Echinacea Extract
Echinacea extract is a botanical ingredient derived from Echinacea purpurea, traditionally used in herbal wellness formulations. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood herbal actives across EU and US markets. As a botanical on the EFSA on-hold list, it carries no authorised EU health claims under Reg. 432/2012, so brands typically position it around traditional use or co-formulate with nutrients that have authorised claims.
- immune support
- seasonal wellness
- daily wellness
At a glance
- Definition
- Echinacea extract is a botanical ingredient derived from Echinacea purpurea, traditionally used in herbal wellness formulations. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood herbal actives across EU and US markets. As a botanical on the EFSA on-hold list, it carries no authorised EU health claims under Reg. 432/2012, so brands typically position it around traditional use or co-formulate with nutrients that have authorised claims.
- Authorised wording (summary)
- 2 authorised statements — see "US structure-function statements" below.
- Common positionings
- immune support
- seasonal wellness
- daily wellness
- natural defence
- winter wellness
- Format suitability
- Reviewed for gummies and sachets — confirmed per project.
Where this ingredient fits in the DAT Supply catalogue
Every format chip links through to its manufacturing hub and to the private-label catalogue for that format. The category chip routes to the matching vertical hub on the categories index.
- Sports nutrition
- Browse all ingredients
What it is
Echinacea extract is a botanical ingredient derived from the Echinacea purpurea plant, native to North America and widely cultivated in Europe. It is one of the most familiar and commercially understood herbal actives across EU and US markets, commonly associated with seasonal wellness and immune support positioning.
For private-label gummy manufacturers, Echinacea offers a well-recognised herbal angle that resonates with consumers seeking natural wellness solutions. However, its regulatory status as a botanical on the EFSA on-hold list means brands cannot make authorised health claims under Reg. 432/2012. Positioning typically relies on traditional use narratives or co-formulation with nutrients like Vitamin C, Vitamin D, or Zinc that carry authorised claims.
Origin and history
Echinacea has been used traditionally by Native American tribes for centuries as a herbal remedy. The plant was later adopted by European herbalists in the 19th century and became one of the most researched botanical ingredients in modern phytotherapy. Today, Echinacea purpurea is the most commercially significant species, with cultivation concentrated in Europe and North America.
Industrial production involves extracting the aerial parts and roots of the plant using ethanol or water-based methods, followed by concentration and standardisation to key marker compounds such as echinacoside and cichoric acid. The extract is then dried to a powder or liquid concentrate suitable for incorporation into gummy and sachet formats.
Scientific overview
Echinacea purpurea contains a complex mixture of bioactive compounds including alkamides, caffeic acid derivatives (echinacoside, cichoric acid), polysaccharides, and glycoproteins. These compounds are thought to interact with immune cell receptors, particularly in the upper respiratory tract, though the exact mechanisms remain under investigation. The EFSA has not authorised any health claims for Echinacea due to insufficient evidence meeting the standard required under Reg. 432/2012.
Bioavailability of Echinacea compounds varies by extraction method and formulation. Standardised extracts with defined marker compound levels offer more consistent dosing than whole-plant powders. The alkamides are rapidly absorbed but have short half-lives, while polysaccharides may have longer-lasting effects. Manufacturers should work with suppliers who provide batch-specific analytical data.
From a manufacturing perspective, Echinacea extract is heat-stable and soluble in gummy formulations, making it technically feasible for gummy production. The primary challenge is its extremely bitter, sulfurous taste profile that requires aggressive taste-masking strategies. Fruit-forward profiles and sweetener systems are recommended. DAT reviews formulation feasibility and taste-masking options per project.
Why brands use Echinacea Extract
Echinacea is one of the most familiar and commercially understood herbal actives across EU and US markets, making it a strong candidate for brands targeting the immune support and seasonal wellness segments. Its herbal positioning differentiates it from synthetic or nutrient-only formulations, appealing to consumers who prefer plant-based wellness solutions. The ingredient works well in daily wellness ranges alongside other botanicals like Elderberry or Zinc.
From a formulation and manufacturing perspective, Echinacea extract is heat-stable and soluble in gummy matrices, which simplifies production. The main tradeoff is taste — the bitter, sulfurous profile requires careful formulation work to achieve a palatable final product. This adds development time and cost, but experienced manufacturers like DAT can manage this through flavour engineering and sweetener systems.
