Key Takeaways

  • Deepest discount this week: The XSSNVV 272-LED mask drops 60%, the steepest cut in the face mask category right now.
  • Face and neck coverage: The Aurphany E106A wraps under the jaw, useful if you care about the often-ignored neck area.
  • FDA-cleared options under $120: Both the Blanight mask and the GIHWRRI mask carry FDA clearance, which is uncommon in this price band.
  • Highest LED count: The Soeumoir mask packs 432 LEDs for denser coverage than most picks here.
  • Prices verified May 28, 2026.

Late May has a strange effect on my skincare routine. Suddenly the windows are open, the natural light is brutal at 7 a.m., and I notice every spot I ignored all winter. That moment, somewhere between Memorial Day cookouts and the realization that summer events are weeks away, is when LED face mask searches spike, and the deals follow.

This week’s Berry Basket leans hard into one health category: red light therapy masks for the face. I counted ten of them with real discounts running right now, which is more than I usually see outside of a Prime Day event. A few patterns jumped out while I was sorting through. Mid-tier brands like Aurphany and Blanight are pushing wireless silicone masks down into the under-$100 range, and a couple of FDA-cleared options snuck into that band too, which used to be a $200-plus feature.

I kept the list tight to face-focused devices rather than mixing in body panels. If you want the wraps and panels, those are still live on the deals hub. Below are the ten I’d actually consider if I were buying this week.

What are the best red light therapy face masks right now?

The strongest face mask picks this week combine high LED counts, wireless operation, and discounts above 40%. These three are the ones I kept coming back to while reviewing the pool.

XSSNVV 272-LED Face Mask

This XSSNVV mask runs four light modes including 850nm near-infrared, 630nm red, blue, and amber, with 272 LEDs across the face shield. The 10-minute timer matches what most clinical at-home protocols recommend, and the cordless design means you can actually move around during a session. At the current discount it’s the cheapest entry point with this LED density that I’ve seen this spring.

  • 272 LEDs across face shield
  • 4 modes: NIR 850nm, red 630nm, blue, amber
  • 10-minute timer, cordless rechargeable

Aurphany E106A Face and Neck Mask

The Aurphany E106A is one of the few masks here that genuinely extends down the neck, with 324 LEDs spread across face and neck zones. Seven color modes, five brightness levels, and a 20-minute timer give you more programming room than the simpler four-mode masks. If you’ve been treating just your face and skipping the area under your jaw, this is a reasonable fix.

  • 324 LEDs covering face and neck
  • 7 color modes, 5 brightness levels
  • 20-minute timer for home and travel

NVBOTY 400-LED Face Mask

NVBOTY packs 400 LEDs into this one and runs four modes including blue, orange, 850nm infrared, and red. The 2000mAh rechargeable remote is the practical touch I appreciated, because fumbling with a touch panel on your forehead gets old fast. Worth noting that the deal ends within about 15 hours of this post going up.

  • 400 LEDs, 4 light modes
  • 2000mAh rechargeable remote
  • Blue, orange, 850nm infrared, red

Which face masks have FDA clearance?

Two masks in this roundup carry FDA clearance, which means the device has been reviewed for safety claims. Clearance is not the same as efficacy proof, but it does separate these from the unregulated bulk of the category.

Blanight FDA-Cleared Mask

The Blanight is a wireless silicone mask running 660nm red and 850nm infrared with four modes, targeted at wrinkles and acne. FDA clearance at this price point is unusual, and the soft silicone shell sits more comfortably than the hard-shell masks if you wear glasses or have a narrow face. Bestseller rank is higher than I’d like at #730, so this one is newer to the market.

  • FDA cleared for wrinkles and acne
  • Wireless 4-mode silicone design
  • 660nm red and 850nm infrared

GIHWRRI FDA-Cleared 7-Color Mask

GIHWRRI’s mask covers seven colors with anti-aging, wrinkle, and acne modes, and it’s also FDA cleared. The soft silicone build is similar to the Blanight, and it’s rechargeable for travel use. It’s the priciest pick here, so I’d grab it only if FDA clearance is a hard requirement for you.

  • FDA cleared, 7-color light therapy
  • Rechargeable soft silicone build
  • Targets anti-aging, wrinkles, acne

What about wireless, rechargeable LED masks?

Cordless masks have become the default for at-home red light therapy, and three picks here lean into that format with different LED layouts and control schemes.

ARIVEA Wireless LED Mask

ARIVEA keeps the mode count simple with three options covering red, blue, and infrared. The wireless rechargeable design is positioned for travel, and the rigid shell stays put without straps digging in. It’s a no-frills pick if you don’t want to manage seven different color modes you’ll never use.

