5 Reasons Women Are Swapping $200 Facials for This $69 Wand

Auralux · 5-minute read

5 reasons women are swapping $200 med-spa facials for a $69 wand they use at home

Med-spa facials feel amazing — for about a week. Then the glow fades, and the next appointment costs another $150–250. Here's why at-home red light + microcurrent devices have become the fastest-growing category in beauty — and why the Auralux Radiance Wand is the version women keep.

1. The tech is the same idea — minus the appointment

Spa “glow” treatments lean on two workhorses: light therapy and microcurrent stimulation. The Radiance Wand puts both in a cordless tool you glide along your cheeks, jawline and neck for 5 minutes while your coffee brews. No booking, no babysitter, no drive.

2. One price, forever — not per visit

One facial: $150–250. The wand: $69.99, once. If you'd otherwise go to the spa even twice a year, it pays for itself before spring. Use it daily and the math gets silly.

3. Five minutes actually fits a real morning

The whole ritual: apply serum or Glow Gel, glide upward for 5 minutes, done. Most women pair it with something they already do — podcast, coffee, skincare — so it sticks. Consistency is what makes results build week over week.

4. It de-puffs on day one — and builds from there

The soothing warmth helps melt away morning puffiness immediately, which is why the first session sells the second one. The lifted, sculpted look develops with consistent use over 2–4 weeks. It's a ritual, not magic — and that's exactly why it works.

5. There's genuinely nothing to lose

Every wand ships free (tracked, US) and carries a 60-Day Glow Guarantee: use it for two full months, and if you don't love what you see in the mirror, email support for a full refund. Keep-or-refund decisions belong to you, not us.

The Auralux Radiance Wand

$139.99 $69.99 · free US shipping

Get the Radiance Wand →

Prefer the full ritual? The Ritual Kit (wand + conductive gel) saves $9.

Auralux devices are cosmetic beauty tools intended to support an at-home skincare routine; they are not medical devices and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any condition. Individual results vary.