Standing Unit
75 LEDs · 660 + 850 nm · adjustable stand
A hands-free panel on an adjustable floor stand, for the face and targeted body areas.
Red and near-infrared at 660 and 850 nanometres — the two wavelengths most of the research is built on. It's the same light at the heart of the costlier devices, too. We've kept ours simple, and priced it gently.
A note on value
With many high-end devices, a good part of what you pay goes to the name, the moulded design, and the retail markup. The light is a smaller piece of it. We've simply chosen to offer that piece on its own.
How red light therapy works
Red light therapy — researchers call it photobiomodulation — uses gentle red and near-infrared light rather than heat. The light is absorbed by the mitochondria inside your cells, where studies suggest it can support their everyday energy-making. It's a quiet, well-researched idea, and the honest picture is more measured than the marketing around it.
660 nm · visible red
Red light is absorbed in the upper layers of skin, where most of the research has focused — on collagen, tone, and the look of fine lines. It's the warm glow you can see.
850 nm · near-infrared
Near-infrared is invisible and travels further into the body, where studies have explored circulation and everyday muscle and joint recovery.
The honest part
The strongest evidence sits with skin, hair, and recovery; bolder claims are still thin. It's best treated as a gentle, supportive habit rather than a cure — and results differ from person to person.
Red light therapy doesn't use UV light and is generally considered safe. Even so, results vary, it's no substitute for medical care, and these devices aren't intended to diagnose or treat any condition. If you're pregnant, photosensitive, or taking light-sensitive medication, it's worth a quick word with your doctor first.
The lineup
660 nm + 850 nm on every device, with LED counts and dimensions published up front. Choose by where you'd like the light — your face, your scalp, or the whole body.
75 LEDs · 660 + 850 nm · adjustable stand
A hands-free panel on an adjustable floor stand, for the face and targeted body areas.
60 LEDs · 660 + 850 nm · black / grey
A wearable scalp cap you can put on and forget. Hands-free, sized for everyday use.
105 LEDs · 660 + 850 nm · 120 × 20 cm
A flexible wrap that straps around the waist or lower back for targeted recovery.
1,280 LEDs · 660 + 850 nm · 180 × 80 cm
A lie-on mat for full-body sessions, when you'd like coverage from head to toe.
2,520 LEDs · 660 + 850 nm · dual controllers
A full-body wrap with two controllers — the most coverage in the lineup.
Tell us what you'd like to support — skin, scalp, or full-body recovery — and we'll help you find the right fit.
Ask supportCalm, by design.
A gentle comparison
A fair, general comparison, offered without any fuss. Premium LED masks are beautiful, well-made things, and they work. We've simply chosen to focus on the light and pass the rest of the saving along.
| Typical premium LED mask | Arya's Glow | |
|---|---|---|
| Wavelengths | Often proprietary or a single shade | 660 nm + 850 nm, stated |
| Specs | Frequently undisclosed | LED count & size published |
| Coverage | Face only | Face, scalp, body & full-body |
| You pay for | The light, plus name, design & markup | The light |
| Typical price | $400–$700+ | From $171.99 |
A general comparison for context, not a comment on any specific product. Prices and features vary by brand, and red light therapy results vary too.
About Arya's Glow
I'm not a dermatologist. I'm someone who wanted to try red light therapy, saw the prices, and decided to understand what I'd actually be paying for before spending anything.
What I found was calmer than the marketing suggested: most of the research comes down to two wavelengths — red around 660 nm and near-infrared at 850 nm. The extra colours, the moulded shells, the famous faces — lovely things, but not the part that's been studied.
So I built a small shop around exactly that, and nothing I couldn't stand behind.
Every device here runs both wavelengths and lists the specs its maker publishes. I'd rather be honest and a little understated than sell you a feeling. If it helps you, it'll be the light doing the quiet work.
Using it gently
01 · The routine
Around ten minutes on clean, dry skin, a few times a week. Follow the guidance that comes with your device — gentle consistency tends to matter more than long sessions.
02 · The timeline
Studies generally look at steady use over a number of weeks. Give it patient, regular use rather than expecting an overnight change — and remember results vary.
03 · Staying comfortable
Red and near-infrared light are gentle and non-thermal. Keep it out of your eyes, pause if your skin feels irritated, and check with a doctor first if you're pregnant or photosensitive.
Questions
If yours isn't here, email welcome@aryasglow.com — it reaches a real person.
Cap for the scalp, belt for the waist or lower back, standing unit for the face and targeted areas, mat or blanket for full-body coverage. Not sure? Email welcome@aryasglow.com and we'll help you choose, gently and without any pressure.
Because those are the two with the most published research behind them: 660 nm red and 850 nm near-infrared. The extra colours on multi-LED gadgets look lovely, but they aren't the part the studies focus on. Every device here runs both, and we've kept the rest simple.
There's no celebrity licence, no moulded silicone design, and no department-store markup in the price. What's left is mainly the LEDs and the wavelengths — which is the part that does the work.
Honestly, it depends — results vary from person to person and aren't guaranteed. Research generally looks at steady use over a number of weeks, so give it regular, patient use rather than expecting an overnight change.
Most routines are around ten-minute sessions, a few times a week, on clean dry skin. Follow the instructions included with your device. Gentle consistency matters more than any single long session.
Red and near-infrared light are non-thermal and don't use UV. As with any light device, keep it out of your eyes, pause if irritation occurs, and check with a doctor first if you're pregnant, taking light-sensitive medication, or have a photosensitive condition. These devices are not medical equipment.
Shipping options, delivery times, and the return policy are shown at checkout and governed by the store policies. If anything's unclear, email welcome@aryasglow.com before you order.
An occasional, quiet note — new arrivals and the odd thing worth knowing about red light.