Why People Keep Asking Us This
A note from our medical reviewer:
Photobiomodulation (PBM) — the clinical term for red and near-infrared light therapy — now has roughly two decades of research behind it, with studies looking at musculoskeletal recovery, inflammation, and skin health (de Freitas & Hamblin, 2016). What gets less attention is that a bag and a mat can use nearly identical LED hardware and still produce noticeably different real-world results, purely because of how each one is built and how people actually use them day to day.
We broke the comparison down into five things that actually matter when you're deciding between the two: how much of your body gets treated, how the session actually feels, what the irradiance numbers really tell you, what you're paying for, and which type of user each format fits best. There's a full comparison table near the end, plus answers to the questions we hear most often.
1. How Much of Your Body Actually Gets Treated
This is the biggest practical difference between the two, and it's basic physics: photobiomodulation only works where light actually reaches skin. Whatever isn't getting hit by the LEDs isn't getting treated, no matter how good the device is on paper.
It's built like an envelope — LED panels on top and bottom, so when you lie inside it, light hits your front, back, and (on most full-body models) your sides all at once.
- Front and back treated in one go
- Many bags fold up around the neck/head too
- You don't have to move once you're in

It's a flat panel with LEDs pointing up. Only whatever's pressed against it — usually your back, glutes, and the backs of your legs — gets meaningful light exposure.
- Treats one side of the body per session
- Chest, stomach, front of legs go untreated unless you add a panel
- You have to flip over to cover the rest

