Building Your Home Apothecary: A Simple and Practical Guide
- Ann Denison
- May 6
- 5 min read

When people first become interested in herbalism, one of the most common thoughts is:
“I don’t have what I need to get started.”
It’s easy to imagine a home apothecary as something that requires shelves full of jars, specialty equipment, and dozens of herbs neatly labeled and organized. While that may come with time, it’s not where you need to begin.
In fact, one of the most important things to understand is this:
You can build a meaningful, functional home apothecary with very little.
Herbalism has always been rooted in simplicity. For generations, people worked with what they had on hand — a few plants, basic tools, and a willingness to learn through experience.
Your apothecary can begin the same way.
Start With What You Already Have
Before buying anything new, take a look around your home.
You likely already have many of the tools you need:
Glass jars from your kitchen can be used for storing dried herbs or making infused oils. Small bottles — even repurposed ones — can hold finished preparations. Tins or containers can be used for salves and balms.
There is no need for everything to match or look a certain way. Function matters more than appearance.
When I first started, I didn’t have a dedicated herbal space. I used a small rolling cabinet that I could move into the kitchen when I needed it. Inside, I kept my herbs, oils, alcohol, and a few basic tools.
It wasn’t elaborate, but it worked.
And that’s what matters.
Herbalism grows with you. Your space will evolve over time, but it doesn’t need to be perfect to be useful.
Creating a Space That Works for You
Your home apothecary doesn’t need to take up an entire room.
It can be:
A shelf in your kitchen
A cabinet in a pantry
A small drawer or storage box
A rolling cart that moves where you need it
The goal is simply to have a place where your materials are kept together and easy to access.
As you begin working with herbs more regularly, having a dedicated space — even a small one — helps build consistency. When everything is in one place, it becomes easier to follow through on making teas, oils, or simple remedies.
Over time, you may choose to expand or reorganize, but in the beginning, simplicity makes the process more approachable.
You Don’t Need Dozens of Herbs
Another common misconception is that you need a large collection of herbs to build an apothecary.
In reality, you only need a few.
Starting with five or six well-chosen herbs allows you to learn deeply instead of feeling scattered. These herbs can be used in multiple ways, giving you the opportunity to practice different preparations while working with familiar plants.
For many beginners, this might include herbs like:
Calendula
Plantain
Nettle
Chamomile
Dandelion
Each of these can be used for teas, infused oils, or simple salves, making them incredibly versatile.
When you limit the number of herbs you’re working with, you begin to understand them more fully — how they smell, how they feel, how they respond in different preparations.
This is where real confidence begins.
Simple Ingredients You Likely Already Have
Along with your herbs, you only need a few additional ingredients to begin making basic remedies.
A good-quality oil, such as olive oil, works well for infused oils and salves. Many people already have this in their kitchen. You can learn more about oils here.
Alcohol, such as vodka, can be used for tinctures. Again, this is often something you may already have on hand.
And beeswax is one simple addition that allows you to turn infused oils into salves and balms.
With just these few ingredients — herbs, oil, alcohol, and beeswax — you can begin creating a wide variety of herbal preparations.
You don’t need specialty supplies or expensive products to get started.
Learning Through Simple Preparations
Once you have your basic materials, the next step is to begin using them.
You might start with something as simple as:
Making a cup of herbal tea
Infusing an oil
Creating a small batch of salve
Each of these builds on the last.
An infused oil can later become a salve. A dried herb can be used for tea or tincture. The same plant can be explored in multiple ways, deepening your understanding with each step.
This approach keeps herbalism from feeling overwhelming.
Instead of trying to learn everything at once, you are working with what you have, one preparation at a time.
Organization Comes Later
It’s easy to feel pressure to have everything labeled identically, arranged, and visually “perfect” right from the beginning.
But organization is something that develops over time.
At first, your focus should simply be on:
Knowing what you have and labeled
Keeping it clean and dry
Storing it in a way that makes sense to you
Labels can be as simple as a piece of tape and a pen. Containers don’t need to match. Shelving doesn’t need to be permanent.
As your collection grows, you’ll naturally begin to refine your system.
What matters most is that your apothecary is functional — that it supports your learning and encourages you to keep practicing.
Let Your Apothecary Grow With You
A home apothecary is not something you build all at once.
It develops gradually, shaped by your experiences, your interests, and the plants you choose to work with.
You might add one new herb at a time. Try a new preparation. Replace a container with something that works better.
Each small addition reflects something you’ve learned.
Over time, what began as a few jars and simple ingredients becomes a collection of knowledge, practice, and confidence.
A More Grounded Way to Learn Herbalism
Building your home apothecary in this way — slowly, simply, and intentionally — creates a strong foundation.
It keeps herbalism approachable and rooted in real experience rather than overwhelm.
If you’ve ever felt like you needed more supplies, more knowledge, or more time before beginning, consider this your reminder:
You can start with what you have.
A few jars. A handful of herbs. A bottle of oil. A small space in your home.
That’s enough.
A Seasonal Way to Build Your Apothecary
If you enjoy the idea of building your apothecary one herb at a time, working with the seasons can make the process feel even more natural.
Inside The Herbal Schoolhouse, we take this approach each month — focusing on one herb and learning how to identify it, prepare it, and incorporate it into simple, practical remedies.
With each box, your apothecary grows in a way that feels manageable and meaningful.
Instead of collecting random supplies, you’re building a collection of herbs and skills that you understand and use.
And over time, that small, simple beginning becomes something much more.




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