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Mugwort: Korea's hanbang heritage ingredient

Quick answer: Mugwort (쑥, ssuk) is a hanbang botanical Korea has used in traditional skincare for generations. Modern K-beauty features mugwort extract in toners, essences, and masks positioned to help calm the look of irritated, reactive skin and support a comfortable barrier. Claims are soothing and comforting in nature, not medical.

Mugwort (Artemisia) has a long history in Korean folk and traditional medicine, used in herbal baths, steaming, and the warming practice of moxibustion, and it appears in classic hanbang texts. It is a familiar everyday botanical in Korean households and cuisine as well.

🗣️ Mugwort — Hangul 쑥, romanized ssuk, say "SSOOK".

In modern K-beauty

Modern K-beauty features mugwort extract in toners, essences, and masks positioned to help calm the look of irritated, reactive skin and support a comfortable barrier. Claims are soothing and comforting in nature, not medical.

Associated with the look of

rednesssensitivityacne

Korean brands that feature it

I'm From · Round Lab · Missha

Related K-beauty guides

🍵 Mugwort (Artemisia)

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🙋 People also ask

What is hanbang Korean skincare?

Hanbang refers to Korean skincare rooted in traditional herbal medicine, using botanicals like ginseng, mugwort and licorice. These ingredients appear in premium and heritage Korean lines, especially anti-ageing products, blending old herbal traditions with modern cosmetic formulation.

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What is mugwort used for in skincare?

Mugwort, called ssuk in Korean, is a traditional botanical used in K-beauty to calm the look of irritated, reactive or breakout-prone skin. It appears in soothing toners, essences and masks and is often paired with centella or panthenol for sensitive skin care.

Read the full answer →

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✍️ Written & reviewed by the KoreaPlus Editorial team — dermatologist-informed, cosmetic-science researched & source-cited. Last reviewed 2026-06-21.

General educational information using cosmetic structure-function wording — not medical advice. Always patch-test new actives. © KoreaPlus.