There is no such thing as a “good tea for the liver”. If you want to regulate the liver, you can take chrysanthemum tea, Yin Chen tea, wolfberry tea and so on, according to the evidence, and follow the doctor’s advice. But the dose of tea is limited, not as much as the medication decoction, it is recommended to follow the doctor’s instructions for medication. 1. Chrysanthemum, sweet, bitter, slightly cold. Attributed to the lung, liver meridian. It has the effect of dispersing wind and clearing heat, calming the liver and brightening the eyes, clearing heat and removing toxins (removing heat and toxins from the body). It is used for wind-heat and cold, headache and dizziness, redness and swelling of the eyes, dimming of the eyes, sores, carbuncles and poisons. Where Yang deficiency or headache and cold (fear of cold) are contraindicated. 2. Yin Chen, bitter, pungent flavor, slightly cold in nature. It belongs to spleen, stomach, liver and gallbladder meridians. It has the effect of clearing dampness and heat, relieving bile and jaundice (dredging the evil qi of the biliary tract and eliminating jaundice). It is used for jaundice with low urine output, dampness and temperature (warm disease caused by feeling dampness and heat), summer dampness, and itching of wet sores. 3. Lycium barbarum, sweet in flavor and flat in nature. Attributed to the liver, kidney meridian. It has the effect of nourishing the liver and kidney, benefiting the essence and brightening the eyes (tonifying the essence and promoting the recovery of eyesight). It is used for deficiency of essence, lumbar and knee pain, dizziness and tinnitus, impotence and spermatorrhea, internal heat and thirst (internal heat accompanied by symptoms such as eating more, drinking more and urinating more), blood deficiency and atrophy, and dimming of the eyes. Not to be taken if there is solid heat from external evils, dampness in the spleen and diarrhea.