St. John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) is a plant with yellow flowers widely used in traditional medicine. The aerial parts contain key bioactive compounds including hypericin and hyperforin [1]. The vast majority of studies have found it as effective as standard antidepressants for mild to moderate depression, with fewer side effects [2][3].
However, St. John's wort presents significant safety risks due to extensive drug interactions — it can reduce the effectiveness of approximately half of all medications in use today.
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Forms and Bioavailability
- Evidence for Benefits
- Recommended Dosing
- Safety and Side Effects
- Drug Interactions
- Dietary Sources
- References
Overview
St. John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) is a plant containing at least seven groups of bioactive compounds, including naphthodianthrons (hypericin), flavonoids (quercetin), and phloroglucinol derivatives (hyperforin) [1]. Multiple meta-analyses confirm it is as effective as standard antidepressant drugs for mild to moderate major depression, with significantly fewer side effects [2][3].
The NIH NCCIH confirms it appears more effective than placebo and as effective as standard antidepressants for mild to moderate depression [4]. However, for severe depression, standard antidepressants are considered more effective.
Exploring Natural Approaches to Mood Support?
St. John's Wort has strong evidence for mild depression but serious drug interactions. Get personalized guidance on what is safe and effective for you with Health Roadmap.
Get Your Personalized Health PlanThe most significant concern is its extensive drug interactions — it can reduce the effectiveness of approximately half of all medications in use today.
Forms and Bioavailability
- Standardized extract (0.3% hypericin): 300 mg three times daily. The most studied form. Some products additionally standardized to 1–3% hyperforin.
- Whole herb powder: 2–4 g/day; should contain 0.1–0.15% hypericin. Higher heavy metal risk than extracts.
Research suggests the benefit is based on synergistic interactions of multiple compounds, not any single ingredient [5][6]. Products should specify aerial parts (flowers, leaves, stems) as the plant part.
Evidence for Benefits
Depression (Mild to Moderate)
This is the most robustly studied indication. Multiple meta-analyses confirm efficacy comparable to standard antidepressants [2][3]. Three well-publicized negative studies are notable because two of them also found the comparison antidepressant was ineffective [7][8].
St. John's wort does not cause euphoria and typically takes several weeks to achieve full effects, like conventional antidepressants.
Menopausal Symptoms
A combination of St. John's wort and black cohosh improved both menopause symptoms and mood in menopausal women with depression [9]. Small studies also suggest potential benefit for hot flashes [4].
Other Conditions
No reliable evidence supports use for anxiety, ADHD, PMS, seasonal affective disorder, chronic pain, insomnia, or smoking cessation [4].
Recommended Dosing
- Standardized extract (0.3% hypericin): 300 mg three times daily (900 mg/day)
- Whole herb powder: 2–4 g/day
Do not abruptly stop St. John's wort — withdrawal symptoms (headache, nausea, insomnia, fatigue) may occur.
Safety and Side Effects
For most adults not taking medications, St. John's wort appears safe for up to 12 weeks, with some evidence supporting safe use for one year or more [4]. Common side effects are mild: digestive distress, headache, fatigue, insomnia, anxiety, and skin rashes.
Additional concerns include photosensitivity (increased UV sensitivity), potential to trigger manic episodes in bipolar disorder, association with anorgasmia in long-term use [13], and possible slight cognitive impairment at excessive doses. Not recommended during pregnancy or breastfeeding [4].
Drug Interactions
St. John's wort has the most extensive drug interaction profile of any herbal supplement. It induces cytochrome P450 enzymes and P-glycoprotein.
Medications with reduced effectiveness:
- Cyclosporine/tacrolimus (transplant rejection risk)
- Oral contraceptives (unintended pregnancy risk)
- HIV protease inhibitors and NNRTIs
- Hepatitis C drugs (sofosbuvir, ledipasvir)
- Digoxin, statins, warfarin
- Cancer chemotherapy, antipsychotics, PPIs
- Paxlovid (COVID-19), methylphenidate, PDE5 inhibitors
Dangerous combination interactions:
- SSRIs and serotonergic drugs — risk of serotonin syndrome (potentially life-threatening)
- MAO inhibitors — rapid heart rate, hypertension, delirium
- Anesthetics — delayed emergence from surgery
Stopping St. John's wort while on adjusted medications can cause sudden rises in drug levels and toxicity. Always discuss with a physician.
Dietary Sources
St. John's wort is not a food ingredient. It is consumed exclusively as a supplement in capsule, tablet, or tincture form.
Exploring Natural Approaches to Mood Support?
St. John's Wort has strong evidence for mild depression but serious drug interactions. Get personalized guidance on what is safe and effective for you with Health Roadmap.
Get Your Personalized Health PlanReferences
1. Nahrstedt A et al., 1997.
2. Linde K et al., Cochrane Database Syst Rev, 2008.
3. Szegedi A et al., BMJ, 2005.
4. NCCIH, St. John's Wort Fact Sheet, accessed 2025.
5. Butterweck V et al., Wien Med Wochenschr, 2007.
6. Reichling J et al., Forsch Komp Klass Natr, 2003.
7. Hypericum Depression Trial Study Group, JAMA, 2002.
8. Shelton RC et al., JAMA, 2001.
9. Uebelhack R et al., Obstet Gynecol, 2006.
10. Weber W et al., JAMA, 2008.
11. Hoban CL et al., Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol, 2015.
12. Booth JN et al., Curr Eye Res, 2009.
13. Sarris J et al., Pharmacopsychiatry, 2012.
14. Hammerness P et al., Psychosomatics, 2003.
15. Burks TF et al., AACE Clin Case Rep, 2016.




































