CurrentBody sits in an interesting spot in the beauty-tech market. It is not just a retailer carrying lots of third-party devices, and it is not just a single-product brand either. Across its Australia storefront and APAC-facing storefronts, it pushes CurrentBody Skin as a clinically positioned, device-first range focused on LED, radio frequency, hair growth, and recovery tech. The brand says it created the first flexible LED light therapy mask and that this mask is now used by more than 500,000 people across 80 countries.
In this CurrentBody review, I looked at the brand from the perspective of an APAC or Australian customer deciding whether these devices are worth the spend. That means I focused on the things that matter most once the marketing fades: what the brand is strongest at, which devices are most prominently featured, how generous the return terms really are, whether the warranty is competitive, and where the pain points begin. Across the Australia and Singapore/APAC-facing stores, the core promise is clear: clinically oriented beauty tech with at-home convenience, backed by a standard two-year warranty and longer money-back guarantees on selected hero devices.
The short version is this: CurrentBody looks strongest if you specifically want high-ticket at-home beauty devices and are willing to follow a structured treatment plan. It looks less compelling if you prefer lower-risk beauty spending or you want simple, no-questions-asked returns after opening and using products. The general return window is 30 days for unused, unopened items, but selected devices also carry separate 60-day, 90-day, or four-month money-back guarantees, and those guarantees can involve a 10% restocking fee.
I based this review on CurrentBody’s official Australia and Singapore/APAC-facing pages, including product pages, delivery and returns policies, money-back guarantee terms, and the brand’s own “About Us” positioning. I also used the devices CurrentBody places most prominently on its home, CurrentBody Skin, and bestseller-style pages, rather than guessing which products matter most to the brand.
CurrentBody positions itself as a beauty-tech specialist rather than a conventional skincare brand. The company says it is known worldwide for creating the first flexible LED light therapy mask and emphasises independent clinical testing and a medical-expert ecosystem, including a medical board, device testing, and clinically verified product claims.
That positioning matters because it shapes the whole CurrentBody value story. You are not being asked to buy a pretty skincare gadget just because it is trending. You are being asked to buy into a more serious routine-based model where technology, wavelengths, treatment consistency, and before-and-after results all sit at the centre of the pitch.
For APAC and Australian shoppers, that makes CurrentBody feel more focused than many general beauty retailers. But it also means the brand is naturally more expensive and less impulse-friendly. This is a brand for people who already know they want beauty tech, not just anyone browsing for skincare.
Overall, CurrentBody makes the strongest case in categories where clinical-style device routines are already widely accepted: LED anti-ageing, acne support, radio-frequency tightening, and hair-growth support. The devices are not cheap, but they are presented with much more structure than you get from most beauty-tech brands, and that structure is probably the company’s biggest strength.
CurrentBody leans heavily on testing and precision language. Its quality pages say it created an end-to-end production and testing system designed to ensure that only precise LEDs power its devices. On its product pages, the brand repeatedly highlights clinically proven wavelengths, flexible silicone mask shapes, and device-specific claims rather than vague “glow” language. That is a meaningful plus in a category where many brands still oversell weak specs.
The strongest example is the LED Red Light Therapy Face Mask: Series 2, which uses three wavelengths — red at 633nm, near-infrared at 830nm, and deep near-infrared at 1072nm — and claims it can reduce wrinkles and improve plumpness in eight weeks. The LED Multi-Light Therapy Mask goes broader, with six clinically proven LED wavelengths and modes targeting anti-ageing, breakouts, redness, and pigmentation.
The main CurrentBody selling points are straightforward:
What is especially important is that the satisfaction guarantees are not all the same. The Australia storefront lists 60-day guarantees on several LED masks and the RF device, 90 days on the laser hair removal device, and four months on the hair-growth helmet. That gives shoppers more breathing room than a basic unopened-box return policy, but it still requires following the recommended treatment plan and can involve a 10% restocking fee.
