Updated June 2026 · Price verified at publication

Therasage TheraPro Review: The Swiss Army Pad

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The TheraPro is what happens when a company refuses to choose. PEMF with nine frequency settings, full-spectrum infrared heat, red and near-infrared light, grounding, TENS, and a mineral layer of jade, rose quartz, amethyst, tourmaline, and shungite, all in one 58.5" x 26" pad for $999. If you were pricing a dedicated PEMF mat and a dedicated red light mat separately, you'd clear $999 fast, and that consolidation is the entire case for this product.

It's a real case. It just comes with caveats the sales page won't give you.

Price: $999 (Large), 110v and 220v versions

Size: 58.5" x 26" (Large)

Modalities: PEMF (9 frequency settings), full-spectrum infrared heat, red + NIR light, grounding, TENS

LED count: not published

Irradiance: not published

Warranty: 1 year limited

What You're Actually Buying

A heated multi-modality recovery pad, full-length but narrower than the true full-body mats. The headline act is the combination: infrared heat warms you the way a sauna pad does, PEMF cycles through selectable frequencies, and the red and NIR LEDs add light therapy on top. For people who respond to heat first and light second, the TheraPro's priorities are arguably the right ones.

Therasage has been in infrared products for two decades and has a loyal practitioner following, which counts for something in a category full of brands younger than your sneakers.

The Good

The modality stack is genuinely economical. A standalone PEMF mat alone often runs $700 to $1,500. Getting credible PEMF, infrared heat, and red light in one $999 device is the best consolidation play in this roundup.

Heat plus light in one session. None of the dedicated red light mats here produce meaningful warmth. If your recovery routine is built around heat, the TheraPro replaces two devices and one extension cord.

Full-length coverage at the second-lowest price. $999 for a 58.5" pad undercuts every full-body light mat here except the Hooga, which is half the size.

The Not-So-Good

Therasage won't tell you the light specs. No published LED count. No irradiance figure. No red-to-NIR ratio. Every other brand in this roundup publishes at least some of this. For a $999 product where light is a headline feature, "trust us" is not a spec, and you should treat the red light component as a bonus on a heat-and-PEMF pad, not a rival to the MitoMAT.

The crystals are decoration. The mineral layer is sold hard: rose quartz for "emotional healing," amethyst for "spiritual connection," shungite to "neutralize EMFs." Stones can hold and distribute heat, and that part is real. The rest is poetry with a markup. No stone neutralizes electromagnetic fields, and a company that engineers EMF shielding (which Therasage also claims, credibly) doesn't need magic rocks to do it.

One-year warranty on a five-modality device. More features means more failure points: controllers, LED strings, PEMF coils, heating elements. One year of coverage is the category norm but feels thinner here than anywhere else.

Who Should Buy It

Who Should Buy Something Else

Verdict: Buy the TheraPro as a heated PEMF pad with red light included, and at $999 it's a defensible, even smart purchase. Buy it as a red light mat and you're buying the only product in this roundup that won't tell you what's inside. We'd pay for the heat and the PEMF. We wouldn't pay for the shungite.

Check Therasage price Budget vs premium comparison

Sources: manufacturer specifications and FAQ (therasage.com), authorized retailer listings (Recovery for Athletes, Carbon Wellness MD), June 2026.