Why a Wearable Instead of a Panel
A panel treats whatever's directly in front of it. A wearable wraps around a joint or limb, so the light stays in contact through natural movement — a knee, elbow, or lower back that would otherwise need constant repositioning under a panel. That contact also means wearables can run at lower stated irradiance than a panel and still deliver a comparable dose, because there's no air gap losing intensity.
The tradeoff is coverage. Every wearable in this guide treats one area at a time. If you're dealing with widespread soreness rather than one stubborn joint, a panel or full-body device covers more ground per session.
How I Rank Wearables & Wraps
Wavelength pairing is the baseline check — 660nm + 850nm is the standard combination for joint and muscle work, and every wearable here uses it (Thyro Light adds two more for its neck-specific use case). Beyond that, fit and durability matter more for wearables than for any other form factor, because they're strapped to a moving body part rather than sitting still on a table.
I weight flexibility and strap design heavily: a wrap that conforms to a knee's curve delivers more consistent contact than a flat panel taped to it. Battery life and cord placement matter for anything meant to move with you. And I check whether a device is purpose-built for one area (like Thyro Light's neck design) or genuinely multi-joint (like BestQool's or Hooga's wrap, which move between knee, elbow, back, and waist).
Best Overall Wearable: BestQool Belt
The BestQool Belt is the wearable I'd point most people to first. At $129, its 110 dual-chip LEDs deliver real 660nm + 850nm output at roughly 45 mW/cm², and the flexible wrap conforms to knees, elbows, waist, and back — genuinely multi-area, not marketed as multi-area. Four intensity levels plus a pulsed mode give you room to adjust as you get comfortable with sessions.
It's corded, which limits movement during a session, and the 1-year warranty is shorter than most panel competitors. But for localized joint and muscle therapy at the lowest price from a brand with a track record, it's the practical default.
BestQool
BestQool Red Light Therapy Belt
7.0
660nm + 850nm · 45 mW/cm² · 110 · $129
Best for Athletes: Hooga Wearable Wrap Belt
At $279, Hooga's wrap costs more than double the BestQool Belt, and the spec sheet explains why: 65 mW/cm² irradiance versus BestQool's 45, plus Hooga's standard 3-year warranty versus BestQool's 1-year. The medical-grade silicone construction and adjustable fit target the same knees, elbows, back, and waist use cases.
It's still corded and still one-area-at-a-time, and the build feels a step below Hooga's own panels. But for athletes who want a higher-output wrap backed by a real warranty and are willing to pay for it, this is the upgrade from the BestQool Belt.
Hooga
Hooga Wearable Wrap Belt Red Light Therapy
7.4
660nm + 850nm · 65 mW/cm² · 100 · $279
Best for Neck & Thyroid: Thyro Light
Thyro Light is the only device in this category built specifically for the neck and thyroid area — a use case no panel or general wrap addresses well. It runs four wavelengths (630nm, 660nm, 830nm, 850nm) instead of the standard two, and it was created by Dr. Westin Childs, a practicing thyroid specialist rather than a supplement-brand influencer.
The research on thyroid-specific photobiomodulation is early-stage, and Thyro Light doesn't publish LED count or irradiance figures the way panel brands do, which makes it hard to benchmark against the rest of this list. At $189, you're buying access to a use case nothing else covers, not a proven clinical outcome. If you're specifically managing thyroid health and want a hands-free neck device, there's genuinely nothing else like it.
Thyro Light
Thyro Light Red & Near Infrared Neck Therapy Device
7.4
630nm + 660nm + 830nm + 850nm · 40 mW/cm² · 36 · $189
Best Budget Wrap: DGYAO Infrared Knee Wrap
At $50, the DGYAO Knee Wrap is the cheapest way to try red light therapy for joint pain specifically. The contoured design keeps the 660nm + 850nm LEDs against the knee during wear, and the low buy-in makes it a reasonable way to test whether red light therapy helps your knee before spending $300+ on a panel.
