Herbal tea — technically called a tisane — is any hot or cold beverage made from the infusion of flowers, herbs, roots, bark, fruit, or other plant materials that are not Camellia sinensis, the tea plant. Black tea, green tea, oolong, white tea, and pu-erh all come from Camellia sinensis. Herbal teas contain none of it. They are entirely separate botanical infusions — which is why herbal tea is naturally caffeine-free, while all true teas contain at least some caffeine.
The term "herbal tea" is a bit of a misnomer in that sense — technically, tea without Camellia sinensis isn't tea at all. But the name has stuck, and the category is as broad and varied as the plant world itself. Chamomile flowers, peppermint leaves, hibiscus calyces, dried fruit pieces, roasted barley, lemon verbena, elderflower, lavender, rose hips — anything that can be steeped in hot water and produces a pleasant drink qualifies. Adagio's loose leaf herbal collection spans all of it.
The most consumed herbal tea in the world and the one most people think of first when someone says "herbal tea." Adagio's loose leaf chamomile uses whole chamomile flower heads — not the ground chamomile dust that fills commercial chamomile teabags — which produces the gentle, apple-like, naturally sweet cup that chamomile is actually supposed to deliver. The difference between whole-flower chamomile and teabag chamomile is immediate and significant. Chamomile's associations with relaxation and digestive comfort are among the best-documented in herbal medicine. From 13¢/cup.
Clean, cooling, and instantly recognizable — loose leaf peppermint tea uses whole or large-cut peppermint leaves rather than the ground mint fragments in commercial teabags, producing a genuinely mentholated cup with natural cooling properties and a brightness that grocery store peppermint teabags rarely match. One of the most versatile herbal teas in the collection: an invigorating morning option, a post-meal digestive aid, a cooling afternoon drink in summer, and a relaxing evening option that works at any hour without any caffeine concern. Cold brewed peppermint is one of the most naturally refreshing iced teas available. From 13¢/cup.
The most visually striking herbal tea in the collection — deep ruby red, naturally tart, and so vividly colored that it stains whatever it touches. Hibiscus (Hibiscus sabdariffa) is made from the dried calyces of the hibiscus flower and produces one of the most naturally beautiful teas available in any category. The tart, cranberry-adjacent flavor and the vivid jewel-colored liquor make hibiscus one of the most photographed herbal teas in café culture — cold brewed hibiscus over ice is a social media-generating drink that needs nothing added. Rich in antioxidants and naturally high in vitamin C. From 13¢/cup.
A fruit-forward herbal blend built around blood orange — one of the most vibrant and aromatic citrus ingredients available. The deep orange-red color and bright, slightly tart citrus character make Blood Orange one of the most immediately appealing herbal teas in the collection on sight and smell before the first sip. A natural cold brew performer — cold-brewed Blood Orange is one of the most vivid iced herbal teas in the Adagio catalog. From 13¢/cup.
The classic wellness herbal combination — warming ginger alongside bright lemon in a cup that has been used as a home remedy for nausea, digestive discomfort, and cold symptoms for centuries across dozens of cultures. Not because it's trendy, but because it works. Lemon Ginger is one of the most practically useful herbal teas in the collection — it tastes genuinely good and it does something specific that people reach for it to do. From 13¢/cup.
A bright, naturally sweet strawberry herbal blend with vivid color and the fresh-picked character of good strawberry fruit rather than artificial strawberry flavoring. Wild Strawberry is the gateway herbal tea for anyone who finds chamomile and peppermint too botanical and wants something fruit-forward and immediately accessible. Cold brewed, it produces a naturally sweet, lightly pink iced tea that works with nothing added. From 13¢/cup.
One of the most purely aromatic herbs available — lemon verbena (Aloysia citrodora) delivers a clean, fresh lemon character that is more vibrant and more complex than dried lemon peel while remaining entirely natural. The aroma when the dry herb hits hot water is one of the most pleasant herbal tea moments in the collection. From 15¢/cup.
