What Does mW/cm² Mean in Red Light Therapy?

What Does mW/cm² Mean in Red Light Therapy?

Short answer: Irradiance — measured in mW/cm² — is how much light energy reaches your skin at a given distance. It is the single most useful number for comparing panels, but only if it is measured honestly at a stated distance.

What irradiance measures

mW/cm² tells you how much light lands on each square centimetre of skin. Higher numbers mean more intensity, which mainly affects how long a session needs to be — not necessarily a better result.

Why distance matters

Light spreads out as it travels, so intensity drops with distance. A figure measured touching the panel looks huge but is meaningless for real use. A figure measured at a realistic distance — for example, 15cm — reflects what you actually get. Always check the distance a number is quoted at.

How much do you need?

For home use, a realistic figure in the region of 40–100 mW/cm² at 15cm is effective. Chasing ever-higher numbers mostly just shortens session time.

How to spot inflated claims

No distance stated? Treat the number with caution. A figure measured “at the surface” (0cm) is not usable in practice. And look for independently or spectrometer-tested figures — Dermfix RLF panels publish spectrometer-tested output at 15cm (82–92 mW/cm²) on each product page.

FAQ

What is a good mW/cm² for a home panel?

Roughly 40–100 mW/cm² at a realistic 15cm distance.

Why do some brands claim huge numbers?

Often because they measure at the surface (0cm) rather than a usable distance. Always check the distance.

Is higher always better?

No — beyond a point it mainly shortens session time rather than improving results.

What Does mW/cm² Mean in Red Light Therapy?

Irradiance (mW/cm²) is how much light actually reaches your skin. What a good figure looks like, why distance matters, and how to spot inflated claims.
 

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