Stack Genius ingredient guide
Triphala
A classical Ayurvedic blend of three dried fruits — Amla, Bibhitaki, and Haritaki — used traditionally for digestion and bowel tone.
Overview
Triphala — Sanskrit for 'three fruits' — is one of the oldest and most recognizable formulas in Ayurvedic tradition. It combines equal parts of three dried fruits: Amla (Emblica officinalis), Bibhitaki (Terminalia bellirica), and Haritaki (Terminalia chebula). Each fruit is used on its own in Ayurveda, but the combination is the classical delivery form.
The formula is tannin- and polyphenol-rich, tastes sharply astringent and bitter-sour, and has been used traditionally for digestive tone and regular elimination. Amla contributes vitamin C and a distinct polyphenol profile, while the two Terminalia species bring tannin-heavy chemistry that acts more directly in the gut.
In finished products triphala appears as loose churna powder for traditional stirring into warm water, as tablets or capsules for convenience, and inside broader gut-health blends. High-quality material has a musty, unmistakably astringent smell and a dark brown color — bright, uniform powders often indicate additives or heat damage.
Key takeaways
- Triphala is a classical three-fruit Ayurvedic blend used for digestion and bowel regularity.
- The equal-parts Amla, Bibhitaki, Haritaki ratio is the defining feature — deviating from it makes it something else.
- Traditional use is gentle daily support, not acute laxative-style dosing.
Practical guidance
What to know before adding Triphala
Evidence snapshot
Modern research on triphala includes small clinical trials on bowel regularity, oral hygiene rinses, and metabolic markers, plus a substantial preclinical literature on its polyphenol chemistry. Signals are supportive but not definitive, and study protocols vary widely. Position it as a traditional Ayurvedic formula with growing but still moderate modern evidence.
What to look for on the label
Look for all three fruit species named individually (Emblica officinalis, Terminalia bellirica, Terminalia chebula) at equal ratios, along with the plant part (fruit) and preferably a certification for heavy metals. Because some Ayurvedic products have historically been contaminated with heavy metals, third-party testing on this specific ingredient category is more than marketing — it is a real quality signal.
What makes a better product
Better triphala products name the sourcing region (India is standard), publish heavy-metal and pesticide testing, and offer both loose powder and tablet formats so users can choose based on how they want to take it. Traditional practitioners generally prefer loose powder mixed with warm water; capsules are more convenient and skip the taste issue entirely.
Watch-outs
Triphala can loosen stools, especially at higher doses or when first starting — the traditional 'gentle bowel tone' framing shades into laxative territory if overdone. It is high in tannins, which can bind minerals and certain medications, so spacing it from iron supplements and time-sensitive prescriptions by a couple of hours is sensible. Pregnancy use is generally avoided without a practitioner's guidance.
Dosing & Timing
Traditional doses of triphala churna are around 3–5 grams of powder mixed into warm water, typically in the evening before bed or first thing in the morning on an empty stomach. Capsule and tablet doses are usually around 500 mg to 1,000 mg per serving. Starting lower and adjusting toward the traditional dose is a gentler introduction, especially for people new to Ayurvedic bitters.
Safety and interaction context
Triphala tends to be mild at traditional doses, with looser stools and cramping being the most common issues at higher intake. Tannins can complicate iron and medication timing, so spacing from other supplements and prescriptions is sensible. Pregnancy, breastfeeding, and pediatric use are better handled with an experienced practitioner.
Sources
- NCCIH — Herbs at a GlanceFramework for evaluating traditional botanical formulas.
- MedlinePlus — Dietary SupplementsConsumer-facing supplement literacy.
- PubMed CentralEntry point for triphala research literature.
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