Recognizes credentialed holistic health practitioners who integrate planetary herbalism within their practice — rooted in the systematic Culpeper tradition that has united botany, constitution, and celestial timing since 17th-century England.
This endorsement is not a standalone credential. It is earned on top of an active IBC credential (IBC-HHA™, IBC-HHP™, IBC-HHE™, or IBC-HHD™) and reflects deep additional expertise in the integration of Western clinical herbalism with the traditional medical astrology framework of the Culpeper tradition. Both the base credential and the endorsement appear together in your practitioner record.
Example shown for IBC-HHP™ level. Applies at all six sequential IBC tiers.
Planetary herbalism — the systematic assignment of herbs to celestial bodies for constitutional and therapeutic guidance — is not a modern New Age invention. It is a documented European medical tradition with roots in Greek humoral medicine, codified in the English language by Nicholas Culpeper in 1652. The Culpeper framework has been continuously practiced, taught, and refined by Western herbalists for four centuries.
The Hippocratic physicians laid the theoretical groundwork: health is governed by the balance of four humors (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, black bile), each associated with an element, a season, and a constitutional type. Celestial cycles — the movement of sun, moon, and planets — directly governed seasonal change and therefore humoral balance. Treatment, including herbal therapy, was calibrated to astrological and seasonal timing from the outset of Western medicine.
Pedanius Dioscorides, a Greek physician in the Roman army, systematically documented over 600 medicinal plants in De Materia Medica — the foundational Western pharmacopeia that remained the primary herbal reference in Europe for 1,500 years. Each plant's temperament (hot, cold, dry, moist in varying degrees) corresponded to humoral theory and planetary rulership in the astrological-medical framework that organized European healing for the next millennium.
Hildegard von Bingen's Physica and Causae et Curae represent the high medieval synthesis of Christian cosmology, humoral medicine, and botanical practice. Hildegard integrated planetary influences, constitutional types, and herbal remedy with theological frameworks — demonstrating the deep interpenetration of astrological timing and herbal healing in the European monastic medical tradition. Her work marks the continuation of the ancient synthesis through the Christian medieval period.
Nicholas Culpeper published The English Physician in 1652 — known today as Culpeper's Complete Herbal — a systematic planetary classification of English medicinal herbs that democratized access to herbal medicine. Culpeper, trained in Galenic medicine and astrology, assigned each herb a planetary ruler based on its elemental qualities, appearance (doctrine of signatures), and therapeutic actions. He translated previously Latin-only medical texts into English so working-class people could treat themselves without expensive physician fees. His herbal-astrological system remains the foundation of Western astrological herbalism practice today.
American Eclectic physicians (1825–1940s) maintained herbal traditions aligned with constitutional medicine, and physiomedical practitioners carried forward vitalist herbalism with constitutional typing rooted in the Culpeper-humoral lineage. Matthew Wood's revival of constitutional and organ-system herbalism in the late 20th century explicitly reconnected clinical Western herbalism to the planetary correspondence framework that Culpeper codified — establishing the tradition that current astrological herbalists draw upon.
The American Herbalists Guild (AHG), founded 1989, provides the primary US professional credentialing framework for clinical herbalism (RH designation). Astrological herbalism programs — specifically those working in the Culpeper and spagyric traditions — have grown substantially in the US, with practitioners like Sajah Popham (Evolutionary Herbalism / School of Evolutionary Herbalism) providing rigorous curriculum that explicitly bridges clinical Western herbalism with planetary correspondence theory. An estimated 500–1,500 US practitioners integrate medical astrology meaningfully within herbal wellness practice.
Culpeper organized every medicinal plant under the governance of one of the seven classical planets — Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn. Each planet governed specific organs, constitutional tendencies, and therapeutic actions. An herb ruled by Mars was used for Mars-type conditions; a Saturn herb addressed Saturn-governed structures. This system created a comprehensive constitutional and therapeutic correspondence map that could be cross-referenced with the client's natal chart to individualize herbal protocols.
