Beloved by beauty experts and celebrities, LED light therapy has been a popular cosmetic treatment to fend off unwanted signs of aging for decades — and is now widely available at home in the form of a glowing wand for your face.
Starting at about $100 and topping out in the thousands, these tools claim to rejuvenate skin by smoothing fine lines, reducing redness and inflammation, clearing acne, improving elasticity, boosting glow and balancing discoloration.
But are these high-tech products worth their high price tags? A recent report in the Times UK questioned the claims.
Lyma, a brand that boasts at-home light therapy that’s “100x more effective than LED masks,” commissioned researchers at Imperial College London to audit claims made by their competitors. They found these products’ efficacy “highly questionable” and only impacts the “outer layer of the skin, rather than deeper down in the dermis.”
However, advertising officials in the UK recently ruled that Lyma’s claims about their supposedly state-of-the-art cold “laser” are misleading and unsupported by evidence.