Irradiance is on the low end and DGYAO doesn't publish official numbers, so consistent daily use over 4-8 weeks matters more here than with a higher-output device. Don't expect it to replace a panel for anything beyond the knee — the wrap only fits that one joint.
DGYAO
DGYAO Red Light Therapy Knee Wrap
7.6
660nm + 850nm · 20 mW/cm² · 60 · $50
Best for Arms: Nourish Red Light Therapy Arm Band
Nourish's arm band fills a specific gap: most wearables target knees, elbows, or backs, and this one is built for arm and shoulder work at $189. It runs the standard 660nm + 850nm pair at roughly 52 mW/cm² and includes a rechargeable battery, though battery life caps out around six sessions per charge.
It's a small brand with limited clinical backing behind the specific device, and the arm-specific design means it won't double as a general-purpose wrap. If arm or shoulder soreness is your actual problem, though, it's a more direct fit than adapting a knee wrap or belt to that shape.
Nourish
Nourish Red Light Therapy Arm Band
6.8
660nm + 850nm · 52 mW/cm² · 50 · $189
Best for Knee/Elbow Combo: Infrared Therapy Wrap
At $179, this dual-wrap design fits either a knee or an elbow using the same 660nm + 850nm LEDs and comfortable neoprene material with simple Velcro fasteners. It only treats one joint type per session — you're choosing knee or elbow, not both simultaneously — and the controls are basic with no timer sophistication.
For straightforward joint-specific therapy without paying a premium for extra features, it does the job. Just don't expect the polish of the BestQool or Hooga wraps at this price.
Infrared Therapy
Infrared Therapy Wrap Knee and Elbow Band
6.9
660nm + 850nm · 45 mW/cm² · 60 · $179
When You've Outgrown a Wearable
A wearable is the right call when soreness or pain is localized to one or two areas. If you're strapping a wrap onto your knee, then your elbow, then your lower back in the same week, you've reached the point where a full-body panel covers more ground per session than rotating a wrap around your whole body.
The Hooga PRO1500 — a full-body panel at $1,199 with 300 dual-chip LEDs and 189 mW/cm² irradiance at six inches — is the panel I'd point wearable users toward when widespread recovery becomes the goal rather than one stubborn joint. See our full guide to full-body panels for the complete lineup and price tiers.
Hooga
Hooga PRO1500 Full Body Red Light Therapy Panel
8.7
660nm + 850nm · 189 mW/cm² · 300 · $1199
Which Wearable Should You Buy?
For most people with a specific joint or muscle complaint, the BestQool Belt is the right starting point — it's the most versatile, the cheapest of the well-reviewed options, and it's genuinely multi-area. If you want more output and a longer warranty and don't mind paying for it, step up to the Hooga Wrap. If your issue is genuinely neck- or thyroid-specific, nothing else here covers that ground the way Thyro Light does, and if you just want to test the waters for under $60, the DGYAO Knee Wrap is the lowest-risk entry.
And if you find yourself wanting to treat more than one area per session, stop rotating a wrap around your body and look at a full-body panel instead — it'll be a better use of your money and your time.
BestQool
BestQool Red Light Therapy Belt
7.0
660nm + 850nm · 45 mW/cm² · 110 · $129
Hooga
Hooga Wearable Wrap Belt Red Light Therapy
7.4
660nm + 850nm · 65 mW/cm² · 100 · $279
Thyro Light
Thyro Light Red & Near Infrared Neck Therapy Device
7.4
630nm + 660nm + 830nm + 850nm · 40 mW/cm² · 36 · $189
DGYAO
DGYAO Red Light Therapy Knee Wrap
7.6
660nm + 850nm · 20 mW/cm² · 60 · $50
Hooga
Hooga PRO1500 Full Body Red Light Therapy Panel
8.7
660nm + 850nm · 189 mW/cm² · 300 · $1199