Most adults start with 1–2 grams of dried burdock root a day, then adjust based on the form and how their body reacts.
Burdock root (Arctium lappa) can be a food, a tea herb, or a concentrated extract. Those forms are not interchangeable, so “one dose” only makes sense after you name what you’re using.
Why Your Daily Amount Changes With The Form
Dry root is mostly fiber plus water-soluble compounds. Extracts pack far more plant material into a smaller serving, so milligrams can mean a lot more than they sound like.
- Fresh root as food: a vegetable serving with a meal.
- Dried cut root: brewed as tea or a decoction, measured in grams per brew.
- Powder or capsules: measured in milligrams or grams of powdered root.
- Liquid extracts and tinctures: measured in milliliters, often tied to a ratio or DER.
Tea often feels gentler because it’s diluted and easy to stop. Extracts are convenient, but you need a label with clear volumes and a sensible daily limit.
How Much Burdock Root Per Day? Practical Starting Points
If you want one baseline, use the dried-root range and treat extracts as their own category. A common starting point for dried burdock root is 1–2 grams per day, split into one or two servings, then adjusted after several days.
For supplement forms, it helps to anchor your plan to a recognized monograph. The European Medicines Agency lists adult posology for burdock preparations, including infusion grams, powder doses, and liquid extract volumes. EMA herbal monograph posology is a clean reference point when labels are vague.
Dried Root Tea Or Decoction
For tea made from dried root, think in grams, not “scoops.” Many labels land in a 2–6 g single-dose range for an infusion, taken up to three times daily. If you’re new to it, start with one lighter cup, then add a second cup only if it sits well.
Powder And Capsules
Powdered root and capsules often end up around 1,000–3,000 mg per day on labels. When a bottle lists “per capsule” only, total up the day and stay inside the brand’s stated maximum.
If the product is an extract, don’t treat it like plain root powder. Look for an extract ratio or DER plus a daily limit. If you don’t see those, skip it.
Liquid Extracts And Tinctures
Liquid extracts list milliliters. Tinctures vary by alcohol strength, so dosing differs by brand. Look for a daily maximum in mL plus a ratio like 1:5 or a DER.
Fresh Burdock Root As Food
If you cook burdock as gobo, “per day” can be a serving with a meal. A cooked serving often runs 50–100 g, depending on the dish. Treat food use with extra care if you’re pregnant, prone to ragweed-family allergies, or taking meds that change blood sugar.
Daily Dosing Table By Form
Use the table as a reality check so the form doesn’t quietly push your daily intake higher.
| Form | Typical Adult Daily Range | Notes For Label Reading |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh root (food) | One serving with a meal | Count it as a vegetable portion, not a “dose.” |
| Dried root infusion | 2–6 g per cup, up to 3x/day | Weigh the herb if you can; “teaspoon” varies by cut. |
| Dried root decoction | Similar to infusion, often brewed longer | Long simmering can pull more out of the root. |
| Powdered root | 350 mg, 3–5x/day | Total daily mg matters more than per-serving mg. |
| Soft extract | 1–2 g/day total | Check if the label lists “soft extract” and daily grams. |
| Liquid extract | 2–8 mL, 3x/day | Look for DER and solvent info. |
| Tincture (45% v/v) | 8–12 mL, 3x/day | Alcohol strength changes dosing across brands. |
| Tincture (25% v/v) | 8–12 mL, 3x/day | Same volume range can mean a different extraction profile. |
How To Pick A Dose That Fits Your Day
Set a simple plan: start low, split the day, and keep it steady long enough to notice a pattern.
Start Low, Then Adjust Slowly
Start at the low end for your form. Hold for three to five days. If you feel fine and still want more, raise the daily amount in one small step, then hold again.
Split The Dose To Reduce Stomach Upset
Two smaller servings often feel better than one big hit. Tea makes this easy. With capsules, a morning and evening split is a simple option.
Make Tea Dosing Repeatable
If you use dried root, a small kitchen scale keeps your cups consistent. Weigh the dry herb first, then steep or simmer with a measured water volume. If you change the cut size, steep time, or the amount of water, the “same” spoonful can land far apart.
For an infusion, pour hot water over the weighed root, place a lid on the mug, and steep. For a decoction, simmer the weighed root gently, then strain. Pick one method and stick with it during a trial so you’re not changing two variables at once.