The notable exception in the herbal tea collection: Yerba Mate (Ilex paraguariensis) is technically an herbal tea in that it contains no Camellia sinensis, but it contains significant caffeine — approximately 30–50mg per 8oz serving — from its own naturally occurring caffeine compounds. Traditionally consumed in South America as a social and ceremonial drink, Yerba Mate has a distinctive, slightly smoky, earthy character with a natural bitterness that mellows as the cup cools. For anyone who wants the herbal tea format with a genuine caffeine boost, Mate is the right choice. From 13¢/cup.
Herbal teas have the longest history of use as medicinal beverages of any beverage category — documented records of chamomile as a calming remedy date to ancient Egypt; ginger's digestive applications appear in Chinese medicine texts from the 4th century BCE. Modern research has confirmed many traditional associations while qualifying others. Here's what the evidence actually supports:
Almost always — with one notable exception. The vast majority of herbal teas contain no caffeine whatsoever because they contain no Camellia sinensis, the caffeine-producing tea plant. Chamomile, peppermint, hibiscus, lemon ginger, wild strawberry, blood orange, lemon verbena, and the great majority of Adagio's herbal collection are completely caffeine-free.
The exception: Yerba Mate and Toasted Mate. Yerba Mate (Ilex paraguariensis) is a South American plant that produces its own caffeine compounds independently of the tea plant. A cup of Yerba Mate contains approximately 30–50mg of caffeine — less than coffee but comparable to a cup of green tea. Both Mate varieties in the Adagio herbal collection are clearly labeled as caffeinated.
For anyone who drinks herbal tea specifically to avoid caffeine in the evening or due to caffeine sensitivity, every herbal tea in the collection except the Mate varieties is a safe choice at any hour.
This is one of the most commonly confused distinctions in the tea category, and it matters for anyone who avoids caffeine:
The practical guide: if you want something that tastes like black tea without caffeine, you want decaf. If you want something that tastes like chamomile, peppermint, or fruit, you want herbal tea. They're different categories serving different needs.
Herbal tea is the most forgiving category to brew — no temperature sensitivity, no bitterness from over-steeping, no special equipment beyond boiling water and an infuser:
Cold brewing herbal tea is one of the most effortless ways to make genuinely great iced tea — herbal ingredients cold brew naturally and consistently, with no bitterness risk and no temperature management required:
Hibiscus, Blood Orange, and Wild Strawberry cold brew into some of the most vivid, jewel-colored, naturally sweet iced teas available — they look spectacular in a clear glass and taste exactly as good as they look. Peppermint cold brew is one of the most naturally cooling drinks of any category. Chamomile cold brew is a gentle surprise — naturally sweet and honey-like in a way that the hot version only hints at.
Cold-brewed herbal iced tea keeps in the refrigerator for up to 4 days — make a pitcher Sunday night and have naturally sweet, caffeine-free iced tea available through Thursday. See the full cold brew herbal iced teas collection.
"What tea should I drink before bed?" is one of the most searched herbal tea questions online — and the answer is more specific than "any herbal tea." The herbal teas with the strongest evidence for sleep support:
For the most targeted sleep support, Adagio's Wellness Teas section includes blends specifically formulated for sleep and relaxation — combining chamomile and other calming botanicals in purpose-made sleep blends rather than single-herb infusions.
Several herbal teas have particularly well-supported associations with digestive comfort — the category where the evidence base for herbal medicine is strongest:
Loose leaf herbal tea makes one of the most thoughtful and universally appropriate gift categories in the Adagio catalog — suitable for any recipient regardless of whether they drink caffeinated tea, entirely safe for pregnant recipients, and accessible to all ages. A herbal tea sampler covering chamomile, peppermint, hibiscus, and a fruit blend gives the recipient the full range of the category from a single gift. Pair with a ceramic infuser mug for a complete herbal tea gift that includes everything needed to brew the first cup. From $12 for a sampler set.
Browse the full loose leaf herbal tea collection above — chamomile, peppermint, hibiscus, blood orange, lemon ginger, wild strawberry, lemon verbena, yerba mate, and dozens more caffeine-free botanical blends, from 13 cents a cup. Free shipping on qualifying orders. Buy loose leaf herbal tea online and have it delivered from Adagio's New Jersey warehouse within one business day. Also available as cold brew herbal iced teas and in pyramid teabag format.