These Red Light Therapy Devices Aim to Improve Your Skin, Hair, and Body. But Are They Worth It?

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If you visited Dr. Joel Kahn’s Detroit home around nine p.m., he might answer the door wearing a red-light helmet. Kahn, a cardiologist practicing longevity medicine, is one of a growing number of people using such hair-growth-stimulating headgear and wears his every night before bed. “There’s pretty good data for it, and a lot of people are gravitating that way right now,” he says.

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Doctors have long used various forms of light to improve sleep disturbances, depression, and other conditions. But recent studies have focused on “a more specific wavelength, in the 600nm to 700nm range of red light, which is perhaps deeper than just the general white-light sort of [treatment],” says Dr. Samuel Lin, a Boston-based plastic surgeon and associate professor at Harvard Medical School. What those studies have discovered is that this light, applied correctly, can increase local blood flow while also supercharging the performance of mitochondria, our cells’ power plants. The result? Certain doses have been found to improve fine lines and wrinkles in skin, ease creaky knees, and speed up wound healing. One 2016 report even suggested that exposure to red light before lifting weights can help you build stronger muscles.

No surprise, then, that there has been an explosion of red-light-therapy devices using lasers and light-emitting diodes to purportedly improve the way we look, feel, and function. And while the best models are built on legitimate science—and come with reassuring FDA clearances—every physician who spoke with Robb Report for this story cautioned that they’re best used to enhance the effects of good lifestyle choices, not replace them. “My 70-plus-year-old mother, who looks amazing, is not going to turn her skin back to how she looked when she was 20 with one of these devices,” says Dr. Morgan Rabach, a dermatologist in N.Y.C. “But I think it’s a good additive treatment to all the other things that we know help the skin look healthy.”

One caveat: “You have to be very consistent with these devices,” says Dr. Ross Kopelman, a hair-transplant specialist who splits time between New York and Palm Beach. To see results, “once you start, you can’t stop.” Here, a guide to the most cutting-edge examples on the market.

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Mito Red Light Commercial Premiere

Mito Red Light Commercial Premiere
Mito Red Light Commercial Premiere

This six-foot two-inch panel uses over 1,150 LEDs to bathe you in red and near-infrared light from head to toe, making it a good option if you prefer one device to many. It’s even programmed to beep halfway through its 14-minute sessions—a reminder to turn around and toast your other side.

Buy Now on Pro RLT:

Price: $6,499

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iRestore Elite

iRestore Elite
iRestore Elite

More doesn’t always equal better, but this hair-growth helmet boasts 500 lasers and light-emitting diodes and achieves the highest power output of any at-home cap on the market. A 2017 clinical study of iRestore’s tech found that after four months of daily use, both men and women had over 40 percent more new hair.

Buy Now on iRestore:

Price: $2,499

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CurrentBody Neck and Dec Perfector

CurrentBody Neck and Dec Perfector
CurrentBody Neck and Dec Perfector

The skin on our necks and upper chests tends to be thinner than around other areas of the body, so it develops wrinkles more easily. This device uses both red and infrared light to stimulate collagen growth, which lifts those lines, while its pillowy silicone material makes it comfortable to wear.

Buy Now on CurrentBody:

Price: $339

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Déesse Pro

Déesse Pro
Déesse Pro

With its shiny, hard-shell plastic, Déesse’s new Pro mask looks like something you might be handed at the start of an immersive theater production. But with modes for anti-aging red light, acne-killing blue light, hyperpigmentation-fading green light, and healing infrared light, it’s more like a kaleidoscope of rejuvenating energies.

Buy Now on Deesee Pro:

Price: $1,700

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Omnilux Contour Glove

Omnilux Contour Glove
Omnilux Contour Glove

Most people don’t put enough sunscreen on the backs of their hands, which is one reason the skin there tends to age faster than anywhere else. But consider the cosmetic effects to be a bonus: In addition to treating sunspots and wrinkles, this glove can also help with stiffness and joint pain.

Buy Now on Omnilux:

Price: $335

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Kineon Move+ Pro

Kineon Move+ Pro
Kineon Move+ Pro

Each of this wearable’s peanut-shaped modules is fitted with eight deep-red lights and 10 lasers; combined, they’re meant to decrease chronic inflammation wherever you aim them over two weeks. The device is great for people with bad knees, but an optional extender strap allows you to use it on your lower back and shoulders, too.

Buy Now on Kineon:

Price: $699

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