CurrentBody LED Mask Series 2 Review (2026): 7.5/10 — Great Tech, Wrong Buyer
Honest Verdict
CurrentBody Series 2 has the deepest NIR wavelength (1072nm) available in any home LED mask — that is a real, clinical advantage for pure anti-aging. But it costs $380, has no blue light for acne, runs at fixed intensity only, and isn’t HSA/FSA eligible. For most buyers, Valo Glow covers more concerns for $140 less.
Contents
CurrentBody’s LED Mask had a moment in 2023 when it appeared in Emily in Paris, and the Series 2 launched in 2024 with a deeper wavelength and higher LED count. It’s genuinely one of the better-designed home LED masks. But “well-designed” and “right for most buyers” are different questions. Here’s the honest breakdown.
Score Breakdown
The 1072nm Deep NIR: CurrentBody’s Genuine Advantage
This is the spec that justifies CurrentBody’s existence in the market, and it deserves a straight explanation rather than being dismissed.
🔬 What 1072nm Deep Near-Infrared Actually Does
Standard NIR in most home masks sits at 830–850nm, penetrating into the upper dermis. CurrentBody’s 1072nm wavelength penetrates significantly deeper — reaching the mid-to-deep dermis where structural collagen type I and elastin fibres originate. This depth is particularly effective for periorbital tissue (around eyes) and perioral tissue (around mouth), where fine lines are often deepest and where shallower NIR wavelengths don’t reach consistently. In photobiomodulation research, 1072nm shows strong response in collagen-producing fibroblasts at that depth. No other home LED mask currently offers this wavelength. Full wavelength science →
The honest framing: if you are 45+ with clear skin and your singular goal is maximum structural collagen remodeling — particularly around the eyes and mouth — the 1072nm advantage is real and worth the premium over masks that top out at 850nm. That is a narrow buyer profile, but it exists.
The Acne Gap: Why Most Buyers Should Keep Looking
⚠️ CurrentBody Series 2 Cannot Treat Acne — At All
The CurrentBody LED Mask Series 2 contains no blue light (415nm). Blue light at 415nm is the validated wavelength for targeting Cutibacterium acnes bacteria. Without it, the mask cannot reduce active breakouts, prevent new ones, or address the bacterial component of acne in any way. If you have any acne concern — occasional adult breakouts, hormonal spots, stress-triggered breakouts — CurrentBody is not a complete skincare solution. The mask is anti-aging only. Full acne RLT protocol →
This matters more than it sounds in product descriptions. Most people in their 30s and 40s — the core market for a $380 LED mask — are managing some combination of aging and occasional acne simultaneously. A device that handles only one of those concerns forces you to either accept incomplete results or buy additional equipment. Valo Glow handles both concerns in one 10-minute session at $140 less.
Specs That Actually Matter
Wavelengths: Red 633nm (collagen, surface healing), NIR 830nm (deeper collagen), Deep NIR 1072nm (deepest structural layer). No blue, no yellow.
LED Count: 236 LEDs — highest count of any mask in this comparison. Higher LED density means more even light distribution and less chance of gaps in coverage across the face.
Session time: 10 minutes, 3–5× per week. Standard protocol matching Omnilux and Valo Glow.
Design: Flexible silicone that conforms to face. Single strap — some users with wider jawlines find chin coverage slightly loose. Cordless, USB charging. Flat storage for travel.
Veritace® Certification: CurrentBody’s proprietary quality assurance — each mask is individually tested before shipping, with an NFC chip that lets you verify your specific mask’s test results. Genuine quality differentiator vs brands that don’t disclose per-unit testing. More on LED mask quality standards →
No adjustable intensity: Runs at a single fixed power level. You cannot reduce intensity for sensitive skin phases or increase it over time as your skin adapts. Valo Glow and some other masks offer adjustable settings — CurrentBody does not.
