Best overall
Omnilux Contour Face
Deepest published evidence, flexible silicone fit, the medical-grade benchmark at $595.
GLOW Standard · Devices · LED
Five medical-grade LED face masks tested across six weeks against wavelength spec, irradiance, fit, comfort and published evidence. Omnilux holds the top of the index. The premium tier earned its $595.
The verdict · Omnilux Contour Face at $595 #1 (9.3/10) · CurrentBody Series 2 premium runner-up · Dr Dennis Gross dermatologist pick · 5 masks · average 8.70/10 · Read the Omnilux vs CurrentBody head-to-head →
The picks · June 2026
Ranked by GLOW Score, descending. Six-week panel against the published evidence, wavelength spec, irradiance, fit, comfort and treatment time. Each card links to the full review; retailer links go through our /out/ wrapper.

Omnilux
Best overall · Evidence-led benchmark
Omnilux is the medical-grade flexible silicone LED mask with the deepest body of published clinical evidence in the category. Red 633nm plus near-infrared 830nm, 10-minute hands-free sessions. The mask the Devices desk re-recommends.

CurrentBody
Best premium tier · Broadest LED coverage
The wider-coverage premium pick: 236 LEDs against the original's 132, red 633nm plus near-infrared 830nm, the closest jaw-line fit on the panel. Sits at AU$595 head-to-head with Omnilux. The pick when LED density matters.

Dr Dennis Gross
Best dermatologist-developed · Blue + red spec
The rigid mask from the New York skin clinic that built the dermatologist-developed device category. Red 633nm plus blue 415nm, the only top-three pick with a blue-light spec for acne-prone skin. The pick when both axes matter.
The Skin Boutique
Best AU mid-tier · Sub-$300 entry
The Australian mid-tier pick. Red, near-infrared and blue at AU$299, the only sub-$300 mask the Standard cleared this cycle. Hard shell, fewer LEDs than the premium tier, but a credible first device for a first-time buyer.
Solawave
Best handheld · Budget targeted treatment
Not strictly a mask but the adjacent device. Handheld LED plus microcurrent plus therapeutic warmth plus facial massage at AU$220. The pick for a reader who wants targeted forehead or jaw treatment without committing to a full-face device.
Best for · By concern
Best overall
Omnilux Contour Face
Deepest published evidence, flexible silicone fit, the medical-grade benchmark at $595.
Best for acne
Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite
The only top-three mask with a blue-light spec at 415nm, plus red 633nm for the inflammatory axis.
Best for anti-ageing
Omnilux Contour Face
Red 633nm plus near-infrared 830nm, the wavelengths studied for fibroblast and collagen response.
Best for redness
CurrentBody Skin Series 2
236-LED density and the broadest jaw coverage in the field for diffuse redness response.
Best for pigmentation
Omnilux Contour Face
Near-infrared at 830nm reaches the dermal layer where post-inflammatory pigment activity sits.
Best budget
The Skin Boutique LED Mask
The only sub-$300 mask the Standard cleared. Red, near-infrared and blue at $299.
Best luxury
Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite
$650 dermatologist-developed device with the deepest brand authority in clinical skincare.
Best handheld
Solawave 4-in-1 Wand
Targeted forehead or jaw at $220, the pick when you don't want a full-face commitment.
Best fit
Omnilux Contour Face
Flexible silicone moulds to face shapes the rigid Dr Dennis Gross frame can't reach.
The ranking · At a glance
| Rank | Product | Wavelengths | Best for | Price | GLOW Score | Session |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Omnilux Contour FaceOmnilux · Flexible silicone | Red 633nm · NIR 830nm | Best overall · Evidence-led benchmark | AU$595Omnilux AU | 9.3 / 10 | 10 min · 3–5x/wk |
| 02 | CurrentBody Skin LED Mask Series 2CurrentBody · Flexible silicone | Red 633nm · NIR 830nm | Best premium · 236 LED count | AU$595CurrentBody AU | 9.1 / 10 | 10 min · 3–5x/wk |
| 03 | Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite FaceWare ProDr Dennis Gross · Rigid shell | Red 633nm · Blue 415nm | Best dermatologist-developed | AU$650MECCA | 8.8 / 10 | 3 min red + 1 min blue · Daily |
| 04 | The Skin Boutique LED MaskThe Skin Boutique · Hard shell | Red, NIR, Blue panel | Best AU mid-tier | AU$299Skin Boutique | 8.5 / 10 | 15 min · 3–4x/wk |
| 05 | Solawave 4-in-1 Radiant Renewal WandSolawave · Handheld | Red 630nm + microcurrent | Best handheld · Budget targeted | AU$220Solawave AU | 7.8 / 10 | 5 min/zone · Daily |
The method · In five axes
Every Glow device ranking runs the same five-axis rubric. Weights are published. The Standard, edition .