This is where CurrentBody becomes easier to judge. If you are the kind of user who will actually follow a treatment schedule, the brand gives you enough structure to make the devices feel purposeful. The homepage highlights before-and-after narratives for fine lines, hair growth, and acne support, with verified buyers describing smoother, brighter skin, fuller hairlines, and calmer skin after consistent use.
If you are not that kind of user, the value drops fast. These are not products that make sense when used sporadically. The whole CurrentBody model depends on routine, repetition, and realistic expectations over several weeks or months. That is true of the devices themselves and also of the money-back guarantees, which are tied to proper usage.
On the shopping side, CurrentBody does a good job. The Australia and Singapore/APAC storefronts clearly separate technology types and concerns, and product pages usually tell you what is in the box, what the device is best for, and how it fits into a wider routine. That reduces a lot of the confusion that usually surrounds beauty tech.
The buying experience is more mixed after checkout. Standard returns are only for new, unused items, and postage costs are not refunded. For APAC customers, the Singapore refund policy also notes that a personal application may be needed to reclaim certain import duties or taxes and that CurrentBody cannot support that process. So while the support structure is solid, the practical return experience is not as effortless as the marketing might make some shoppers hope.
CurrentBody devices are not especially difficult to maintain, but they are still high-touch beauty tools. Product pages typically list what is in the box, and the policies make clear that accessories, cards, and other included items need to be returned for guarantee eligibility. That signals a more structured ownership experience than “plug in and forget.”
The deeper point is that this brand behaves more like consumer tech than like skincare. That has benefits — warranty, defined support, performance framing — but it also means buyers need to be more careful with packaging, accessories, and treatment compliance if they expect support to go smoothly.
CurrentBody is not a budget beauty-tech brand, and it does not really try to be. The value case rests on three things: strong hero devices, a more clinical-style positioning than most competitors, and guarantee structures that give you time to evaluate some of the higher-ticket products. That can feel worth it if you want serious at-home beauty tech. It feels much less convincing if you are simply curious and not ready to commit to regular use.
These are the devices CurrentBody most prominently features across its Australia homepage, CurrentBody Skin pages, and APAC-facing storefront pages.
Best for: People who want the brand’s clearest hero product and a serious anti-ageing LED entry point.
Top 3 key features
One honest drawback: It is still expensive enough that casual users may not get enough value out of it.
Mini verdict: The safest place to start if you want to understand why CurrentBody became known for LED.
Best for: Shoppers who want one premium anti-ageing setup instead of buying separate devices later.
Top 3 key features
One honest drawback: The price jump is significant, so it makes most sense for users already committed to LED.
Mini verdict: One of the best premium bundles in the range, but only if you will really use both parts.
Best for: Users more interested in firmness and tightening than in mask-based LED routines.
Top 3 key features
One honest drawback: RF has a steeper learning curve than simply wearing an LED mask.
Mini verdict: A strong alternative if you want a device that feels a little more treatment-driven than passive.
Best for: Hair-focused shoppers who want a device with a longer evaluation window.
Top 3 key features
One honest drawback: It is one of the priciest CurrentBody devices and asks for patience.
Mini verdict: Probably the best fit in the lineup for buyers willing to commit to a long-term hair routine.
Best for: Users who want one mask that can target more than just anti-ageing.
Top 3 key features
One honest drawback: It is expensive and can be out of stock at times.
Mini verdict: Arguably the most versatile face device in the CurrentBody range, but also one of the easiest to overbuy if you only have one specific concern.
On its official storefronts, CurrentBody presents a mostly positive review picture. The LED Red Light Therapy Face Mask: Series 2 shows a strong rating with thousands of reviews on both the Australia and Singapore/APAC-facing stores. The RF device is also well rated, as is the Multi-Light Therapy Mask, and the Face & Neck Kit performs well on the APAC-facing page.
