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Harnessing Light for
Holistic Wellness
Last updated: June 26, 2026 | 14-minute read
Most people treat red light therapy timing as an afterthought: complete the session, check the box, and move on. But when you use red light therapy around exercise can influence the type of response you are trying to support.
So, should you use red light therapy before or after a workout? The practical answer is: use it before training if your main goal is performance support, and use it after training if your main goal is recovery support. Both timing windows have been studied in photobiomodulation research, but they are not used for the same reason.
Pre-workout use is generally aimed at preparing working muscles before the exercise demand begins. Post-workout use is generally aimed at supporting recovery after exercise-related stress has already occurred. Your goal — performance, soreness management, training consistency, or general wellness — should guide the timing.
This article explains the difference in a practical, evidence-aware way.
Red and near-infrared wavelengths penetrating skin layers
Red light therapy is a common term for photobiomodulation, or PBM. It uses non-ionizing red and near-infrared light to interact with light-sensitive structures inside cells. One of the most discussed targets is cytochrome c oxidase, an enzyme involved in mitochondrial energy metabolism.
This does not mean red light therapy is the same as heat therapy. While some devices may feel warm, PBM is primarily discussed as a light-driven biological process rather than a purely thermal one.
The most commonly used wavelength ranges in consumer and professional devices are:
Red and near-infrared wavelengths do not behave identically in tissue. Red wavelengths are often used for more superficial targets, while near-infrared wavelengths are commonly selected when the target is deeper soft tissue. However, tissue penetration is not determined by wavelength alone. It also depends on irradiance, treatment distance, optical design, skin type, tissue composition, contact method, and treatment area.
That is why timing matters. Muscle tissue is not in the same physiological state before and after exercise. Before training, the goal is usually to support readiness and performance. After training, the goal is usually to support recovery, soreness management, and readiness for the next session.
Athlete using a red light therapy panel before training
Pre-workout PBM is often described as a way to prepare working muscles before exercise begins. In research settings, light is typically applied to major muscle groups before strength, endurance, or repeated-effort tasks.
The proposed mechanism is related to mitochondrial activity, oxygen utilization, and oxidative stress regulation. In simple terms, pre-exercise PBM may help create a more favorable cellular environment before the muscle is placed under high demand.
Studies and reviews on exercise performance have reported outcomes such as delayed fatigue, improved muscular endurance, and better recovery markers in some protocols. However, these effects are protocol-dependent. Wavelength, dose, treatment site, timing, and participant training status all matter.
For this reason, it is better to say that pre-workout red light therapy may support performance-related outcomes rather than saying it directly "boosts ATP" or guarantees better strength.
Pre-workout timing is most relevant for people whose priority is the quality of the upcoming session.
This may include:
A practical pre-workout window is usually 10–20 minutes before training, depending on the device instructions and the target area. The goal is not to use the longest possible session. The goal is to deliver a meaningful, controlled dose before exercise begins.
Device output matters here. A product's peak irradiance number is not enough. The useful dose depends on the irradiance delivered at the actual treatment distance and over the actual treatment area.
Person using red light therapy after workout recovery
Post-workout red light therapy is usually used for recovery support. Exercise creates normal physiological stress: muscle fiber micro-damage, temporary inflammation, reactive oxygen species, and soreness-related signaling. These processes are not automatically bad. They are part of adaptation.
The goal of post-workout PBM is not to eliminate inflammation completely. A more accurate description is that it may help modulate excessive inflammatory signaling and support cellular recovery processes.
This distinction is important. Overstating red light therapy as an "anti-inflammatory cure" can make the article sound medically exaggerated. A better approach is to explain that PBM may help support recovery when used as part of a broader routine that also includes sleep, nutrition, hydration, and appropriate training load.
Post-workout timing is most useful for people who care about recovery speed and training consistency.
This may include:
A practical post-workout window is soon after training, often within 30–60 minutes. This should not be presented as a strict biological cutoff. Waiting longer may still be useful, but immediate or near-immediate use is easier to integrate into a recovery routine.
Decision tree infographic for red light therapy timing
The best timing depends on what you want from the session.
If your main goal is performance support during the workout, pre-workout timing is the more logical choice. Apply red light therapy to the main muscle groups you plan to train.
A practical setup is:
For endurance training, pre-workout PBM may be useful when applied to large working muscle groups. Some users may also add a shorter post-workout session during high-volume training weeks.
However, two full sessions are not automatically better than one. PBM follows a dose-dependent response. More light is not always better.
