Sābūr ibn Sahl (Arabic: سابور بن سهل; d. 869 CE) was a 9th-century Persian Christian physician from the Academy of Gundishapur.
Among other medical works, he wrote one of the first medical books on antidotes called Aqrabadhin, which was divided into 22 volumes, and which was possibly the earliest of its kind to influence Muslim medicine. This antidotary enjoyed much popularity until it was superseded Ibn al-Tilmidh's version later in the first half of twelfth century.