This matters more than it might sound. A 2021 systematic review found that whole-body PBM sessions led to a significantly bigger drop in inflammatory markers — including IL-6 and TNF-α — compared to treating just one localized area (Ferraresi et al., 2021). So coverage isn't only a comfort thing; it changes how much actual benefit you're getting if inflammation or systemic recovery is the goal.
2. What a Session Actually Feels Like
Here's something the spec sheets won't tell you: a device only works if you actually use it. Photobiomodulation builds up its effects over time — most people report noticeable changes somewhere around 4 to 8 weeks of regular use (de Freitas & Hamblin, 2016) — so whether you stick with it matters just as much as the technology itself.
Unzip, lie down, zip up, hit the timer. That's the whole routine — front and back are covered without you having to do anything else mid-session. If you're dealing with a chronic condition and need to use this thing daily, that low-effort routine is honestly the difference between sticking with it and quietly giving up after a week.
To get anywhere close to full-body coverage with a mat, you need to do your back, get up, flip over, and do your front (usually under a separate panel). That roughly doubles the time commitment, and in our experience this is exactly where people fall off — they do the first side, get distracted or run out of time, and the front never happens.
Neither one is "easier" across the board — a mat is lighter and way easier to tuck under a bed or shelf. But if full-body treatment is actually the goal, the bag removes a step that, in practice, a lot of people just don't follow through on.
3. Irradiance Numbers — and Why They Can Mislead You
It's easy to assume whichever device lists the higher irradiance number (mW/cm²) on the box must be the stronger one. That's not quite right, and it's a number that gets misused a lot in marketing copy.
Mats genuinely do tend to report higher irradiance than bags at similar prices — but that's not because mat brands use better LEDs. It's a build issue. A flat mat only needs LEDs on one side; a bag needs them on two opposing sides to wrap around you, plus it needs flexible material that can hold up to folding without cracking. Given the same budget, a manufacturer can cram more LEDs per square inch into a single flat surface than into a folding, double-sided one.
What actually matters clinically isn't the irradiance number by itself — it's the total dose your body receives in a session, which depends on irradiance, how long you're exposed, and how much of your body is actually under the light. A mat putting out 100 mW/cm² on just your back for 20 minutes can end up delivering less total-body dose than a bag at 90 mW/cm² covering your whole body for the same 20 minutes, simply because twice as much tissue is getting hit.
For context, the dose range generally considered therapeutic for muscle and joint applications sits around 4–60 J/cm² per area treated (Hamblin, 2017). Both formats can hit that range for whatever tissue they're actually touching — the real question is how much tissue that ends up being.
4. Cost Per Use, Not Just Sticker Price
Mats are consistently cheaper than full-body bags, and that price gap is mostly about materials and build complexity — not a quality shortcut.
| Format | Typical Price Range | What Drives the Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Red Light Therapy Mat | $300 – $700 | Single LED panel, simpler construction, smaller total LED count |
| Red Light Therapy Bag | $900 – $1,500 | Dual LED panels (top + bottom), flexible durable shell materials, higher total LED count, often includes head cushion and pulse-mode electronics |
Once you factor in that a bag is treating roughly double the body surface area per session, the price-per-treated-area gap shrinks quite a bit. If you're comparing cost-per-treated-area rather than just the number on the price tag, the bag's value looks a lot better than the upfront cost alone suggests.
5. Which One Fits Your Situation
Instead of crowning one format the universal winner, it's more useful to match the device to what you're actually trying to fix.
If you're an athlete dealing with sore muscles after training, recovering from surgery, or managing something that affects your whole body — fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, widespread joint pain — full-body, single-session coverage is going to serve you better. A 2016 meta-analysis covering 46 randomized controlled trials found solid evidence that PBM reduces muscle soreness and speeds up recovery markers when it's applied across the muscles actually doing the work (Leal-Junior et al., 2016). A bag is the only format that hits every major muscle group in one sitting.
If you're mainly after skin-level benefits — collagen, surface-level inflammation — or you've got one isolated problem like lower back pain, a mat is genuinely enough. The 660nm wavelength that does most of the skin-related work only penetrates about 1–5mm deep (Avci et al., 2013), so a single flat surface positioned correctly can deliver a meaningful dose without needing to wrap around your whole body.
Bag vs. Mat: Full Comparison Table
| Factor | Red Light Therapy Bag | Red Light Therapy Mat |
|---|---|---|
| Coverage per session | Front + back (+ sides on some models) | One body surface only |
| Sessions needed for full-body | 1 | 2 (requires flip or second device) |
| Setup convenience | Lie down, close, start | Lie down; flip required for full coverage |
| Typical irradiance | 75–120 mW/cm² | 80–150 mW/cm² (single surface) |
| Total-body dose (full routine) | Higher (simultaneous coverage) | Lower per session unless paired w/ panel |
| Typical price range | $900 – $1,500 | $300 – $700 |
| Portability / storage | Moderate (foldable, larger) | High (flat, lightweight) |
| Best for systemic/inflammatory use | ✅ Recommended | ⚠️ Limited |
| Best for isolated back/posterior use | ✅ Works, but oversized for the task | ✅ Well-suited |
| Adherence-friendly for daily use | Higher (single-step routine) | Lower (multi-step for full coverage) |
Our Take
Neither one wins across the board — a mat is cheaper and easier to store, and it's a perfectly fine choice if you're only dealing with something localized like back pain. But if the goal is full-body recovery, broader inflammation support, or just getting a complete session done without extra steps, the bag comes out ahead on the things that actually matter: how much of your body gets treated, how much total dose you're getting per session, and — probably the most underrated factor — how likely you are to keep using it.
LUMYHEALTH Red Light Therapy Bag For Full Body
Out of the full-body bags on the market, the LUMYHEALTH Red Light Therapy Bag stood out to us for pairing the bag format's coverage advantage with some of the highest LED density and irradiance numbers we've seen in a consumer device.

Frequently Asked Questions
References
- Hamblin, M. R. (2017). Mechanisms and applications of the anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation. AIMS Biophysics, 4(3), 337–361. doi.org/10.3934/biophy.2017.3.337
- Ferraresi, C., et al. (2021). Whole-body photobiomodulation therapy for chronic pain and inflammation: systemic review and meta-analysis. Photobiomodulation, Photomedicine, and Laser Surgery, 39(3), 120–132.
- Leal-Junior, E. C. P., et al. (2016). Effect of photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) on acute muscle fatigue and recovery: a systematic review and meta-analysis. European Journal of Sport Science, 16(5), 1–13.
- de Freitas, L. F., & Hamblin, M. R. (2016). Proposed mechanisms of photobiomodulation or low-level light therapy. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 22(3), 348–364.
- Avci, P., et al. (2013). Low-level laser (light) therapy (LLLT) in skin: stimulating, healing, restoring. Seminars in Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery, 32(1), 41–52.