• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Deep Roots at Home
  • Home
  • About
  • Podcast
  • Shop
  • Blog
    • Alternative Medicine
    • Babies & Pregnancy
    • Beauty
    • Books & Booklists
    • Brain & Gut Health
    • Children At Home
    • COVID-19
    • Detoxing & TRS
    • DIY & Crafts
    • Education & Homeschool
    • Faith & Family
    • Feel-Good Stories
    • Flourishing Marriage
    • Flourishing Womanhood
    • Food & Recipes
    • Food Additives
    • Garden & Homestead
    • Healthy Living
    • Herbs & Remedies
    • Holidays
    • Homemaking
    • My Favorite Products
    • News & Alerts
    • Parental Rights
    • Pharma & Vaccines
    • Play, Toys, & Movies
    • Raising Daughters
    • Raising Sons

Raspberry Leaf In Pregnancy For Morning Sickness & Ease of Labor

23.6KViews Modified: Jan 31, 2026 · Published: Jan 19, 2019
By Jacqueline 21 Comments

3.6K shares
  • 3.2K

mother's tea: red raspberry leaf tea

Talk to almost any doula, midwife, or old hippie mama (like me) and you’re pretty much guaranteed to hear about the importance of drinking raspberry leaf (RL) tea for pregnancy.

[Note: adding lots of crushed red raspberries gives the pretty red color above. RL herb alone is the color of normal green tea.]

Treasured Old Books
Print this booklist before going to the library!

Without added raspberries it will look like normal tea:

A lot of people say that raspberry leaf tea is strengthening from the second trimester through pregnancy to have an easier and less painful labor, and others say that it is wonderful all along.

Many Attributes of Red Raspberry Leaf

First off, there are many wonderful things to be said for Raspberry Leaf (RL), my favorite herb (alongside dandelion and elderberry). According to Susan Weed’s ‘Wise Woman Herbal for the Childbearing Years’ (in it’s 24th printing), the benefits of drinking raspberry leaf tea before and throughout pregnancy (and after) include:

• Easing of morning sickness. Many attest to RRL’s gentle relief of nausea and stomach distress throughout pregnancy.

• Preventing miscarriage and hemorrhage. RRL tones the uterus and helps prevent miscarriage and postpartum hemorrhage from a relaxed or atonic uterus.

• Reducing pain during labor and after birth. By toning the muscles used during labor and delivery, RRL eliminates many of the reasons for a painful delivery and prolonged recovery. It does not, however, counter the pain of pelvic dilation.

• Assisting in the production of plentiful breast milk. The high mineral content of RRL assists in milk production.

• Providing a safe and speedy parturition. RRL works to encourage the uterus to let go and function without tension. It does not strengthen contractions, but does allow the contracting uterus to work more effectively and so may make the birth easier and faster.

• Increasing fertility in both men and women. RRL is an excellent fertility herb when combined with Red Clover.

• This study on a group of mothers indicates that RRLT helps shorten labor and results in fewer medical interventions, including cesarean.

• In this study, RRL in the capsule form helped to shorten second stage of labor (marginally) and reduced the need for forceps delivery.

Can raspberry leaf ease childbirth & when do you start drinking it?

First recorded in the 1500’s, raspberry leaf tea has been used for centuries in Europe, China, and both North and South America. This popular tea has earned the reputation of “herb-supreme” among pregnant women. According to folklore it can relieve almost any discomfort of pregnancy from morning sickness to leg cramps. And there may be good reason for its reputation.

Raspberry Leaf Tea contains a variety of components -most of which have yet to be identified- that produce a direct effect on the pregnant uterus. They have been shown to strengthen the uterine wall, relax smooth muscle, and help to make delivery easier and speedier by helping the uterus contract more efficiently.

Historically women have taken raspberry leaf tea throughout their pregnancies up to and including childbirth. Many mothers extol this herb’s ability to make childbirth easier and less painful. In a letter to the editor of the medical journal The Lancet, Dr. Violet Russel wrote “I have encouraged expectant mothers to drink this infusion. In a great many cases labour has been free and easy from muscular spasm.”

Some women also drink the tea throughout their labor, or suck on frozen cubes made red raspberry leaf tea. In many cases it is known to help expel the placenta, and its nutritional value is thought to be responsible for encouraging and enriching the mother’s breast milk. Many women continue to drink the tea long after childbirth as it is thought to help restore the reproductive system and continue to help nourish the new mother.

