Learn About Red Light

Learning center

What to know before choosing a red light device

Start with the format, exact wavelengths, coverage, controls, care requirements, evidence boundary, warranty, and support. A larger number on a product page is not automatically a better routine.

Short answer

Red light products use visible red and sometimes near-infrared wavelengths. Research into photobiomodulation covers many devices and dosing methods, so general studies should not be presented as proof for a specific consumer product.

Question What to check
Format Mat, panel, belt, pad, mask, or handheld device
Wavelengths Exact numbers, not only “red and infrared”
Coverage Dimensions and photos showing real scale
Controls Timer, brightness, modes, auto-off, and clear instructions
Proof Manual, testing method, warranty, support, and honest limitations

660 nm and 850 nm

Two wavelengths, different visibility

660 nm is visible red light. 850 nm is near-infrared and is much less visible to the eye. The Repretty mat lists both wavelengths. Wavelength presence does not by itself establish the right dose or outcome for every person or goal.

Mat

Broad supported coverage and a lie-down routine.

Panel

Upright use with more attention to distance and exposure area.

Belt or pad

Smaller targeted use with easier portability.

Evidence discipline

A trustworthy product page tells you which facts belong to the device and which claims come from broader research.

External sources provide general education and do not evaluate this Repretty device.

Compare the facts with the routine you actually want