Pros & Cons
✅ What Works
- 1072nm deep NIR — deepest penetration available in any home mask
- 236 LEDs — highest count, most even light distribution
- Veritace® per-unit quality certification — genuine transparency
- Flexible silicone — good face conformity for most face shapes
- Cordless, 10-minute sessions — convenient daily routine
- 60-day return policy — same as Valo Glow
- FDA cleared
- Strong brand reputation and customer support track record
❌ What Doesn’t Work
- No blue light — zero acne treatment capability
- No yellow light — cannot address skin tone or redness
- Fixed intensity only — no adjustment for sensitive skin or progression
- Not HSA/FSA eligible — cannot use pre-tax health savings
- $380 — $140 more than Valo Glow for fewer wavelength options
- Single chin strap — some face shapes get loose coverage along jaw
- 2-year warranty — shorter than Valo Glow’s 3-year coverage
Who Should (and Shouldn’t) Buy CurrentBody
✅ Buy CurrentBody if:
- Your skin is reliably clear — no acne at all
- You are 45+ focusing exclusively on deep structural anti-aging
- Deep collagen remodeling around eyes and mouth is your primary goal
- You’ve already tried standard red/NIR masks and want to go deeper
- Brand reputation and quality certification (Veritace®) matter to your decision
❌ Skip CurrentBody if:
- You ever get breakouts — even occasional adult acne
- You have uneven skin tone or redness — no yellow wavelength to address it
- You have sensitive skin — no adjustable intensity to start low
- You want to use HSA/FSA pre-tax dollars
- $380 is over budget — equivalent results for anti-aging at $240 (Valo Glow)
- You’re new to LED therapy and want a versatile starting device
CurrentBody Series 2 vs Valo Glow: Full Comparison
| Feature | Valo Glow ✓ Better Value | CurrentBody S2 ✓ Deeper NIR |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $240 (20% OFF via link) | $380 |
| Wavelength Count | 4 wavelengths | 3 wavelengths |
| Red Light | ✅ 630nm | ✅ 633nm |
| Blue 415nm (Acne) | ✅ Yes | ❌ None |
| Yellow 580nm (Tone) | ✅ Yes | ❌ None |
| NIR | ✅ 850nm | ✅ 830nm |
| Deep NIR 1072nm | ❌ No | ✅ Yes — deepest available |
| Adjustable Intensity | ✅ Yes | ❌ Fixed only |
| HSA / FSA | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Warranty | 3 years | 2 years |
| Returns | 60 days | 60 days |
| FDA Cleared | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Fred’s Score | 9.5/10 | 7.5/10 |
A Better Choice for Most Buyers
Valo Glow — What Most CurrentBody Browsers Should Buy
4 wavelengths (including blue for acne) · $140 cheaper · HSA/FSA eligible · 3-year warranty
For the full head-to-head breakdown see the Valo Glow vs CurrentBody comparison page →
Fred’s Take
CurrentBody Series 2 is a good product for a specific buyer. If you’re 45+, your skin is clear, and you want the absolute deepest NIR penetration available in a home mask — 1072nm is the real deal. The Veritace® per-unit quality testing is also a genuine differentiator that most brands don’t bother with.
The problem is that “clear skin, pure anti-aging, 45+” describes maybe 20% of people looking at a $380 LED mask. The other 80% have some combination of aging plus acne, or aging plus uneven tone, or sensitive skin that needs adjustable intensity. For all of them, CurrentBody is a partial solution at a full premium price.
My recommendation: If the 1072nm depth is specifically what you’re after and your skin is consistently clear — CurrentBody is worth it. Everyone else should be looking at Valo Glow, which handles the full spectrum of skin concerns at $140 less with better warranty and HSA/FSA eligibility.
Frequently Asked Questions
More Wavelengths. Lower Price. Better Warranty.
4 wavelengths vs CurrentBody’s 3. Includes blue for acne. $140 cheaper. HSA/FSA eligible. 3-year warranty. 20% OFF auto-applied.
Get Valo Glow — $240 (20% OFF Applied) →