Elderberry: Potential Benefits, Known Risks, and More

Note: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not approve supplements for safety or effectiveness. Talk to a healthcare professional about whether a supplement is the right fit for your individual health, and about any potential drug interactions or safety concerns.
Potential Health Benefits of Elderberry
Here are some possible elderberry benefits — emphasis on "possible."
Fights the Flu
You know you need to wash your hands frequently, especially in flu season. But there is some animal research that suggests elderberry can act as another defense against illness.
Shortens the Common Cold
If you travel by air, you may want to stock up on elderberry.
While the placebo group did get more colds, the authors noted that the result wasn't statistically significant. The bright spot is that people who took elderberry and developed a cold reduced their cold duration by two days and suffered less-serious symptoms. The researchers suggest it may be elderberry's antioxidant properties, similar to vitamin C, that "stabilize" someone's health while traveling. More research is needed.
Guards Against Other Infections
Improves Metabolic Health
Potential Risks and Side Effects of Elderberry
Eat elderberries only if they're ripe and cooked. If you're managing a health condition or are on medications, check with your doctor before consuming elderberry or consuming it as an herbal supplement.
Risks
Side Effects
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Severe diarrhea
It may also act as a diuretic (increasing urination).
Forms of Elderberry
Most likely, you'll take elderberry as a supplement. You'll find these in gummies, liquids or juices, syrups, lozenges, dried, and in capsule form.
You can buy elderberry jelly, jam, and wine online and in some stores. The taste is sweet and tart and, overall, enjoyable. But note that most research studies have focused on supplements and pure extracts, and not on other forms of elderberry like juices and jams.
Elderberry Supplements
Elderberry gummies are tasty, but they do have added sugar. When you're buying elderberry, you'll frequently find supplements that include a mix of elderberry and potential immune supportive supplements like zinc and vitamin C.
Other supplements may include only elderberry as the active ingredient. Choose the formula that suits your needs the best, and read the ingredients label to know what active and inactive components each contains.
Elderberry Jam
Certain country stores and online outlets sell elderberry jelly and jam; use and store it as you would other jellies and jams.
Elderberry Juice
Elderberry Wine
While it's unclear whether wine offers the same potential benefits of elderberry extract, elderberry in this form is common. You can find elderberry wine at some wineries and their associated online stores, where the winemakers may feature wine made from only elderberries or blends with other berries.
How to Select and Store Elderberry
Selection
To choose a quality supplement, check the label for USP, NSF, or Consumer Labs Approved. This means the product has undergone third-party testing for quality and purity.
Storage
Like other vitamins, elderberry supplements should be stored in a cool, dry place.
Dosage of Elderberry
The Takeaway
- Elderberry is a popular ingredient that is made into supplements, tea, jam, juice, and even wine.
- Perhaps best known are elderberry supplements, which people commonly turn to for cold and flu relief.
- Research on the potential benefits as well as the side effects of elderberry remains limited. Scientists emphasize that more studies in humans are needed.
- If you're managing a health condition or taking any medications, check with your doctor before adding elderberry to your supplement routine.
- Elderberry. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. November 2024.
- Elderberry. Mount Sinai.
- Krawitz C et al. Inhibitory Activity of a Standardized Elderberry Liquid Extract Against Clinically-Relevant Human Respiratory Bacterial Pathogens and Influenza A and B Viruses. BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies. February 25, 2011.
- Wieland LS et al. Elderberry for Prevention and Treatment of Viral Respiratory Illnesses: A Systematic Review. BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies. April 7, 2021.
- Kinoshita E et al. Anti-influenza Virus Effects of Elderberry Juice and its Fractions. Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry. 2012.
- Mocanu ML et al. Elderberries — a Source of Bioactive Compounds with Antiviral Action. Plants (Basel). March 10, 2022.
- Ulbricht C et al (2014). An Evidence-Based Systematic Review of Elderberry and Elderflower (Sambucus nigra) by the Natural Standard Research Collaboration. Journal of Dietary Supplements. 2014.
- Tiralongo E et al. Elderberry Supplementation Reduces Cold Duration and Symptoms in Air-Travellers: A Randomized, Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial. Nutrients. March 24, 2016.
- Przybylska-Balcerek A et al. Sambucus Nigra Extracts — Natural Antioxidants and Antimicrobial Compounds. Molecules. May 14, 2021.
- Haitao J et al. The Anti-Obesogenic Effects of Dietary Berry Fruits: A Review. Food Research International. September 2021.
- Studzińska-Sroka E et al. Antidiabetic Potential of Black Elderberry Cultivars Flower Extracts: Phytochemical Profile and Enzyme Inhibition. Molecules. December 6, 2024.
- Common Elderberry. United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service. September 2010.
- Elderberry. University of Rochester Medical Center.
- Elderberry Juice. USDA FoodData Central. July 29, 2021.
- Sinupret. Bionorica.
- Black Elderberry Homeopathic Cold & Flu Relief Tablets. Sambucol.

Justin Laube, MD
Medical Reviewer
Justin Laube, MD, is a board-certified integrative and internal medicine physician, a teacher, and a consultant with extensive expertise in integrative health, medical education, and trauma healing.
He graduated with a bachelor's in biology from the University of Wisconsin and a medical degree from the University of Minnesota Medical School. During medical school, he completed a graduate certificate in integrative therapies and healing practices through the Earl E. Bakken Center for Spirituality & Healing. He completed his three-year residency training in internal medicine at the University of California in Los Angeles on the primary care track and a two-year fellowship in integrative East-West primary care at the UCLA Health Center for East-West Medicine.
He is currently taking a multiyear personal and professional sabbatical to explore the relationship between childhood trauma, disease, and the processes of healing. He is developing a clinical practice for patients with complex trauma, as well as for others going through significant life transitions. He is working on a book distilling the insights from his sabbatical, teaching, and leading retreats on trauma, integrative health, mindfulness, and well-being for health professionals, students, and the community.
Previously, Dr. Laube was an assistant clinical professor at the UCLA Health Center for East-West Medicine and the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, where he provided primary care and integrative East-West medical consultations. As part of the faculty, he completed a medical education fellowship and received a certificate in innovation in curriculum design and evaluation. He was the fellowship director at the Center for East-West Medicine and led courses for physician fellows, residents, and medical students.

Jessica Migala
Author
Jessica Migala is a freelance writer with over 15 years of experience, specializing in health, nutrition, fitness, and beauty. She has written extensively about vision care, diabetes, dermatology, gastrointestinal health, cardiovascular health, cancer, pregnancy, and gynecology. She was previously an assistant editor at Prevention where she wrote monthly science-based beauty news items and feature stories.
She has contributed to more than 40 print and digital publications, including Cosmopolitan, O:The Oprah Magazine, Real Simple, Woman’s Day, Women’s Health, Fitness, Family Circle, Health, Prevention, Self, VICE, and more. Migala lives in the Chicago suburbs with her husband, two young boys, rescue beagle, and 15 fish. When not reporting, she likes running, bike rides, and a glass of wine (in moderation, of course).