  • 3 modes: red, blue, infrared
  • Wireless rechargeable design
  • Rigid travel-friendly shell

Dermita 360-Degree LED Mask

Dermita advertises 400 LEDs with what it calls 360-degree coverage and four modes including near-infrared. The 2000mAh battery and built-in eye protection are worth flagging, because LED glare during a 10-minute session is more bothersome than it sounds. Bestseller rank is mid-pack but the spec sheet holds up next to pricier options.

  • 400 LEDs with 360-degree coverage
  • 4 modes including near-infrared
  • 2000mAh battery, eye protection

COMSYNC Detachable Controller Mask

COMSYNC’s hook is the detachable controller. You can pop it off when not in use, which is convenient if you store the mask in a drawer. Multiple light modes, three timer settings, and three brightness levels, all in a soft silicone shell. Deal window is short on this one too.

  • Detachable controller for storage
  • 3 timers and 3 brightness levels
  • Soft silicone full-face shell

Which masks offer multi-color light therapy?

Multi-color masks layer chromotherapy modes on top of red and near-infrared. The science behind some of the secondary colors is thinner than the red and NIR research, so treat extra modes as bonus rather than the reason to buy.

biuufish 8-Color LED Mask

biuufish runs eight colors plus 850nm near-infrared, with a 3000mAh rechargeable battery that should hold up for plenty of sessions per charge. It sits at the lower end of the price range here, which makes the multi-color option easier to justify if you’re curious about chromotherapy. The hard shell is less forgiving than silicone if you have a smaller face.

  • 8 colors plus 850nm near-infrared
  • 3000mAh rechargeable battery
  • Hard-shell travel design

Soeumoir 432-LED 7-Mode Mask

Soeumoir has the highest LED count in this roundup at 432, with seven modes, adjustable brightness, a timer, and a 3600mAh battery. Denser LED coverage typically means more even light distribution, which matters more than the color count. Bestseller rank is the weakest here, so it’s a newer listing with less feedback to lean on.

  • 432 LEDs for dense coverage
  • 7 modes with adjustable brightness
  • 3600mAh battery, full-face fit

Frequently asked questions

What does a red light therapy mask actually do for your face?

Red light at around 630-660nm and near-infrared at 850nm are studied for stimulating skin cell activity, which research links to reduced wrinkle depth and improved skin tone over weeks of consistent use. Results vary by device power, session length, and skin type. Most at-home masks are weaker than clinical panels, so expect gradual changes rather than overnight results.

Should I get a face-only mask or one that covers the face and neck?

If the neck and jawline are part of what you’re treating, a combined mask like the Aurphany E106A saves you from doing two sessions. Face-only masks are lighter and often have higher LED density per square inch on the face itself. Pick based on the area you actually want to treat, not the bigger LED count number.

How often should you use a red light therapy mask?

Most manufacturers suggest 10 to 20 minute sessions, three to five times per week. The masks in this roundup have built-in timers that cap sessions automatically. More is not better, and going past recommended times can irritate sensitive skin.

Is FDA clearance important for an at-home LED mask?

Clearance means the device met safety standards for its marketed claims, but it doesn’t guarantee strong results compared to non-cleared masks. The Blanight and GIHWRRI in this roundup are both cleared. If you’re cautious or have skin sensitivities, clearance is a reasonable filter.

Do wireless masks work as well as plug-in panels?

Wireless masks deliver lower total power output than full-size therapy panels, but they sit closer to your skin, which improves light penetration at the contact point. For face-specific treatment, a wireless mask is often more practical than a panel. For body treatment, a panel still wins on coverage and power.

Discounts on red light therapy masks this week land between roughly 27% and 60%, with most of the strongest picks in the 33% to 53% range. The 60% drop on the XSSNVV is the outlier, and the original price on that one looks plausible given the LED count. A lot of category markdowns get inflated by suspicious sticker prices, but this week most of the math holds up.

If I were buying one for myself, the Aurphany E106A face and neck mask is the pick. The neck coverage is genuinely useful, and the 324 LEDs spread across a larger treatment area is a better deal than chasing the highest LED-count-per-mask number. The Soeumoir is impressive on paper but the higher bestseller rank tells me it’s still proving itself. I’d skip the ARIVEA unless you specifically want a stripped-down three-mode option, because for similar money the Dermita gives you more LEDs and an eye-protection design.

Memorial Day weekend usually pulls a second wave of skincare and wellness deals through the Tuesday after the holiday, so if any of these run out, give it 48 hours and check the health deals page. The body panels and wraps tend to follow face masks down in price, and I’d expect those to discount further into June as Father’s Day pricing starts.