Our Verdict
Therabody threw hardware and clinical money at this category to take market share. The largest published consumer LED mask clinical study to date (104 participants, 12 weeks) and 648 total LEDs in a tri-wick architecture (red 630nm + NIR 830nm + blue 415nm). FDA-cleared Class II medical device with integrated vibration massage. The catches: the clinical study is in-house and not peer-reviewed, the device is heavy at 576g and multiple testers report neck strain during longer sessions, and at $599 the value case is weak vs HigherDose at $349 with honest irradiance disclosure.
Evident Ratings
Therabody Therabody TheraFace Mask
Scored across 5 dimensions on a 5-point scale
About Therabody
Therabody entered the LED mask category the same way they entered massage guns — with more hardware than anyone else and a big marketing budget. The 648-light tri-wick architecture is impressive on paper. But the clinical study was in-house rather than peer-reviewed, and Therabody has not published a clean irradiance figure in mW/cm² the way HigherDose and Omnilux have.
See how Therabody stacks up against every red light face masks we tested
Our full red light face masks comparison ranks every brand across the same scoring dimensions you saw above — formulation, testing, trust, value, and sourcing.
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