Did you know?? Some medical and popular media make reference to red raspberry leaf tea as something to avoid during pregnancy for risk of miscarriage. This notion stems from a single study conducted in 1954 where fractions were isolated from Rubus sp. and applied in vitro to the uterine tissues of guinea pigs and frogs. The scientists discovered such things as one fraction relieved spasms whereas another caused mild contractions. Herein lies the risk of isolating the parts of a whole. When used as a whole plant, neither action is excessive and the herb is deemed safe.

If a mother is prone to miscarriages she may feel safer avoiding raspberry until the third trimester. This is a herb with centuries of safe use behind it, there is usually little cause for concern. The key is to watch how YOUR body responds and adjust accordingly.

Raspberry Leaf For Morning Sickness:

Drink one to two cups of Raspberry leaf tea per day for morning sickness. 

Sipping slowly through the day, is incredibly helpful and healthful. 

Take raspberry leaf according to the package directions. This company and product gets highest marks in reviews on Amazon by the thousands. The tea does NOT taste like raspberries. It tastes more like a black tea. I sweeten with my own Sweet Water when I use a tea bag.

TM Raspberry leaf tea

Directions for second trimester thru labor:

To be more economical, change to a bulk loose leaf, organic red raspberry for your tea at this time.

If you want it sweet with no sugar or chemical additives, we like to brew it along with dried green stevia leaves (steeping unlocks the natural super-sweetness of stevia leaves). (Embedded near the end this post is how I make my own Sweet Water)!

Keep a gallon container of the prepared Raspberry leaf tea in the refrigerator so that you don’t need to brew it by the cup.

How to make a gallon of raspberry leaf:

• Use 3/4 – 1 cup of RL herb per gallon of boiling water.

• Add 1 rounded tsp. of dried stevia leaves  for sweetener

• Pour it all into a gallon glass jar, cover it, and leave it overnight to get stronger.

• Strain it in the morning and drink it over several days.

• Remake

The Complete Historical Writings of Dr. John R. Christopher on Raspberry Leaf 

Elderberry Syrup Recipes
Get your printable elderberry syrup recipes!

 “A tea made from Red Raspberry leaves is the best gift God ever gave to women. Its utility in travail is surprising. As a drink before and after confinement, it is unequaled by any other agent. If the pains of childbirth are premature, it will make all quiet. When timely, it will occasion a safe and easy parturition. If the mother is weak, it will abundantly strengthen her, cleanse her and enrich her milk. It is perfectly safe under all circumstances.” ~Renowned Quaker herbalist, Henry Box

References:

Rosemary Gladstar, Herbal Healing for Women 
Susun S. Weed, Wise Woman Herbal for the Childbearing Year 
Aviva Jill Romm, The Natural Pregnancy Book: Herbs, Nutrition, and Other Holistic Choices

“He will protect His flock like a shepherd, He will gather the lambs in His arm, He will carry them in His bosom; He will gently and carefully lead those nursing their young.” ~Isaiah 40:11, Amplified

****For the Full Spike Protein Protocol to protect from transmission from the “V” and to help those who took the “V”, go here.

***If you found value in this writing, please share it, discuss it, and subscribe to my FREE newsletter. Independent, totally ad-free work like this spreads because of readers like you.

Also, please consider supporting my work by using my Amazon affiliate link when purchasing from there.

Help For Kids' ADHD, Dyspraxia, or Dyslexia Without Drugs? Yes!, printable or PDF

Censorship is real, so my Pinterest account was suspended; thankfully, a big part of my main board is still alive through this link!

You can also find me on Facebook, Gab, MeWe, X (Twitter), and Instagram.

Medical Disclaimer: I am no longer a practicing medical professional, and I am not doctor. I am a mother. Nothing I say on this blog is intended to treat or prevent disease. Consult your own doctor.

Raspberry Leaf In Pregnancy For Morning Sickness, Ease of Labor & More. A pretty glass of red raspberry leaf tea

©2026 Deep Roots at Home • All Rights Reserved

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
« Adjust a Baby? Certainly! The Many Ways Chiropractic Can Help a Child
Totally Satisfying, Gluten-Free, Almond Flour Fudge Brownies »
3.6K shares
  • 3.2K

Related

Hi! I’m Jacqueline!

Thanks for being part of this journey with me.
Welcome to my own little place on the internet! Home is where I love to be. I feel there is no greater place to incubate souls. These days you’ll find me using my experiences here to write about herbal remedies and natural health research — a big passion of mine. But being a wife and mother is not easy. It is challenging and potentially lonely. I get that. I wanted to create a place to connect with and support other moms for creating a natural, healthy, and fulfilling home life.
Join the newsletter:

Sent in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

Get new posts texted directly to your phone:

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. M.