For pack copy, brands must observe strict claim discipline. As a botanical on the EFSA on-hold list, Echinacea carries no authorised health claims under Reg. 432/2012. Positioning should focus on traditional use, general wellness, or co-formulate with nutrients that have authorised claims. DAT reviews compliance per project and target market. No disease claims, no certification promises, and no guaranteed shelf-life should appear on pack without project-specific confirmation.
Formats this ingredient is reviewed for
DAT Supply covers gummy, capsule, softgel, tablet, powder, oral strip, liquid drop, shot, jelly and pet formats. The list below reflects every format this ingredient is reviewed for — chips link through to the manufacturing hub for each format. Final compatibility, dose and matrix are confirmed per project.
Formulation notes
Verified formulation reference across the formats this ingredient is reviewed for — the Supported formats section lists every product format this active is approved for, and the per-format Considerations section below covers matrix-specific guidance. Final formulation, dose and on-pack copy are confirmed per project.
- Gummy fit
- Good
- Heat stable
- Yes
- Soluble in matrix
- Yes
- Cost tier
- Medium
Forms available
- Echinacea purpurea extract (standardised to echinacoside/polyphenols)
- Echinacea purpurea root powder
- Echinacea purpurea juice concentrate
Dosage reference
Typical brand positioning ranges from 300 mg to 2400 mg per serving. reference-intake target reviewed per market not established for botanicals. DAT confirms final dose per project based on formulation constraints and target market.
Taste & sensory
Very bitter with a sulfurous, rotten-egg aroma. Requires aggressive taste-masking strategies — fruit-forward profiles (berry, citrus) and sweetener systems (stevia, monk fruit) are recommended. DAT reviews taste-masking options per project.
Manufacturing notes
Gummy-optimized dosing; check payload constraints. DAT reviews formulation feasibility per project.
Per-format formulation notes
Safe-baseline considerations for each format this ingredient is reviewed for. Final formulation, dose and on-pack copy are confirmed per project.
Gummies
- Taste masking and aroma load against the cooked-base flavour — confirmed per project.
- Heat exposure during cooking; coated or encapsulated forms may be required — confirmed per project.
- Matrix choice (pectin vs gelatin) and its effect on ingredient stability — confirmed per project.
- Per-gummy dose and serving count needed to hit the label claim — confirmed per project.
Sachets
- Powder flow and dose accuracy at single-serve sachet weights — confirmed per project.
- Barrier requirements (oxygen, moisture) for the active — confirmed per project.
- Reconstitution behaviour when the sachet is dosed into water — confirmed per project.
US structure-function statements
- Supports immune system functionStructure-function (DSHEA)
- Supports seasonal wellnessStructure-function (DSHEA)
Structure-function statements must appear with the FDA disclaimer in the same field of vision on the label. % Daily Value (DV) based on FDA 21 CFR 101.9.
Wording to avoid on pack copy
- No disease claims (diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease).
- Structure-function claims must be accompanied by the FDA disclaimer: 'These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.'
- No certification promises on pack until confirmed per project and batch documentation.
- No guaranteed shelf-life on pack until confirmed with stability data.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Structure-function claims are permitted under DSHEA (21 USC §343(r)(6)). No Daily Value (DV) has been established for Echinacea under FDA 21 CFR 101.9.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Studies & evidence
External peer-reviewed sources and regulatory opinions. Citations only — DAT does not endorse the publishers.
Barnes J, Anderson LA, Gibbons S, Phillipson JD·Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology·2005
Shah SA, Sander S, White CM, Rinaldi M, Coleman CI·The Lancet Infectious Diseases·2007
Karsch-Völk M, Barrett B, Kiefer D, Bauer R, Ardjomand-Woelkart K, Linde K·Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·2014
EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies (NDA)·EFSA Journal·2011
Percival SS·Nutrition Reviews·2000
Product concepts featuring Echinacea Extract
Private-label product concepts where Echinacea Extract appears in the formula. Each opens to a product brief and quote route.
Synergies & conflicts
Pairs well with
Pairs with Alpha Lipoic Acid (glutathione recycling), Selenium (glutathione peroxidase), Milk Thistle (liver support).
Care when combining with
EXTREMELY difficult taste profile. Mucolytic action can liquefy mucus (therapeutic but uncomfortable). Sulfur smell persistent.
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L-Arginine HCl
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L-Carnitine Tartrate
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L-Citrulline
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Adjacent reading
Pairings, resource guides and blog notes most often associated with Echinacea Extract on DAT Supply briefs.
Develop a formula featuring Echinacea Extract
A ready white-label formula exists — open a product brief, or talk to our team to align the launch plan.