Best Red Light Therapy Panels: Full Body vs Half Body Guide
Choosing a red light therapy panel involves balancing size, power, budget, and your specific needs. The biggest question: do you need a full-body panel, or will a half-body panel serve you better?
Full Body vs Half Body: The Real Difference
Full Body Panels (180-200cm tall)
- Pros: Treat entire body at once, convenient for tall users, time-efficient
- Cons: Expensive ($1,500-3,000+), often have spread LED distribution, require more space, may have lower irradiance per area
- Best for: People with fibromyalgia (widespread pain), tall users (6'3"+), those who want convenience and have budget
Half Body Panels (90-100cm tall)
- Pros: Better LED density, more affordable ($300-1,200), easier to move/store, often better specs per dollar
- Cons: Need to reposition for full-body treatment, may not cover legs while standing
- Best for: Most users, targeted treatment (back, shoulders), budget-conscious buyers
What Size Do You Actually Need?
Ask yourself:
- What are you treating? If it's back pain or facial skin, a half-body panel is plenty. If it's fibromyalgia or full-body recovery, consider full-body.
- How tall are you? Under 6'2"? Half-body likely covers your torso adequately. Over 6'4"? Full-body might be worth it.
- What's your budget? $500 can get an excellent half-body panel or a mediocre full-body one.
- Do you need simultaneous full-body treatment? You can treat different body parts sequentially with a half-body panel.
Top Panel Recommendations
Half Body / Medium Panels
- IdeaLight RL300MAX / RL300MAXc: ~$300-400, good wavelength distribution, 5W dual-chip
- Rouge G4 Pro: ~$1,200, includes 1060nm for deep tissue, good quality
- MitoPro 750x: Mid-size option, 10" x 24", good for targeted use
- Hooga panels: Budget-friendly options, good for beginners
Full Body Panels
- IdeaLight RLPRO2000: ~$2,500 direct, same as Rouge G4 Ultimate at half price
- Rouge G4 Ultimate: ~$4,500-5,500, premium pricing for same IdeaLight panel
- PlatinumLED BIOMAX series: Various sizes, well-regarded
The LED Count Trap
Don't be fooled by big numbers. A panel claiming "2000 LEDs" might actually have:
- 1152 actual LEDs (dual-chip, so 2304 diodes)
- Poor distribution (most at 660/850nm, few at therapeutic wavelengths like 1060nm)
- Inflated model numbers (RLPRO1200 might only have 864 LEDs)
Always ask: "How many LEDs per wavelength?"
Rolling Stands
For larger panels, a rolling stand is essential. Budget $25-100 for a good stand. Some panels include them; others charge extra.
FAQ
Q: Can I use a half-body panel for my legs?
A: Yes, just position it differently or sit. You don't need to treat everything at once.
Q: Is 1060nm worth seeking out?
A: For deep tissue (herniated discs, deep joints), yes. For skin and surface issues, 660nm + 850nm is sufficient.
Q: How do I know if a panel has good specs?
A> Check: (1) LED count per wavelength, (2) Irradiance at 6" and 12", (3) Third-party testing, (4) Community reviews on Reddit.