GLOW Standard scores every LED face mask against five axes, spec (30%), fit (20%), evidence (20%), comfort (15%), value (15%). Spec is wavelength accuracy plus measured irradiance plus LED count. Fit covers face-shape coverage on a five-tone panel. Evidence weights the published trial body cited by the manufacturer, ranked by sample size and rigour.
Comfort is treatment-time tolerability and head-strap pressure across a six-week wear period. Value is per-treatment cost amortised over a 36-month device life, modelled against the depth of result the panel reported at week six. Spec carries the most weight because a mask with the wrong wavelength runs the wrong mechanism, LED output is the thing the device is for.
Full method at GLOW Standard. PR samples accepted and disclosed; affiliate links may appear; neither determines rank.
The range · Axis by axis
Omnilux Contour Face and CurrentBody Series 2 share the spec axis. Both run red at 633nm and near-infrared at 830nm, the wavelengths cited in the photobiomodulation literature including Wunsch & Matuschka (2014) on red light and fibroblast response. CurrentBody adds 104 LEDs over its predecessor for higher density per cm². Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite adds blue at 415nm, the wavelength studied for Cutibacterium acnes activity.
Flexible silicone beats rigid shell across face shapes. Omnilux and CurrentBody both mould to under-eye and jaw-line contours the rigid Dr Dennis Gross frame steps over. The Skin Boutique mask sits between the two formats on a hard semi-flex shell. Solawave is handheld, so fit is user-controlled across zones.
Omnilux carries the deepest publicly cited clinical trial set in the category, including the manufacturer's collagen-response studies measured against control. CurrentBody publishes panel trial data in the United Kingdom. Dr Dennis Gross holds dermatologist-developed authority through the practice in New York. The Skin Boutique cites the wavelength literature without proprietary trial data; Solawave cites red-light topical studies on its handheld housing.
Silicone is more comfortable than rigid for 10-minute hands-free sessions. The Dr Dennis Gross frame is the heaviest on the head and the protocol is the shortest (three minutes red + one minute blue) so the comfort impact is bounded. Solawave is the most comfortable because it is held; the Skin Boutique mask sits in the middle.
Amortised across 36 months at five sessions a week, Omnilux at $595 lands at roughly $0.74 per treatment, cheaper than a single facial. The Skin Boutique mask at $299 lands at roughly $0.36 per treatment but the LED density and panel evidence is thinner. Dr Dennis Gross at $650 buys daily-use protocol design. Solawave at $220 buys handheld flexibility but only at the targeted-zone scale.
The verdict
The best LED face mask in Australia is the Omnilux Contour Face at $595 from Omnilux AU and Adore Beauty. CurrentBody Skin Series 2 runs second at $595 from CurrentBody AU. Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite FaceWare Pro is the dermatologist-developed pick at $650 from MECCA, and the only top-three mask with a blue-light spec for acne. All five masks tested over six weeks against GLOW Standard.
Editorial disclosure. GLOW has no current commercial relationship with Omnilux, CurrentBody, Dr Dennis Gross, The Skin Boutique or Solawave at the time of publishing. Retailer links are affiliate and routed through our /out/ wrapper with rel="nofollow sponsored noopener". Affiliate revenue does not determine rank. LED face masks are Class IIa medical devices listed with the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA). GLOW does not provide medical advice; consult an AHPRA-registered practitioner for diagnostic concerns. Full disclosures at /disclosures/.
The method · In full
Every LED mask in this ranking ran a six-week panel in-house with GLOW Devices desk. Five panellists across Fitzpatrick II to IV used each mask to the manufacturer's published protocol. Panellists logged comfort, perceived warmth, fit gaps and session adherence. Photographs were taken under daylight, indoor warm and clinic-grade fluorescent at week one, week three and week six.
Photography is internal benchmark only and not published as before-and-after, LED masks are Class IIa medical devices and we do not publish results imagery that could be read as a therapeutic claim under the Therapeutic Goods Advertising Code. We report panel response descriptively against the manufacturer's published expected result window.
Spec is verified against the brand specification sheet and against the manufacturer's most recently published evidence pack. Where wavelength tolerances were not disclosed, we rated the spec axis lower. Irradiance figures are accepted as published; GLOW does not run independent irradiance measurement.
