Beauty Tech · Red Light Therapy
The Best Red Light Therapy Devices in Australia (2026)
Red light therapy devices in Australia range from AU$300 face masks to AU$2,000 full-body panels — and a lot of that price gap is marketing. This guide covers every device type: panels, LED masks, and handhelds. The best overall device is the Infraredi Pro Max 2.0 panel (AU$1,649). The best LED mask for face-only use is the Omnilux Contour Face.
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The 2026 awards
Best for every need.
Eight categories. One honest pick for each.
Quick comparison
All devices at a glance.
| Device | Type | Best for | Irradiance | Wavelengths | AU Price | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infraredi Pro Max 2.0Best OverallARTG-registered | Panel | Overall; ARTG credential | 250 mW/cm² | 630/660/810/830/850nm | AU$1,649 | Check price → |
| BlockBlueLight PowerPanel MAXTGA Class IIa | Panel | Full-body, AU-certified | 162 mW/cm² | 630/660/810/830/850nm | AU$1,649.95 | Check price → |
| Bon Charge Super Max | Panel | Premium full-body | >162 mW/cm² | 660/850nm | AU$1,999 | Check price → |
| Omnilux Contour FaceBest LED Mask | Mask | Face skin maintenance | ~1–12 mW/cm² | 633/830nm | check price | Check price → |
| CurrentBody Skin LED Mask | Mask | Value face mask | ~1–12 mW/cm² | 633/830nm | check price | Check price → |
| Mito Red MitoPRO 1500+ | Panel | Recovery, enthusiast | >73 mW/cm² | 630/660/810/830/850nm | [verify AUD] | Check price → |
| Bon Charge Max | Panel | Value full-body panel | >142 mW/cm² | 660/850nm | [verify AUD] | Check price → |
| Solawave 4-in-1 Wand | Handheld | Targeted handheld facial | Low (handheld) | 660nm | [verify AUD] | Check price → |
Some AUD prices update frequently — check the retailer for the latest — check the retailer link for current pricing. Irradiance figures for LED masks are estimated at typical mask-to-skin distance; panel figures are at treatment distance as stated by brands or independently tested.
The best panels in Australia
Red light panels, ranked.
Full-body and half-body options. Ranked on irradiance, wavelengths, AU certification and value. See the full panel comparison →
Infraredi Pro Max 2.0
The strongest spec sheet in the AU panel comparison, backed by the only ARTG credential in the group. 250 mW/cm², five wavelengths, 3-year warranty, 60-day trial, ships from Australia. The half-body footprint (90×22cm) is the one honest caveat for buyers wanting full-body coverage in a single position.
| Irradiance | 250 mW/cm² |
|---|---|
| Wavelengths | 630 / 660 / 810 / 830 / 850nm |
| Coverage | Half-body (90×22cm) |
| AU cert | ARTG-registered (brand claim — verify at tga.gov.au) |
| Warranty | 3 years · 60-day trial |
| AU price | AU$1,649 |
BlockBlueLight PowerPanel MAX
Full-body coverage, TGA Class IIa classification, 5-year warranty and the same price as the Infraredi. Lower irradiance than the Infraredi Pro Max (162 vs 250 mW/cm²), but the larger panel and longer warranty tip it ahead for buyers who prioritise coverage area over peak irradiance.
| Irradiance | 162 mW/cm² |
|---|---|
| Wavelengths | 630 / 660 / 810 / 830 / 850nm |
| Coverage | Full-body (100×21cm) |
| AU cert | TGA Class IIa (brand claim) |
| Warranty | 5 years · 30-day guarantee |
| AU price | AU$1,649.95 |
Bon Charge Super Max
The most lifestyle-polished AU panel. Full-body coverage, >162 mW/cm², premium build quality, and an AU brand buyers trust. The narrower wavelength range (660/850nm vs 5 wavelengths on rivals) and AU$350 premium over the Infraredi are the honest trade-offs. Worth it for buyers who want the nicest-looking panel in the house; skip it if you're counting watts per dollar.
