Key Takeaways
- Best body panel value: The Morfone Tri-Wavelength Panel runs three wavelengths with an adjustable stand, and it sits near the top of its category by sales rank.
- Cheapest way in: The USUIE Red Light Belt is a bestseller rank #6 wrap for back and shoulder soreness, and it is the lowest entry price in this roundup.
- If you want a real panel: The EmberTouch 115W Panel has the most output here at 660nm and 850nm, though its sales rank is the weakest of the bunch.
- Face mask standout: The GIHWRRI 7-Color Mask is FDA-cleared, which most masks in this price band are not.
Summer changes how I think about red light. In the colder months it lived on my bathroom counter as a skin thing. Now that I am hiking on weekends and waking up with a stiff lower back I have been clamping a panel to a tripod and pointing it at the achy parts instead. That is the use most people actually want when they search for a red light therapy panel for the body, not another face mask.
What stood out this week in the Berry Basket is how many true body devices showed up next to the usual masks. Morfone sent over two panels, one a compact 4-color unit and one a tri-wavelength model with a stand, and there is a 115W EmberTouch panel that pushes more light than anything else here. The wraps are the sleeper story though, because the USUIE belt for back and shoulder pain is sitting at a bestseller rank that most face masks would envy.
So this list leans heavy on panels and one body wrap up top, then a handful of masks for the face and neck crowd. Prices verified June 22, 2026. If you want the broader health roundup, you can browse all deals after this.
What are the best red light therapy panels for the body?
The best body panels here pair 660nm red light with 850nm near-infrared and give you a stand or strap so you can treat a knee or a shoulder hands-free. Morfone has the strongest combination of price and sales rank, while EmberTouch wins on raw output.
Morfone 4-Color Panel
This Morfone panel runs four light modes across 460, 590, 660 and 850nm with 120 LEDs, and it comes with a lighted makeup mirror and timer. It is pitched as a face-and-body crossover, so it works on the counter for skin and gets pointed at a sore wrist or knee when you need it. Good starter panel if you want one device that does double duty without committing to a big mounted unit.
- 460/590/660/850nm 4-color modes
- 120 LEDs with lighted mirror
- Timer, face and body use
Morfone Tri-Wavelength Panel
The tri-wavelength version is the one I keep coming back to for actual body use. You get 660nm, 850nm and 940nm with an adjustable stand and a pair of protective glasses in the box, which matters because 850nm is invisible and easy to stare into. It sits high in its category by sales rank, and the stand means you can set it up beside the couch and treat a shoulder while you watch something.
- 660nm, 850nm and 940nm
- Adjustable stand included
- Protective glasses in box
EmberTouch 115W Panel
EmberTouch is the most serious panel on this list at 115W across 660nm and 850nm, which is real output for covering a larger area like a back or both knees at once. The catch is the sales rank, which is the weakest of anything here, so it is newer and less proven than the Morfone units. If you specifically want power over portability, this is the pick, just go in knowing it is the unknown quantity.
- 115W output
- 660nm and 850nm wavelengths
- Infrared body device
INTEO 2-in-1 Body Lamp
This INTEO is a tall 2-in-1 lamp that stands 46.5 inches and detaches, so you can use it as a floor panel for the body or break it down for the face. It runs 660nm and 850nm with protective glasses and an elastic strap included. The height is the appeal here, since it covers more of you standing up than a small tabletop unit ever will.
- 46.5 inch detachable lamp
- 660nm and 850nm
- Protective glasses and elastic strap
USUIE Red Light Belt
If you only care about back, shoulder or waist pain, skip the panel and grab this USUIE wrap. It straps directly onto the sore spot with a built-in timer, which beats trying to hold still in front of a stationary light. It is a bestseller rank #6 in its category and the lowest price in this roundup, which is why it is the one I would hand a parent dealing with muscle aches.
- Wrap for back, shoulder, waist
- Built-in timer
- Bestseller rank #6
Which red light therapy masks are the best value this week?
For the face, the best value masks pair near-infrared light with a comfortable fit and a real timer, and one here is FDA-cleared. These three cover the range from simple and cheap to a bestseller everyone is buying.
TOYXE LED Face Mask
The TOYXE is a wireless mask with 850nm near-infrared, rechargeable so you can wear it on the couch or pack it for travel. It keeps things simple, which I appreciate at this price, and the sales rank says plenty of people are happy with it. A solid first mask if you are testing whether red light fits your routine before spending more.