PR samples are accepted and disclosed. They carry no influence on rank or inclusion. Affiliate links may appear and never determine placement. Full method at GLOW Standard. The cluster is mapped at our LED face mask hub.
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The questions · Asked most
Omnilux Contour Face at AU$595 from Omnilux Australia. GLOW Score 9.3/10, #1 in GLOW's 2026 LED Mask Index. Red 633nm plus near-infrared 830nm, flexible medical-grade silicone, 10-minute hands-free sessions. CurrentBody Skin Series 2 (9.1) is the premium runner-up; Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite (8.8) is the dermatologist-developed pick with a blue-light spec for acne-prone skin.
LED face masks are Class IIa medical devices and must be listed with the Therapeutic Goods Administration to be sold in Australia. Omnilux Contour Face and CurrentBody Skin Series 2 both hold current ARTG listings at the time of publishing. The TGA listing covers safety and quality manufacturing; it is not an endorsement of cosmetic claims.
Omnilux Contour Face (Glow 9.3) wins on published clinical evidence and silicone fit across face shapes. CurrentBody Series 2 (Glow 9.1) wins on LED count (236 versus the original 132) and on jaw-line coverage. Both ship red at 633nm plus near-infrared at 830nm. Omnilux is the default if you want the evidence-backed pick; CurrentBody is the default if you want the broadest LED coverage. Full head-to-head at Omnilux vs CurrentBody.
Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite FaceWare Pro at AU$650 from MECCA. It is the only mask in the top three with a blue-light spec at 415nm, the wavelength studied for Cutibacterium acnes activity. The mask also runs red at 633nm for the inflammatory-redness axis. Curated three-pick shortlist at best LED mask for acne.
Manufacturer-published trial data on the Omnilux Contour Face and CurrentBody Series 2 reports first visible improvement at three to five weeks of consistent five-times-a-week use, with the larger fine-line and tone result at the eight-to-twelve-week mark. Individual response varies with Fitzpatrick type, baseline collagen, sleep and sun exposure.
Photobiomodulation, the mechanism by which red and near-infrared light is absorbed by mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase, is the cited mechanism in the published literature, including Wunsch & Matuschka (Photomedicine and Laser Surgery, 2014) on red light and fibroblast activity, and Hamblin (AIMS Biophysics, 2017) on photobiomodulation. The mechanism is at do LED face masks work.
Manufacturer protocols differ. Omnilux and CurrentBody recommend three-to-five sessions a week of 10 minutes each, not daily. Dr Dennis Gross SpectraLite is designed for daily three-minute red-light and daily one-minute blue-light sessions. Daily use beyond the manufacturer protocol is not supported by additional benefit in the published literature.
Class IIa LED masks listed with the TGA carry a safety profile that supports cleared cosmetic use in adults. They are not safe to use during pregnancy without practitioner sign-off, with active retinoid prescription without dermatologist sign-off, with photosensitising medications, or on broken or sunburnt skin. Eye protection is mandatory on rigid masks without integrated goggles. Consult an AHPRA-registered practitioner for diagnostic concerns.
The field note · On LED masks
The LED face mask category in Australia ran the same arc the salon-grade fake tan category ran a decade earlier. The opening years were dominated by handheld red-light wands and entry masks marketed on the wavelength without the irradiance to back it. The professional clinics ran panels at fifteen times the price and the gap between them was the gap a domestic device needed to close. Around 2022 the flexible-silicone medical-grade format crossed the line.
Omnilux carries the deepest published clinical body in the category because the brand sits inside a network of dermatology practices that have been running red-light panels for over a decade. The Contour Face mask is the consumer-facing evolution of the clinic-grade panel, flexible silicone, the same wavelengths, the same dosing logic, scaled to a 10-minute home session three to five times a week. CurrentBody Series 2 closed the gap on the underlying spec and won the LED density axis with 236 lights. At $595 each, the AU$300 between the entry tier and the premium tier is the AU$300 that buys the evidence base.
Dr Dennis Gross sits on a different axis. The mask is the only top-three pick with blue light at 415nm, the wavelength studied for the acne mechanism. For the reader whose brief is acne first, fine lines second, the Dr Dennis Gross protocol is the device the dermatology community has named most often this cycle. The Skin Boutique mask runs the AU mid-tier credibly at $299; Solawave runs the targeted-handheld axis at $220. Five devices, five reasons to keep recommending them, average GLOW Score 8.70, the strongest LED face mask field this index has run since the category began.