If the goal is muscle recovery, soreness management, or next-day readiness, post-workout timing is usually the better fit.
A practical setup is:
Some users also apply red light therapy after workouts for skin comfort, especially after outdoor exercise, sweat irritation, or general facial care. In this case, red wavelengths may be more relevant than deeper near-infrared-focused protocols.
Be careful with irritated, sunburned, broken, or overheated skin. Do not treat damaged skin directly unless the device instructions specifically allow it.
Yes, some athletes use a split approach: a shorter pre-workout session for performance support and a post-workout session for recovery support.
This can make sense, but total dose matters. PBM is not a "more is always better" intervention. Too much exposure may reduce the intended benefit or increase the chance of discomfort, especially with high-output or close-contact devices.
If you use both timing windows, consider:
Irradiance measurement comparison
Timing only matters if the device delivers a reliable dose.
PBM research is dose-dependent. The dose is influenced by:
A device labeled "660 nm" or "850 nm" should be supported by spectral testing. A device claiming strong irradiance should specify the measurement distance and testing method. Without this information, the user may not know whether the dose used in real life resembles the dose used in research.
For professional buyers, quality documentation matters. Useful documents may include:
ISO 13485 and MDSAP are quality management frameworks. They support documented manufacturing and regulatory processes, but they should not be described as direct proof that every dose claim is clinically validated. Product-level performance should still be supported by test reports.
Safe red light therapy setup
Red and near-infrared light are non-ionizing, meaning they do not damage DNA in the same way ultraviolet radiation can. However, non-ionizing does not mean risk-free.
Users should still follow basic safety rules:
Post-exercise skin may feel warm, flushed, or less sensitive to discomfort. This makes it especially important to follow the device manual instead of relying only on how the skin feels during the session.
Use red light therapy 10–20 minutes before training when your goal is performance support.
Best for:
Keep the setup consistent. Use the same distance, duration, and target area for several weeks before judging the effect.
Use red light therapy soon after training, ideally within a practical 30–60 minute window, when your goal is recovery support.
Best for:
Do not treat this as a strict medical rule. It is a practical timing target.
Consistency matters more than occasional long sessions. For active people, 3–5 sessions per week is a common practical starting point, depending on training frequency and device instructions.
For most users focused on recovery, red light therapy after a workout is the simplest and most practical option. It fits naturally into a recovery routine and targets the period when muscles are already responding to exercise stress.
For users focused on performance, pre-workout use may be more relevant. Applying PBM before training may support muscular readiness, endurance, or fatigue resistance in some protocols.
Using both before and after training can be reasonable for experienced users, but the total dose should be controlled. More exposure is not automatically better.
The best timing is the one that matches your goal, your device, and your ability to use it consistently.
For muscle recovery, post-workout use is usually the more practical choice. It aligns with the period when the body is already responding to exercise-related stress. A good target is soon after training, often within 30–60 minutes.
Pre-workout PBM has been studied for performance-related outcomes such as fatigue resistance, muscular endurance, and strength performance. Results depend on the protocol, dose, wavelength, and training context, so it should be described as performance support rather than a guaranteed boost.
A common practical window is 10–20 minutes before exercise. Follow the device manual and keep distance and session length consistent.
Soon after training is a practical target. Many users choose a 30–60 minute window because it is easy to combine with cooldown, hydration, and stretching. It is not necessary to describe this as a strict cutoff.
Yes, but total dose matters. If using both windows, shorten individual sessions and follow the device's tested recommendations. Avoid assuming that two full-length sessions are better.
Some research suggests PBM may help reduce soreness or improve recovery markers under specific protocols. Results are not identical across all studies, so it is better to present this as a potential recovery-support tool rather than a guaranteed DOMS solution.
Near-infrared wavelengths such as 810–850 nm are commonly used for muscle-focused PBM because they are often selected for deeper soft-tissue applications. Red wavelengths such as 630–660 nm may be useful for more superficial tissue targets. A combination of red and near-infrared light is common, but the dose and device design matter as much as the wavelength label.
For most healthy users, immediate post-workout use is generally practical when the device is used according to instructions. However, avoid treating sunburned, irritated, broken, or unusually sensitive skin. Follow the recommended distance and session time.
Many practical routines use 3–5 sessions per week, often aligned with training days. Daily use may be appropriate for some users if the device instructions support it, but consistency and dose control matter more than frequency alone.
No. Red light therapy should complement recovery basics, not replace them. Sleep, nutrition, hydration, mobility work, and appropriate training load remain essential.