Current Body LED Face Mask Series 2Review
I spent $470 on a glowing silicone face mask. My boyfriend thought I’d joined a
cult. My skin, three months later, has never looked better — and I’m genuinely
annoyed it actually worked.
Let me back up. I’d been seeing the Current Body LED face mask absolutely everywhere —
Instagram, TikTok, beauty editor “must haves,” you name it. Google searches for this thing shot
up over 5,000% in the past year. I was skeptical. Really skeptical. I’d wasted money on
gimmicky beauty gadgets before (RIP, my $80 facial roller that did absolutely nothing). But after
my aesthetician mentioned it — unprompted — during a facial, I figured fine. I’ll test it properly
and tell you exactly what happened.
So here it is: my full, no-fluff, 90-day review of the Current Body Skin LED Light Therapy Face
Mask Series 2. I’ll tell you what changed, what didn’t, what I wish I’d known before buying, and
whether you should spend your hard-earned money on it.
Overall Rating: 4.4 / 5 ★★★★½
Effective for anti-aging & glow. Pricey but delivers real results with consistency.
Quick Summary — Who Should (and
Shouldn’t) Buy This
BUY IT IF YOU…
✓ Are serious about anti-aging and want clinical-grade results at home
✓ Have fine lines, uneven texture, or dull skin you want to address
✓ Can commit to 10 minutes, 3–5x per week consistently
✓ Want to replace expensive monthly facial appointments
✓ Have acne-prone or inflamed skin that needs calming
SKIP IT IF YOU…
✗ Want overnight results — this takes 4–8+ weeks
✗ Are under 25 with minimal skin concerns
✗ Have photosensitivity conditions or take photosensitizing medications
✗ Are pregnant (not recommended)
✗ Can’t commit to consistent use — occasional use won’t do much
My 90-Day Experience — The Real Story
I started using the Current Body Series 2 in early January, treating it like a proper science
experiment. I kept everything else in my skincare routine the same — same cleanser, same
serum, same moisturizer — so I could actually attribute any changes to the mask and not
something else I’d swapped in.
Weeks 1–2: Getting Used to It (and Feeling Silly)
Okay, the first time you put this thing on, it’s a lot. The mask is made of this flexible liquid
silicone and it molds to your face in a way that feels oddly intimate. You press a button, it glows
red and near-infrared, and then you just… sit there for 10 minutes. I used the time to watch TV.
My cat was deeply unsettled by my appearance.
In the first two weeks? Honestly, not much happened visually. My skin felt slightly more hydrated
after sessions — that part I noticed pretty quickly. But nothing dramatic. I was 50% convinced I’d
been had.