    June 20, 2014 at 9:04 am

    Jacqueline, thank you so very much for this information. I find that in our culture we can be so easily scared away from natural approaches to health because we focus on ONE study that isolated ONE component of a plant. Personally, I would fear more chemical cocktails (READ: some pharmaceuticals) more than a plant that has helped women in ages past. The information presented here is just that–information, with which the reader can make her own choice. God bless you for the thoroughness of this topic and have a lovely weekend. Pax, M.

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      June 20, 2014 at 9:39 am

      Well, you said it better in several sentences, than I did in the whole article! Great summation 🙂 Thanks and blessings, M~

      Reply
      • M.

        June 20, 2014 at 11:45 am

        Jacqueline, may I kindly ask you to contact me privately? Thank you and God bless.

        Pax,

        M.

        Reply
        • Jacqueline

          June 20, 2014 at 9:53 pm

          Absolutely! I’ll see what I can do 🙂

          Reply
    • Jacqueline

      June 20, 2014 at 9:54 pm

      I did it! So glad I could help, new friend!

      Reply
  2. Toni

    June 20, 2014 at 12:53 pm

    We have raspberries this year! We always have canes, but we almost never have fruit to set on so I’m wondering if the unusually cold winter was a factor in that somehow. (I know those bitter temperatures sure killed most of my blackberries, but new canes are coming up, now. I think I’ll try the raspberry tea. It looks delicious in the photo (in the pitcher).
    Hope you and your family have a wonderful weekend!

    Reply
  3. Annie Kate

    June 20, 2014 at 8:04 pm

    Yes, when I was pregnant I did not dare take a lot of it because of the warnings. I think this informative post will benefit many moms.

    RRL works for menstrual cramps, too, and we’ve given away bags full for that purpose. For a while we were even drying it for people.

    Since it has so much calcium and magnesium, it must be good for everyone. Do you have any information about what effects it has for non-pregnant people?

    Reply
  4. Franchesca

    June 20, 2014 at 9:00 pm

    This is such good info. I’ve heard of RRL tea but never knew it could help so much. I’ll definitely be sharing this with my SIL who just had her baby 🙂

    Reply
  5. Tracy Hasty

    June 20, 2014 at 11:05 pm

    Wonderful post my friend. Thank you!

    Reply
  6. Bernadyn @ B is For...

    June 21, 2014 at 4:24 pm

    I didn’t know about all these benefits for red raspberry tea, very interesting and good to know. Thanks for sharing it and happy weekend. 🙂

    Reply
  7. Erin

    July 08, 2014 at 7:30 am

    I avoided it during pregnancy as I believed the misinformation about miscarriage. Morning sickness gets me every time, it is one of the reasons the plus sign on that little stick brought a wave of anxiety rather than immediate joy yesterday. My schedule is full and I can’t be incapacitated with morning sickness so am eager to see if the tea helps with that.

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      July 08, 2014 at 10:44 am

      Erin – Yay! Congratulations 🙂 I hope it works for you as it has for my local friends and millions through time…just as a beverage several small glasses sipped through the morning and early afternoon. I am praying for you right now! God bless this precious time, sweet friend 😀

      Reply
  8. Naomi M

    July 08, 2014 at 8:38 pm

    I read this right before delivering #4 and remembered reading some of this before #3 was born. When I started having signs of early/pre labor, I made a strong quart of RRL tea. I had a few contractions here and there and by the time we made it to the hospital, everything seemed to have fizzled out. We were an hour from home, so opted to spend the rest of the night in a hotel down the street. I was able to get some rest and woke up with strong contractions. 2 1/2 hours after checking in, I was heading back to the hospital (2-3 mins away) and he was born within 10 minutes after arriving there. My shortest labor yet, and I do believe the RRL tea helped a lot to make effective contractions.

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      July 08, 2014 at 9:35 pm

      Congratulations on your new little one!! Naomi, it is exciting to hear different Mamas stories! What a great testimony to the powers of RRL tea to shorten labor. I am thankful it was helpful to you. Thank you for sharing it here 🙂

      Reply
  9. Alli

    June 06, 2015 at 2:16 pm

    Great article with great resources! Thank you so much for the info! Brewing up a gallon right now 🙂

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      June 07, 2015 at 11:27 am

      Awesome, Alli!

