Red light therapy (also called photobiomodulation, low-level light therapy, or LLLT) is shining red and near-infrared light on your skin to drive cellular changes underneath. Most people use it for skin (firmer, less wrinkles, less acne, faster healing), hair regrowth, and faster recovery from training. A smaller group uses it for thyroid issues, mood, sleep, joint pain, and fertility.

It's not a stimulant or a drug. The light penetrates a few centimetres into tissue, gets absorbed by your mitochondria, and nudges them to produce more energy and less inflammation. The effects are real but cumulative and modest. You're not going to feel anything after one session. You'll see things change over weeks of consistent use. Done at the right dose it has almost no downside, the catch is that dose, wavelength, distance, and consistency all matter and most people get them wrong.

Deep-dive


Dosage:


Here's what you can expect:

For skin, expect subtle improvements in tone, texture, and hydration at 2-4 weeks, more visible reductions in fine lines and overall skin quality at 8-12 weeks. The change is real but gradual, more "I look better-rested" than "I look 10 years younger." For hair, no visible change for 8-12 weeks, then a slow reduction in shedding and gradual fill-in in thinning areas over 4-6 months. For muscle recovery, you may notice less soreness the day after a hard session within the first week or two of using it pre-workout. For Hashimoto's, lab markers (TSH, antibodies) shift over months, not weeks, and you'll want bloodwork to confirm rather than relying on subjective feel. For cognition and mood, effects are subtle and individual, some people notice a clearer feeling after sessions, others nothing.

The biggest mistake people make is inconsistency. Three sessions and quitting will do nothing. Three sessions a week for three months will do something. The second biggest mistake is overdoing it: longer sessions or closer to the skin past the optimal dose start eroding the benefit.