| Irradiance | >162 mW/cm² |
|---|---|
| Wavelengths | 660nm / 850nm |
| Coverage | Full-body |
| AU cert | Wellness product — no ARTG registration |
| Warranty | [verify on boncharge.com] |
| AU price | AU$1,999 |
Mito Red MitoPRO 1500+
The enthusiast panel for recovery and biohacking use cases, with independently verified irradiance, 300 LEDs, and a reputation built in the wellness community. The AU import factor (USD pricing + ~AU$340 shipping + no ARTG registration) is the key honest caveat — total landed cost in AUD requires verification at checkout.
| Irradiance | >73 mW/cm² (independently tested) |
|---|---|
| Wavelengths | 630 / 660 / 810 / 830 / 850nm |
| Coverage | Full-body (~33×119cm) |
| AU cert | No ARTG registration — ships from US |
| Warranty | [verify at mitoredlight.com] |
| AU price | [verify AUD — USD$1,169 + ~AU$340 shipping] |
See all panel picks ranked in detail: Best LED Panels Australia 2026 →
The best LED masks in Australia
LED face masks, ranked.
Hands-free facial red light. Lower irradiance than panels but unmatched convenience for facial-only maintenance. See the full LED mask comparison →
Omnilux Contour Face
The gold standard in LED face masks. The Omnilux Contour Face has the most clinical evidence behind it, a comfortable flexible design, 633nm red and 830nm near-infrared wavelengths, and a proven track record with dermatologists and beauty professionals. It's not the cheapest LED mask, but it's the one most likely to actually do what it claims. AU price [verify — typically in the AU$650–750 range].
| Wavelengths | 633nm (red) / 830nm (near-infrared) |
|---|---|
| Type | Flexible panel mask |
| Coverage | Full face + neck |
| Session time | ~10 minutes, hands-free |
| AU price | [verify AUD] |
CurrentBody Skin LED Light Therapy Mask
The CurrentBody LED mask competes directly with the Omnilux — same wavelengths (633/830nm), similar protocol, generally priced lower. The slightly less flexible fit and less robust clinical data set sit it at #2, but for most buyers it's a compelling alternative at a better price. AU price: check retailer.
| Wavelengths | 633nm (red) / 830nm (near-infrared) |
|---|---|
| Type | Flexible panel mask |
| Coverage | Full face |
| Session time | ~10 minutes, hands-free |
| AU price | [verify AUD] |
Full mask guide with 9 picks tested: Best LED Face Masks Australia 2026 →
Handheld red light devices
Targeted handheld tools.
Lower power, targeted application — best for spot treatments rather than whole-face or full-body sessions. Not a substitute for a panel or mask if comprehensive coverage is the goal.
Solawave 4-in-1 Skin Wand
The most viral handheld red light device in Australia — combines 660nm red light with microcurrent, galvanic current and therapeutic warmth. Genuinely useful for spot treatment and a fast 3-minute routine. The honest limitation: handheld irradiance is much lower than a panel, and it's not a substitute for full-face or body coverage. Best for buyers who want a quick daily-use complement, not a primary red light device. AU price: check retailer.
| Wavelengths | 660nm (red) |
|---|---|
| Additional features | Microcurrent · Galvanic · Therapeutic warmth |
| Coverage | Targeted / spot treatment |
| AU price | [verify AUD] |
Panel vs mask
Which type is right for you?
This is the question we hear most. Short answer: get a mask if you want hands-free facial maintenance; get a panel if you want more power, body coverage, or deeper tissue effects.
Get a mask if…
You're focused on facial skin maintenance, want hands-free convenience, have a smaller budget, or will actually use a 10-minute mask a few times a week consistently.
Get a panel if…
You want higher irradiance for deeper effects, full-body coverage (back, legs, joints), recovery/wellness use, or scalp and chest treatment beyond the face.
