LED Light Treatments in Singapore

LED Light Treatments

Evidence-based photobiomodulation (PBM) for acne-prone, sensitive and inflamed skin.

LED light therapy (also called photobiomodulation) is a non-invasive, medical-grade light treatment used in dermatology to support skin healing, calm inflammation, and improve certain skin concerns—most commonly acne, skin rejuvenation and post-procedure redness and discomfort. When done with the right wavelengths, dosing and eye protection, it has a strong safety profile and essentially no downtime.

What is LED light?

LED stands for light-emitting diode. In dermatology, “LED light treatment” refers to a device that emits specific wavelengths of visible (and sometimes near-infrared) light to trigger beneficial biological responses in skin—without burning or removing skin. This is why LED is considered non-ablative and typically non-thermal when used correctly.

What does LED light consist of?

LED light therapy for dermatology delivers photons of light at controlled settings. Clinically, we care about:

  • Wavelength (colour): commonly blue ~415 nm, red ~633–660 nm, and sometimes near-infrared
  • Energy or “dose” (fluence, J/cm²) and power (irradiance, mW/cm²)
  • Treatment time and treatment schedule

Different wavelengths interact with different targets in skin and therefore have different clinical uses.

What are the benefits of LED light in dermatology?

Think of LED as a skin-calming and skin-repairing tool that can be used alone or layered into a broader plan. The benefits of LED light therapy in dermatology are supported by evidence for these conditions:

Acne support (especially inflammatory acne)

  • Blue and red LED have clinical evidence for reducing acne lesions; many doctors use it as an adjunct rather than a stand-alone cure. 
  • The American Academy of Dermatology notes light-based treatments can reduce acne, but often work best alongside medical acne therapy. 

Faster recovery after energy-based procedures

  • Studies show LED (e.g., 635 nm) can reduce post-laser redness and shorten how long erythema lasts after fractional CO₂ resurfacing. 

Skin rejuvenation and collagen repair with led light therapy has been studied, with clinical and lab evidence suggesting improvements in photoaging parameters in some settings.

How LED light works (skin biology, simplified)

Think of LED as a skin-calming and skin-repairing tool that can be used alone or layered into a broader plan. LED therapy works through photobiomodulation: photons are absorbed by cellular photoreceptors (chromophores). One major target for LED light therapy is mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase, which can shift cellular signaling involved in energy (ATP), oxidative stress, and inflammation.

In The Skin Longevity Clinic, we use different wavelengths for dermatological conditions:

  • Blue light (~415 nm): targets acne-related pathways (including interaction with acne-associated bacterial byproducts), helping reduce inflammatory lesions in selected patients.
  • Red light (~633–660 nm): tends to be used for inflammation calming and tissue repair signaling; often paired with blue for acne protocols.

LED light vs lasers (e.g., Q-switched): what’s the difference?

LED light therapy

  • Low-energy, non-ablative light for photobiomodulation
  • Aims to modulate biology (inflammation, repair pathways)
  • Usually no downtime, minimal discomfort

Q-switched lasers

  • High-peak energy, very short pulses (nanoseconds) designed to target pigment (tattoos, certain pigmentation) via selective photothermolysis / photoacoustic fragmentation

 

LED is not a “weaker laser.” It’s a different category of treatment with different goals.

FAQs

What is the procedure like?

A typical in-clinic LED light treatment is straightforward:

  1. Skin assessment (acne type, sensitivity, pigmentation risk, current skincare/medications)
  2. Cleanse 
  3. Protective eyewear is used—especially important for blue light devices 
  4. LED session (commonly 10–20 minutes, depending on device and protocol)
  5. Resume normal activities

LED light therapy should feel warm or bright, but generally not painful.

Is there downtime for LED light therapy?

For a typical LED photobiomodulation (without topical photosensitisers used in photodynamic therapy), there is almost no downtime. Most people can return to work or school immediately.

How soon can I see results from LED light treatment?

This depends on the condition and the treatment plan:

  • Acne: many studies and protocols assess outcomes over weeks, often after a series of sessions rather than one treatment. 
  • Post-procedure redness recovery: improvements can be seen within days in post-laser settings (e.g., differences noted from day 4 in a split-area study). 

In clinic, we usually frame LED as a cumulative therapy—the biology you’re influencing (inflammation signals, repair cycles) takes time.

Can LED light therapy treatments be combined with other aesthetic treatments?

Often, yes—with the right sequencing and skin-barrier planning.

Photobiomodulation is commonly discussed as a supportive treatment to reduce inflammation and support recovery after more intensive procedures (including resurfacing and chemical peels) in some protocols and reviews. 

In The Skin Longevity Clinic, combination plans are tailored around:

  • your skin sensitivity
  • your pigmentation risk (especially in Asian skin)
  • the strength of accompanying treatments
  • timing with actives (retinoids, acids) and any prescription acne therapy

How safe are LED light treatments?

When performed with medical devices and backed with validated protocols, LED photobiomodulation is generally considered safe and well tolerated. 

Key safety points we take seriously

  • Eye protection matters, especially with blue light; medical literature highlights ocular risk with excessive exposure and recommends safe handling. 

Not everyone is suitable: people with photosensitivity disorders or on certain photosensitising medications may require extra caution and medical review.

Doctor Rachel’s Takeaway

LED light therapy is best understood as biology-led dermatology: we use specific wavelengths and dosing to shift the skin away from inflammation and towards repair for skin health and longevity. Evidence supports its role as an adjunct for acne and as a recovery-support tool after certain procedures, with a strong safety profile and minimal downtime when appropriately selected and supervised. 

If you’re considering LED light treatments in Singapore, the most important step is not choosing a “colour”—it’s having a doctor assess your acne subtype, barrier health, pigment risk, and treatment compatibility, so the protocol is truly matched to your skin biology.