Sleep quality / circadian light

Red light therapy for sleep quality, sleep inertia, and bedtime use

Evidence on red light and near-infrared phototherapy for sleep quality, bedtime exposure, sleep inertia, and athlete recovery.

Study count

Starter library cites four human studies plus one whole-body PBM systematic review; evidence is small and mixed.

Evidence grade

low

Panel relevance

partially-replicable

Bottom line

Do not market red light as a proven insomnia treatment. If discussed for sleep, separate tissue PBM, visual red lighting, and sleep-inertia alertness use cases.

Consensus: Sleep is a low-certainty, mixed category: small studies show possible benefits for athlete sleep, subjective sleep complaints, or sleep inertia, while bedtime visible red light can increase alertness and negative mood.

What the studies found

  • A small athlete study reported improved sleep, melatonin, and endurance after 14 days of whole-body red-light treatment.
  • A sham-controlled wearable red/NIR neck-device trial found subjective sleep-related improvements without clear objective actigraphy differences.
  • A randomized PSG study found 1 hour of red light before bed increased subjective alertness, anxiety, and negative emotions, showing that red light before bedtime is not automatically sleep-promoting.
  • A sleep-inertia study found red light masks or goggles improved some post-waking performance measures, but this is an alertness use case rather than an insomnia treatment.
  • A whole-body PBM systematic review found possible sleep-quality improvement but no exercise recovery or performance benefit.

Dosage and timing

Wavelengths658, 660, 740, 810, 870, 625, 628, 631 nm
IrradianceNot settled
FluenceNot settled
Session timeSmall studies used 25-60 minute sessions depending on device and purpose.
FrequencyDaily for 14 days in the athlete red-light study; every other night for 3 weeks in the wearable NIR trial.
DurationShort study windows: one night to 3 weeks.
TimingBefore bed for sleep-quality studies; during sleep opportunity or after waking for sleep-inertia studies.
Treatment areaWhole body, neck, or visual exposure depending on study.
Device typesWhole-body red light setup, wearable red/NIR collar, red light panel/room exposure, red light mask or goggles.
NotesLow-illuminance visual red light and high-irradiance PBM are different interventions.
  • There is no consensus home-panel sleep protocol.
  • Evening use should be cautious because visual red light can increase alertness for some people.
  • A practical article should ask whether the goal is relaxation, circadian lighting, post-waking alertness, or tissue PBM; the evidence differs for each.

Caveats

  • Insomnia, sleep apnea, restless legs, medication effects, and mood disorders need medical evaluation.
  • Avoid claiming red light raises melatonin or fixes sleep based on small athlete-only evidence.
  • Eye comfort and brightness matter; visual red-light studies are not the same as skin-dose PBM studies.

Cited peer-reviewed sources

controlled-trial Study count not extracted Evidence: low; direction: positive Panel relevance: panel-replicable Wavelengths: Not reported Dose/timing: Daily during a 14-day intervention / 14 days Area: Whole body Device: Red-light irradiation setup Source

Zhao J, Tian Y, Nie J, Xu J, Liu D. Journal of Athletic Training. 2012.

A 14-day red-light exposure study in elite female basketball players reported improved sleep, serum melatonin, and endurance performance.

Source

randomized-controlled-trial 30 participants Evidence: low; direction: mixed Panel relevance: partially-replicable Wavelengths: 660, 740, 810, 870 nm Dose/timing: 25 min / Every other night before bed / 3 weeks Area: Neck Device: Wearable red/NIR phototherapy collar Source

Kennedy KER, Wills CCA, Holt C, Grandner MA. Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine. 2023.

A randomized sham-controlled trial of a wearable red/NIR neck phototherapy device found subjective sleep-related improvements but no clear objective actigraphy difference.

Source

randomized-controlled-trial 114 participants Evidence: low; direction: mixed Panel relevance: partially-replicable Wavelengths: 625 nm Dose/timing: 60 min / Single bedtime exposure in study protocol Area: Visual light exposure Device: Red light room/panel exposure Source

Pan R, Zhang G, Deng F, Lin W, Pan J. Frontiers in Psychiatry. 2023.

A randomized PSG study found 1 hour of 625 nm red light before bedtime increased subjective alertness, anxiety, and negative emotions, with mixed sleep-structure effects.

Source

controlled-trial 30 participants Evidence: low; direction: positive Panel relevance: not-panel-replicable Wavelengths: 628, 631 nm Dose/timing: Not fully reported Area: Eyes/visual system through mask or goggles Device: Red light mask and goggles Source

Figueiro MG, Sahin L, Roohan C, Kalsher M, Plitnick B, Rea MS. Nature and Science of Sleep. 2019.

A crossover study found saturated red light delivered through closed eyelids or after waking improved some performance measures related to sleep inertia.

Source

systematic-review Study count not extracted Evidence: low; direction: mixed Panel relevance: panel-replicable Wavelengths: Not reported Dose/timing: Varied across whole-body PBM studies / Varied across whole-body PBM studies Area: Whole body Device: Whole-body photobiomodulation beds, booths, or large-array devices Source

Álvarez-Martínez M, Borden G. Lasers in Medical Science. 2025.

A systematic review of whole-body PBM found possible sleep-quality improvement but no evidence of benefits for exercise recovery or performance.

Source

Last reviewed: 2026-06-15