- 850nm near-infrared
- Wireless and rechargeable
- Portable for travel
XSSNVV 4-Mode Mask
This XSSNVV cordless mask packs 272 LEDs and four light modes, 850nm near-infrared plus red, blue and amber, with a 10-minute timer. It is one of the best-selling masks in the whole category right now and it is a limited time deal, so the price reflects the demand. The four modes give you blue for breakouts and amber for tone on top of the red, which is more flexibility than most masks at this level.
- 272 LEDs, 4 light modes
- 850nm NIR plus red, blue, amber
- 10-minute timer
GIHWRRI 7-Color Mask
The GIHWRRI is FDA-cleared, which separates it from most masks floating around at this price. It runs seven colors on soft silicone for anti-aging and acne, and it is rechargeable for hands-free use. If the regulatory clearance matters to you, and for a skincare device it reasonably should, this is the mask I would point you toward.
- FDA-cleared
- 7 colors, soft silicone
- Rechargeable hands-free
Are the silicone red light masks worth it?
Silicone masks are worth it if you value comfort and a flush fit over a rigid plastic shell, since the soft material molds to your face. Aurphany has three variations here, and they differ mostly in extras like a cooling pack and LED count.
Aurphany E106A Silicone Mask
This is the standard Aurphany E106A in soft pink silicone with adjustable brightness and a timer. It is the most pared-back of the three and the easiest to recommend if you just want a comfortable mask for home and travel. Nothing flashy, but the fit is the whole point and silicone does that better than hard plastic.
- Soft silicone fit
- Adjustable brightness and timer
- Home and travel
Aurphany Cooling Gel Mask
The cooling gel version adds a chilled pack and a rechargeable remote, with up to 180 minutes of use per charge and seven colors of 850nm near-infrared light. The cooling pack is a nice touch on a warm evening after sun exposure, and the long runtime means fewer charging stops. This is the Aurphany I would pick in summer for that reason alone.
- Cooling gel pack
- Up to 180 minutes per charge
- 7-color 850nm NIR with remote
Aurphany 7-in-1 Mask
The 7-in-1 model steps up to 324 LEDs with five brightness levels and a 20-minute timer, all on skin-friendly silicone and covering the neck. More LEDs and finer brightness control make this the one to get if you want the most coverage from the Aurphany line. It is the priciest of the three, so only worth it if you will use the extra modes.
- 324 LEDs
- 5 brightness levels
- 20-minute timer, face and neck
Frequently asked questions
What is the best red light therapy panel for the body?
For most people the Morfone Tri-Wavelength Panel is the best balance of price, output and proven sales rank, with 660nm, 850nm and 940nm plus an adjustable stand. If you want maximum coverage for a larger area, the 115W EmberTouch panel pushes more light, and the INTEO floor lamp covers more of you standing up.
What wavelengths should a body panel have?
Look for 660nm red light for skin and surface tissue and 850nm near-infrared for deeper muscle and joint penetration. Several panels here add a third wavelength like 940nm, which reaches deeper still. The 850nm light is invisible, so use the included protective glasses.
Is a red light wrap better than a panel for back pain?
A wrap like the USUIE belt is often easier for targeted pain because it straps directly onto the back, shoulder or waist and stays put while you move. A panel gives broader coverage but needs you to hold still in front of it. For one stubborn sore spot, the wrap usually wins.
Can I use a face mask for body areas too?
Not really, since masks are shaped to the contours of the face and neck and will not sit flat on a knee or back. If you want body coverage, choose a panel or a wrap. The Morfone 4-color panel is one of the few here pitched for both face and body.
Discounts this week ran from about 31% up to 62%, with the deeper cuts landing on the masks rather than the panels. The mask markdowns look like genuine drops against steady selling prices, not the inflated-original nonsense you sometimes see, and the XSSNVV at 60% off is a real limited time deal given its category rank. The body panels held tighter discounts in the 33% to 52% range, which is normal because they move less inventory than masks.
Honestly, this was a decent week if you want a body device and an average one if you only want a face mask. The standout for me is the USUIE belt, because a bestseller rank #6 wrap at the lowest price here is the easiest thing to recommend for actual muscle soreness. The one I would slow down on is the EmberTouch panel, since the output is great but the sales rank tells me it is unproven, and I would rather pay a little less for the Morfone tri-wavelength that people are clearly buying.
Looking ahead, Prime Day usually lands in July, so the masks that are deeply cut now may go lower in a few weeks if you can wait. The panels are less likely to drop much further, so if a body panel is what you came for, this is a reasonable time to grab one rather than hold out. I will be watching whether Morfone keeps these panel prices going into the event.