Medical astrology is unregulated in all 50 US states. No license is required to practice or teach astrological interpretation for wellness purposes. Clinical herbalism operates in a patchwork legal environment: while no US state licenses "herbalists" as a standalone profession, herbs are regulated as dietary supplements under DSHEA, and practitioners must stay within wellness-education framing rather than medical diagnosis or prescription. ICONIC Board's endorsement establishes clear professional conduct standards within this legal landscape.
Herbal wellness recommendations — framed as dietary supplement education rather than medical diagnosis — have clear legal footing under DSHEA (Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act, 1994). Medical astrology as wellness-constitutional assessment sits in the same non-licensed category as flower essence therapy, gemstone therapy, and Tarot-based reflection practices. The combination of herbal and astrological frameworks for constitutional typing has direct parallels in TCM (Five Element constitutional typing), Ayurveda (dosha typing with Jyotish), and Unani medicine (humoral-astral medicine). ICONIC Board's endorsement recognizes this within-scope integration while requiring practitioners to maintain clear professional and client-communication boundaries consistent with holistic health practice standards.
Your endorsement tier corresponds to your current IBC credential tier. Select your tier below to view specific requirements.
Entry-level recognition for practitioners who have completed foundational training in both clinical herbalism and medical astrology and can demonstrate awareness of the Culpeper planetary herbalism framework. Focused on education, history, and safe wellness integration.
The primary endorsement tier — recognizes practitioners who actively integrate planetary herbalism within their holistic client work. Requires substantial herbalism training, documented client practice, and formal scope-of-practice acknowledgment.
For educators, trainers, and senior practitioners who teach or mentor others in the integration of herbalism and medical astrology. Requires extensive documented practice and an active contribution to the professional herbalism field.
For researchers, scholars, historians, and recognized leaders who contribute at the highest level to the academic and professional development of Western astrological herbalism — including the history, pharmacognosy, and clinical application of the Culpeper tradition.
ICONIC Board recognizes training programs in two tracks: clinical Western herbalism (core training requirement) and astrological herbalism in the Culpeper or related planetary traditions (specialty training requirement). Practitioners typically draw from both tracks to meet endorsement training requirements.
The most comprehensive US curriculum directly in the Culpeper tradition. The Vitalist Herbalism and Spagyrics curriculum explicitly bridges clinical Western herbalism, planetary correspondence theory, and medical astrology. "Evolutionary Herbalism" (2019, North Atlantic Books) is the field's key modern text.
Matthew Wood's constitutional herbalism curriculum explicitly integrates organ-system and constitutional typing rooted in the Galenic-Culpeper lineage. Wood is recognized as the leading 20th–21st century revivalist of traditional Western constitutional herbalism.
Spagyric and astrological herbalism curriculum drawing directly from Culpeper, Paracelsus, and Western alchemical-medical traditions. Covers planetary signatures, herb-planet correspondence, and practical spagyric preparation methods.
The primary US professional body for herbalists. AHG's Registered Herbalist (RH) credential requires minimum 1,600 hours of herbal training and practice. AHG-recognized programs and RH certification satisfy the core herbalism training requirement at the IBC-HHP™ endorsement tier.
Rigorous clinical Western herbalism programs with AHG alignment. Full practitioner training program covering materia medica, clinical assessment, constitutional typing, and therapeutic protocols. In-person and online options.
Extensive online and in-person herbalism curriculum covering Appalachian, European, and clinical Western traditions. Comprehensive materia medica and practical plant identification training. AHG-aligned program structure.
One of the oldest Western herbalism schools in the US, founded in the 1970s. Intensive plant-based learning with hands-on field and clinical experience. Practitioner program recognized within the AHG training landscape.
MS in Herbal Medicine and related programs. Academic-level herbalism training with clinical application. MUIH's herbal medicine faculty includes practitioners with AHG and NIMH affiliations. Degree-granting institution.
