🌿 Men's Wellness

Herbs for Men's Health

8 powerful adaptogens and plant remedies drawn from traditional medicine and validated by modern research — supporting testosterone, energy, heart health, mental clarity, and sexual vitality.

🌿 8 herbs profiled ⚡ Adaptogens included ⏱ 7 min read 🔬 Evidence-informed

Men's health challenges — declining testosterone, chronic stress, fatigue, and cardiovascular risk — are often addressable through intentional plant-based living. These 8 herbs have been used in Ayurvedic, Traditional Chinese, and African herbalism for centuries, and are now gaining validation from nutritional science. They pair powerfully with an alkaline vegan diet.

Important: Consult your healthcare provider

These herbs are foods and traditional plant remedies, not pharmaceutical drugs. However, some interact with medications (e.g. blood thinners, blood pressure medications, hormonal therapies). Always consult a qualified health practitioner before adding concentrated herbal supplements to your routine, especially if you have a pre-existing condition.

🌿 The 8 Essential Herbs

1
Pine Pollen
Pinus sylvestris
Testosterone Support Androgens Vitality

Pine pollen contains phyto-androgens including testosterone, DHEA, and androstenedione in trace amounts — making it one of the few plant sources of naturally occurring androgens. It also provides a broad spectrum of amino acids, vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. Used in Traditional Chinese Medicine for millennia to restore masculine vitality and longevity.

How to Use Raw pollen powder in smoothies (1 tsp), tincture under the tongue for direct mucosal absorption, or capsules (500–1000 mg/day). Best in the morning.
2
Rhodiola
Rhodiola rosea
Focus Anti-Fatigue Mood Adaptogen

Rhodiola is a clinically studied adaptogen that reduces cortisol and physical fatigue. Its active compounds — rosavins and salidroside — enhance serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine transport. Multiple randomised controlled trials show significant reductions in fatigue and improvements in cognitive performance under mental and physical stress.

How to Use Standardised extract 200–600 mg/day (3% rosavins, 1% salidroside). Take 30 minutes before meals. Cycle 6 weeks on, 2 weeks off for best results.
3
Hawthorn
Crataegus monogyna
Heart Tonic Circulation Emotional Resilience

Hawthorn is Europe's most researched heart herb, used for centuries as a cardiac tonic. Its oligomeric proanthocyanidins (OPCs) dilate coronary arteries, strengthen the heart muscle, and improve cardiac output. Studies show reductions in blood pressure and improved exercise tolerance in men with heart conditions. Also revered in Celtic tradition as a herb of emotional courage and resilience.

How to Use Berry extract 250–500 mg twice daily (standardised to 18.75% OPCs), hawthorn tea (2 tsp dried berries per cup), or tincture. Long-term use (8+ weeks) shows the strongest cardiovascular benefit.
4
Siberian Ginseng
Eleutherococcus senticosus
Stamina Immune Mental Clarity Adaptogen

Not a true ginseng but equally powerful. Siberian ginseng (eleuthero) is one of the most comprehensively studied adaptogens in both Soviet sports science and modern clinical research. It improves VO2 max, reduces recovery time, and modulates immune function via eleutherosides. A go-to herb for athletes, high-stress professionals, and men over 40.

How to Use Root extract 300–1200 mg/day in divided doses, standardised to 0.8% eleutherosides. Can be added to morning smoothies or taken as a tincture. Excellent in combination with Rhodiola.
5
Maca Root
Lepidium meyenii
Hormonal Balance Libido Stamina Fertility

Maca is a Peruvian root vegetable and adaptogen that works through the hypothalamus-pituitary axis to support hormonal balance without acting as a direct hormone. Multiple RCTs demonstrate increased libido, improved sperm motility and count, and enhanced exercise endurance. Black maca specifically shows memory enhancement effects. Nutrient-dense: iron, calcium, zinc, B6.

How to Use Gelatinised (pre-cooked) maca powder 1.5–3.5 g/day in smoothies, oatmeal, or energy balls. Raw maca is harder to digest. Black or red maca preferred for men's sexual health. Effects notable after 6–8 weeks.
6
Stinging Nettle
Urtica dioica
Testosterone Prostate Urinary Health Anti-Inflammatory

Nettle root contains compounds that bind to SHBG (sex hormone-binding globulin), freeing more testosterone for active use in the body. The root also inhibits 5-alpha-reductase, reducing DHT conversion associated with BPH (benign prostatic hyperplasia). Clinical trials confirm improved urinary flow and reduced prostate symptoms. Nettle leaf is one of the most nutrient-dense plants on earth — iron, calcium, silica, chlorophyll.

How to Use Root extract 120–360 mg/day for hormonal and prostate support. Leaf as tea, soup, or smoothie for nutritional benefit. Fresh leaves lose their sting when cooked or blended.
7
Damiana
Turnera diffusa
Aphrodisiac Mood Libido Nervous System

A traditional Mexican and Central American aphrodisiac herb with well-documented effects on libido and sexual function. Damiana's arbutin and flavonoids affect the nervous system and have shown mild testosterone-like activity in preclinical studies. It also acts as a mild mood elevator and anxiolytic, addressing the psychological side of sexual health — reducing performance anxiety and stress-related inhibition.

How to Use Dried leaf tea (2–4 g per cup, steep 10 min), tincture 2–3 mL up to three times daily, or capsules 400–800 mg/day. Often combined with maca for synergistic effects.
8
Schisandra
Schisandra chinensis
Liver Health Stress Resilience Sexual Vitality Adaptogen

Known as the "five-flavour berry" in TCM, schisandra is a multi-system adaptogen that simultaneously supports the liver (clearing the hormonal detox pathway), the adrenals (cortisol regulation), and sexual function. Its lignans (schisandrin A/B/C) are potent hepatoprotective compounds. A healthier liver means better testosterone metabolism, cleaner hormonal signals, and improved energy. TCM considers it among the supreme tonic herbs.

How to Use Dried berry tea (1–2 tsp/cup), standardised extract 500 mg twice daily (9% schisandrins), or tincture. Pairs well with hawthorn for cardiovascular and liver synergy.

🔄 The Adaptogen Advantage

Five of these eight herbs (Rhodiola, Siberian Ginseng, Maca, Damiana, Schisandra) are classified as adaptogens — herbs that help the body maintain homeostasis under physical and psychological stress. Unlike stimulants, adaptogens work bidirectionally: they raise what's too low and lower what's too high. The foundation beneath all of them is an alkaline, anti-inflammatory whole-food diet.

🌻 Pine Pollen 🌸 Rhodiola 🍒 Hawthorn 🌿 Siberian Ginseng 🥬 Maca Root 🌱 Nettle 🌼 Damiana 🍇 Schisandra
Pair With: Food as Medicine

For maximum benefit, combine these herbs with an organ-targeted alkaline diet. Read our Food as Medicine guide →

🥤 Cook With These Herbs

Many of these herbs integrate beautifully into alkaline vegan cooking — maca in smoothies, nettle in soups, ginseng in broths, schisandra as a tea. Explore recipes that feature these powerful plant medicines.