Just Launched: Dreame Chrona Pro Max Brings Five-Mode LED Therapy — and Therabody Goes Palm-Sized

Just Launched: Dreame Enters the LED Mask Market — and Therabody Takes Recovery Tech Portable

11 June 2026 — Two notable device launches this month signal where beauty and wellness tech is heading: a vacuum-cleaning giant has entered the LED mask arena, and Therabody has shrunk performance recovery into the palm of your hand.


Dreame Chrona Pro Max: A New Contender in Light Therapy

Dreame — the brand you probably know for robot vacuum cleaners — has launched its first-ever LED face mask, the Chrona Pro Max, at its Dreame NEXT 2026 event in Silicon Valley last month. And on paper, it's not a tentative first attempt.

The Chrona Pro Max is a completely cordless, five-mode LED mask that targets the standard trio of skin concerns: wrinkles (red light), redness and inflammation (infrared), and acne (blue light). The five treatment modes allow users to toggle between specific wavelengths depending on the concern — a feature typically found in masks at the upper end of the market.

Key details that have surfaced:

  • Five distinct light therapy modes covering red, blue, infrared, and combination protocols
  • Fully cordless design — no tether to a controller or power bank
  • Rigid shell construction with eye and mouth cutouts — closer to the CurrentBody/Omnilux form factor than flexible silicone masks
  • Pricing yet to be confirmed for UK markets, though US indications suggest a sub-£300 positioning

Dreame's entry matters not because the brand has skincare heritage (it doesn't), but because it signals that the LED mask category is now attracting major consumer electronics players. When a company that builds LiDAR-navigated robot vacuums starts producing light therapy masks, you're looking at hardware manufacturers treating skincare as an engineering problem — not a cosmetic one.


Therabody CryoTherm Palm: Cooling Meets Skincare-Adjacent Recovery

Therabody has launched the CryoTherm Palm, a handheld thermoregulation device that uses palm cooling to accelerate recovery during and after workouts. Priced at $400 (~£320), it debuted this month with the England men's national football team.

While this isn't a facial device, the CryoTherm Palm sits on an interesting boundary between sports recovery and the broader beauty-tech ecosystem. Therabody already has an LED face mask in its lineup, and the company's expansion into targeted thermal devices suggests a future where at-home beauty hardware incorporates more than just light.

The device works by cooling the palm — a highly vascular area — to lower core body temperature during rest intervals. The mechanism is thermoregulatory, not cosmetic, but the "device for every body part" trend is one to watch. Hands, scalp, neck, chest — the mask is no longer the only piece of real estate device brands are fighting over.


Why It Matters

The LED mask market, projected to exceed £1 billion globally by 2027, is now attracting engineering-heavy brands with no legacy in beauty. That's good for consumers — it means competition on specs (diode count, irradiance, battery life) rather than brand prestige alone. For those tracking the category, the Dreame Chrona Pro Max is worth watching as a potential value disruptor when UK pricing and availability are confirmed.


FoundYourNext tracks every significant device launch in the beauty-tech category — so you don't have to. Browse our full range of LED masks at foundyournext.shop.

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