pregnancy?

Some are, some are not. Ginger and chamomile are generally considered safe in pregnancy at culinary or normal tea amounts. Whole licorice should be avoided. Peppermint oil capsules and large doses of any herb should be cleared with your OB. When in doubt, ask your provider before starting.

How do I know if I have leaky gut?

"Leaky gut" — increased intestinal permeability — is recognized in medical research as a real phenomenon, but there is no single accepted clinical test. Common signs include bloating, food sensitivities, skin issues, fatigue, and brain fog. If you suspect chronic gut issues, work with a healthcare provider who can rule out underlying conditions and develop a structured plan.

What is the fastest way to heal the gut lining?

There is no overnight fix. The fastest sustainable approach combines four things: (1) remove the irritants — alcohol, ultra-processed food, NSAIDs you don't need; (2) coat and calm with soothing herbs like slippery elm, marshmallow, and licorice; (3) feed gut lining repair with bone broth, fermented foods, and L-glutamine; (4) reduce stress, since chronic stress directly damages the gut lining. Expect 4–8 weeks for meaningful change.

References & Further Reading

  1. Peterson CT et al. "Botanical Approaches to Functional GI Disorders." Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 2022. PMC review on medicinal plants and gut microbiome.
  2. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) — Licorice Root: What the science says.
  3. Cleveland Clinic — Patient guides on digestive health and herbal remedies.
  4. Mount Sinai Health Library — Monographs on slippery elm, marshmallow root, chamomile, and peppermint.
  5. Memorial Sloan Kettering Integrative Medicine — Herb database on aloe vera, licorice, and turmeric.

† These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This article is for general education and is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any supplement or herbal program.

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