The recurring themes are exactly what you would expect from the category: smoother skin, brighter complexion, softer lines, calmer breakouts, and fuller hair. The homepage’s before-and-after section highlights those same patterns using verified-buyer examples for fine lines, hair density, and blemish reduction. Product-page snippets for the RF device and neck mask also lean positive, with users saying the devices feel easy to use and worth the investment.
That said, this is still brand-hosted review content, so I would read it as directional rather than definitive. The broader takeaway is not “every product is perfect,” but that CurrentBody’s hero devices appear to have enough satisfied users to support the brand’s premium positioning.
Yes. CurrentBody looks like a legitimate beauty-tech brand and retailer with structured regional storefronts, detailed product pages, clear returns and warranty pages, a medical board, independent testing language, and published support resources. The company’s Australia pages are much more developed than what you usually see from lower-end beauty gadget sellers.
For the right buyer, yes. CurrentBody is worth considering if you already believe in at-home beauty tech, want a more clinical-feeling device brand, and are willing to use the devices consistently enough to justify the cost. It is much less attractive if you want low-commitment skincare spending or you tend to abandon routines after two weeks.
CurrentBody and FOREO overlap in beauty-tech, but they have different strengths. CurrentBody is stronger for treatment-led LED and RF routines, with longer satisfaction windows on selected hero devices and a broader “clinic-at-home” feel. FOREO looks stronger if you want a more general beauty-tech ecosystem, but its official support pages say returns are only accepted for unopened products within 14 days, while CurrentBody allows 30-day returns for unused unopened items and offers extra money-back guarantees on selected devices. FOREO says it guarantees at least a two-year warranty worldwide, while CurrentBody also offers a standard two-year warranty.
My take is simple: choose CurrentBody if your priority is LED masks, RF, or hair-growth routines with a more treatment-focused framework. Choose FOREO if you want broader beauty-tech variety and are less interested in long-form guarantee periods.
CurrentBody’s regional storefronts visibly use promotional pricing, kits, and bundles. The Australia and Singapore/APAC-facing sites both show bundled LED kits, price comparisons, and “worth” callouts on some of the more premium bundles, which suggests the brand actively uses bundle-led value messaging rather than relying only on full-price single-device sales.
You can buy CurrentBody directly from the Australia storefront or from the Singapore/APAC-facing storefront, depending on your region. Both regional sites surface the core hero devices, the support hub, returns information, and the guarantee pages directly within the shopping flow.
Yes. CurrentBody has structured regional stores, a medical board, clinically framed product pages, and published warranty and returns policies.
Yes. CurrentBody says its devices come with a standard two-year warranty across the Australia and Singapore/APAC-facing stores.
Standard returns are 30 days for unused, unopened items with all accessories and seals intact. Shipping or postage costs are not refunded.
Yes, on selected devices. The Australia storefront lists 60-day guarantees for several LED masks and the RF device, 90 days for laser hair removal, and four months for the hair-growth helmet.
It can be, especially if you want a serious at-home LED or RF routine and will use the device consistently.
For most people, the LED Red Light Therapy Face Mask: Series 2 is the clearest starting point because it is the brand’s best-known hero device.
CurrentBody is better for treatment-led LED and RF beauty tech. FOREO is better for a broader, more general beauty-device ecosystem.
The Singapore/APAC-facing storefront supports multiple regional currencies and operates its own delivery and returns structure, which suggests an active regional APAC setup.
CurrentBody is one of the more convincing beauty-tech brands in the APAC and Australia market because it does not just sell gadgets — it sells a full treatment logic. The strongest parts of the brand are its LED leadership, the way it frames product performance, and the fact that its hero devices actually get longer trial-style guarantee windows than many competitors offer.
The catch is that this is not casual beauty shopping. It is expensive, it asks for consistency, and its standard return policy is much stricter than the big claims around satisfaction might imply at first glance. But for shoppers who genuinely want high-end beauty tech and are willing to use it properly, CurrentBody is easy to take seriously.
Rating: 8.7/10