      Reply
  10. Cammy

    November 22, 2015 at 12:16 am

    What about using it for helping with a missed miscarriage to avoid D&C? That’s the use I’m trying to research

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      November 24, 2015 at 2:02 pm

      Sorry, I missed your question, Cammy! I did find this: http://gimmebliss.blogspot.com/2013/11/my-experience-with-red-raspberry-leaf.html
      I am praying for you today, dear one. I am sorry for your loss.

      Reply
  11. Nell

    August 03, 2016 at 11:15 pm

    Is Red Raspberry tea safe in early pregnancy?
    Could the tea also cause cramping after a miscarriage?

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      August 04, 2016 at 4:31 pm

      Nell, I cannot say how each person will respond. But from my post you may get an idea of what others have done for a very long time. Really all I know about it is in the post. One thought is that after miscarriage, once the baby is out, the body wants to expel all the rest of the tissue and RRL tea would be helpful to tone the uterus back to its pre-pregnancy state so there may be some mild cramping as it works to expel the last bits of tissue. I am so sorry if you had a miscarriage. 🙁
      I wish I could advise. I will say I have used it throughout all pregnancy.

      Reply
  12. Katie

    October 17, 2023 at 10:04 pm

    This is a great post. Thank you.

    Rachel Weaver has a story in one of her books (Be Your Own Doctor, I think) about a lady who feeds a little red raspberry leaf daily to each of her nanny goats. It was expensive to buy the amount she needed for that many goats, but the increase in fertility and milk quality/quantity more than made up for it. Her goats had twins more often and their milk was very high quality. So – it’s good for the livestock, too!

    Katie

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

About Deep Roots at Home

What is Deep Roots at Home?
Jacqueline’s Story
Article Archives
Contact
Stay Updated

Weekly updates on the topics that matter the most to you!

Sent in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

Get Phone Texting Updates

Popular Posts This Week
  • Dr. Bryan Ardis: Reversing Just About Any Disease with Nicotine
  • 764: The Internet’s Most Disturbing Cult: Every Parent’s Nightmare
  • No Additive Kool-Aid Recipe: Kid-Approved, Happy Mom!
  • Joe Tippins’s Fenbendazole Protocol For Cancer

Affiliate Disclosure  •  Medical Disclosure  •  Privacy Policy  •  Cookie Policy

The information on this website has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any disease. By accessing or using this website, you agree to abide by the Terms of Service, Full Disclaimer, Privacy Policy, Affiliate Disclosure, and Comment Policy. Content may not be reproduced in any form. Website by Imperative Co.


© 2006–2026 Deep Roots at Home • All Rights Reserved

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}

Get New Posts Texted Directly to Your Phone!

Get New Posts Texted Directly to Your Phone!

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “5 Easy + Healthy Lifestyle Drinks” printable PDF.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “5 Easy, Homemade Remedies to Beat Coughs & Colds” printable PDF.

Subscribe to Email Updates

By adding your email address below, you agree to receive email updates from Deep Roots at Home. You’ll get 2-6 emails per month with info that we can’t share on social media and important updates. We may send occasional marketing / sales emails.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Treasured Old Books” printable guide.

Praying for newlyweds is perhaps the best gift we can give them! Receive this printable PDF: “31 Days of Praying Scripture for Newlyweds.” 

Prayers for Husbands

View our privacy policy.

The PDF will arrive in your inbox! You’ll also get about 1-2 emails a month (including the seasonal freebies!) and can unsubscribe at any time.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “31 Days of Praying Scripture for Newlyweds” printable guide.

Get your free ebook!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Vital Vaccine Info” printable e-book.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Make Your Own Elderberry Syrup — with Easy Recipes!” printable PDF.

¡Nos gustaría mantener en contacto! Y usted recibirá un obsequio importante de la temporada: “Cerebros Ambrientes y Escasa Atención En Los Niños” PDF imprimible.

Spanish Boys Attention Spans

Ver nuestra política de privacidad.


¡El PDF llegará a su buzón de entrada! ¡Usted recibirá 1 – 2 correos electrónicos al mes (incluyendo los regalos de temporada!) y puede cancelar su suscripción en cualquier momento. 

Get the freebie of the season!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “100 Wholehearted Books to Take Back the Culture” printable guide.

Get the printable ebook!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Dyslexia Tips” ebook from Sarah J. Brown.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Starving Brains & Poor Attention Spans in Boys: 30 Tips for Parents” printable PDF.