Naturopathic and integrative health programs with robust botanical medicine curriculum. Bastyr's botanical medicine training is among the most clinically rigorous in the US. Credit-bearing coursework accepted as foundational herbalism documentation.
Clinical herbalism intensives with emphasis on practical plant medicine, first aid, and constitutional assessment. 7Song is recognized as one of the leading clinical herbalism educators in the US, with AHG registration.
Rosemary Gladstar, widely considered the "godmother of American herbalism," offers foundational herbalism correspondence courses and intensive programs at Sage Mountain. Foundational training meets awareness-level requirements for IBC-HHA™ endorsement tier.
Structured online herbalism curriculum from foundational through advanced clinical tracks. Well-organized course documentation makes transcripts easy to provide. Foundational and intermediate programs satisfy awareness and beginning-practitioner training requirements.
Specialized curriculum in traditional Western medical astrology, including Culpeper's planetary herbalism, electional astrology for health, and the Galenic-astrological medical tradition. One of the few US programs teaching medical astrology in its historical European context.
Integrative curriculum bridging Western herbalism, medical astrology, and earth-based medicine. Covers planetary herb correspondences and seasonal therapeutic protocols informed by the Culpeper and Eclectic traditions.
Clinical herbalism curriculum in the Eclectic medical tradition with emphasis on evidence-based and constitutional practice. Paul Bergner's curriculum bridges the Eclectic-constitutional tradition with modern clinical competency standards.
The American Herbalists Guild (AHG), founded in 1989, is the primary professional credentialing body for herbalists in the United States. The AHG's Registered Herbalist designation — RH(AHG) — requires a minimum of 1,600 hours of combined herbal training and practice documentation, two professional references, and a peer-reviewed application process. The RH designation is the closest analog in the US herbalism profession to a formal credential with established competency standards.
ICONIC Board's Herbalism + Medical Astrology Integration Endorsement requires active AHG membership at the IBC-HHP™ tier and above — not necessarily full RH designation, but demonstrated professional engagement with the AHG community. AHG's recognition of any program's curriculum is weighted in ICONIC Board's training evaluation. The AHG does not specifically credential medical astrology as a specialty area; ICONIC Board's endorsement fills this gap by establishing formal recognition standards for practitioners who integrate the Culpeper tradition within their AHG-aligned clinical practice.
Note: ICONIC Board is an independent professional standards body. ICONIC Board endorsements are separate from AHG membership or the RH(AHG) designation. This section references AHG's professional framework as the primary US herbalism credentialing context with which this endorsement aligns.
Verify you hold an active IBC credential in good standing. Review the tier requirements above. Gather training documentation — program transcripts, letters of completion, and client case summaries as required for your tier. Confirm AHG membership status if applying at IBC-HHP™ or above.
Complete the ICONIC Board endorsement application. Attach all required documentation: herbalism training records, medical astrology training records, professional biography, signed Scope of Practice Agreement (Medical Astrology), professional references, and client case summaries as specified for your tier.
ICONIC Board's credentialing panel reviews your application. Additional information may be requested. Upon approval, your credential record is updated with the Herbalism + Medical Astrology Integration Endorsement designation. Your ICONIC Board digital credential displays both your base credential and your endorsement.
Active IBC credential required · 9 endorsement fee · Committee review in 10–14 business days
Apply for This EndorsementICONIC Board's Herbalism Pathway covers the foundational training requirements for clinical Western herbalism, Ayurvedic, and TCM herbal modalities. Relevant foundational pathway for practitioners building toward this endorsement.
View Herbalism Pathway →The Naturopathic Pathway includes Traditional Naturopathy tracks with strong botanical medicine emphasis. Practitioners with ND or traditional naturopathic training often hold relevant herbalism hours for this endorsement.
View Naturopathic Pathway →ICONIC Board's parallel endorsement for practitioners integrating Vedic astrology within Ayurvedic practice. Both endorsements share the planetary-correspondence constitutional model — the Vedic and European traditions that developed independently with striking structural parallels.
View Jyotish Endorsement →