Read Extract Labels Like A Checklist
Extract labels can be clear or useless. A usable label shows (1) the serving volume in mL or the capsule mg, (2) how many servings per day, and (3) a ratio like 1:5 or a DER. Some labels also list the solvent, which matters for people avoiding alcohol.
If you only see a vague phrase like “liquid extract” with no ratio and no daily maximum, you’re guessing. In that case, tea or plain powder is usually easier to dose with confidence.
Set A Time Limit
Treat burdock like a short trial, not a forever habit. A two- to four-week run is common in traditional use. If you want to keep going, pause for a week and see if you still want it.
Quality Checks Before You Buy
Herbs can vary by harvest, storage, and testing. Memorial Sloan Kettering notes a case of burdock tea contaminated with atropine, which is a sharp reminder to choose brands with clear sourcing. MSKCC burdock safety and quality notes explains that risk in plain language.
- Look for transparency: a batch number and a way to view testing results.
- Avoid mystery blends: if you can’t see the burdock amount per day, you can’t dose it well.
If a product causes a strong reaction, stop using it and report it. FDA guide to reporting problems with dietary supplements shows where those reports go.
When Burdock Is A Bad Fit
Burdock can clash with meds and can be a poor choice for certain groups. The points below are straightforward and worth respecting.
Pregnancy And Breastfeeding
Many monographs advise avoiding burdock during pregnancy and breastfeeding due to limited safety data. Drugs.com also lists pregnancy and lactation as “avoid use” for burdock products. Drugs.com burdock monograph also notes possible blood-sugar interactions.
Ragweed-Family Allergy
Burdock is in the Asteraceae family. If you react to ragweed or similar plants, start with food amounts or skip it.
Diabetes Meds And Low Blood Sugar
Burdock may lower blood sugar for some people. If you use insulin or oral diabetes meds, even a mild shift can matter, especially with extracts.
Diuretics, Dehydration, And Kidney Disease
Traditional use includes increasing urine output. If you already take diuretics or you struggle with dehydration, burdock tea can push you in the wrong direction. If you have kidney disease, get medical advice before using it.
Safety Table: Quick Checks Before You Take A Daily Dose
| Situation | Why It Matters | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Pregnancy | Safety data is limited for supplement use | Skip burdock supplements |
| Breastfeeding | Data is limited; infant exposure is unknown | Skip burdock supplements |
| Ragweed-family allergy | Cross-reactivity can trigger itching or rash | Start with food amounts or avoid |
| Diabetes meds | Blood sugar may drop more than expected | Track glucose; avoid high-dose extracts |
| Diuretics | Extra fluid loss can cause dizziness | Limit tea use; hydrate; stop if light-headed |
| Upcoming surgery | Blood sugar swings can complicate anesthesia plans | Stop 1–2 weeks before, unless your surgeon says otherwise |
| Unclear product label | You can’t gauge what you’re taking | Pick a product with daily limits and ratios |
Common Side Effects And When To Stop
Some people get stomach upset, gas, loose stools, or a skin rash. Tea can be gentler than capsules for sensitive stomachs.
Stop right away if you get hives, wheezing, facial swelling, or trouble breathing. Also stop if you get persistent dizziness or signs of low blood sugar like shaking and confusion.
A Simple Daily Plan You Can Follow
- Pick one form and stick with it for the whole trial.
- Choose the low end of that form’s daily range.
- Split the day into two servings if you can.
- Run it for 14 days and write down any changes you notice.
- Stop for 7 days before deciding on another run.
If you’re using burdock for a medical reason, or you take prescription meds, talk with a licensed clinician first.
Safe Use Checklist Before You Start
- Confirm the form: food, tea herb, powder, tincture, or extract.
- Use a measured dose in grams, milligrams, or milliliters.
- Start low and step up slowly only if you feel fine.
- Skip use during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
- Use extra care with diabetes meds and diuretics.
- Pick products with batch numbers and testing details.
- Stop if you get allergic symptoms or strong side effects.
References & Sources
- European Medicines Agency (EMA).“Final Herbal Monograph on Arctium lappa L., radix.”Lists adult posology by preparation, including infusion grams, powder doses, and extract volumes.
- Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.“Burdock.”Notes safety issues and quality concerns such as contamination risk in commercial tea.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“How to Report Problems with Dietary Supplements.”Explains how consumers can report adverse events linked to supplement use.
- Drugs.com.“Burdock Uses, Benefits & Dosage.”Summarizes reported dosing and flags cautions such as avoiding use in pregnancy and possible blood-sugar interactions.