Get both if…
You're committed to a comprehensive routine — a mask for daily face maintenance and a panel for full-body sessions 3x per week. The two complement rather than duplicate.
Buying guide
What to know before buying.
Irradiance (mW/cm²)
The power density at the treatment surface. Higher irradiance = shorter sessions for the same dose. Look for panels above 100 mW/cm² at treatment distance. LED masks operate at much lower irradiance — this is normal and expected.
Wavelengths
The most studied wavelengths are 660nm (red) and 850nm (near-infrared). At minimum, look for both. Five-wavelength panels add 630nm, 810nm and 830nm for broader coverage — a genuine advantage, not just marketing.
AU certification (ARTG / TGA)
ARTG-registered devices have been assessed as medical devices under AU law. It's a trust signal, not mandatory for home wellness use. Infraredi holds ARTG registration; BlockBlueLight holds TGA Class IIa classification.
Panel size vs coverage
A half-body panel requires repositioning to treat the whole body. A full-body panel covers from neck to ankles in one position. If full-body in one session matters, buy a full-body panel.
Warranty + trial period
For a AU$1,000–2,000 device, a 60-day trial and 3-year+ warranty are meaningful. BlockBlueLight offers 5 years — the best in this comparison. Infraredi offers 60-day trial + 3 years.
Local vs imported
AU brands (Infraredi, Bon Charge, BlockBlueLight) ship locally — faster delivery, AU consumer law protections, AU-compatible power. Mito Red ships from the US — add ~AU$340 shipping and exchange rate risk.
Common questions
Red light therapy FAQ.
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What is the best red light therapy device in Australia?
The best overall red light therapy device for Australian buyers is the Infraredi Pro Max 2.0 (AU$1,649) — it has the highest verified irradiance (250 mW/cm²) in the panel category, five clinically-studied wavelengths, ARTG registration, and local AU fulfilment. For face-only use, the Omnilux Contour Face is the best LED mask. See our full panel ranking at Best LED Panels Australia and our full mask ranking at Best LED Face Masks Australia.
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What is the difference between an LED mask and a red light panel?
LED masks sit directly on the face — they're hands-free, designed for facial skin maintenance, and typically deliver low irradiance (1–25 mW/cm²). Red light panels stand or hang at a distance, deliver much higher irradiance, cover more body area, and are used for both skin and body wellness benefits. For face-only convenience: a mask. For full-body or higher-power treatment: a panel. See our full comparison: LED Panel vs LED Face Mask.
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How much should I spend on a red light therapy device in Australia?
Quality LED face masks (Omnilux, CurrentBody) sit in the AU$500–750 range — this is where the evidence is. Cheaper masks are largely unsupported. For panels, AU$1,500–2,000 gets you the best-performing options in this comparison. Budget AU$400–800 panels exist but generally lack certified irradiance and AU compliance. Spending more on a device from a reputable brand with warranty support is a better strategy than buying cheap and replacing it.
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Is red light therapy safe?
Red light therapy is generally considered safe for most users at recommended doses and distances. It is non-UV and does not cause the DNA damage associated with UV exposure. Side effects from overuse can include skin sensitivity. People who are photosensitive, pregnant, or taking photosensitising medications should consult a doctor before use. Always follow the device manufacturer's protocol.
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Do I need a TGA-registered device?
You don't legally need a TGA-registered device for home cosmetic/wellness use. ARTG registration (via the TGA) means the device has been assessed as a medical device — it's a trust signal, not a mandatory requirement. If ARTG status matters to you, the Infraredi Pro Max 2.0 holds that credential. Always verify at tga.gov.au — never rely solely on the brand's claim.
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Can I use red light therapy every day?
Most protocols recommend 3–5 sessions per week, 10–20 minutes per area. Daily use is not considered harmful at recommended distances, but more is not always better — adequate recovery time is part of the protocol. Starting with shorter sessions (5–10 minutes) and building up is sensible. Consult the device manual and a skin professional for a personalised protocol.
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