IPL and Laser: What's Actually Different?
Walk into any beauty retailer and you'll see two types of at-home hair removal devices: IPL (Intense Pulsed Light) and devices marketed as "laser." Both use light to destroy hair follicles. Both promise permanent reduction. Both cost $200–$600. But they work in meaningfully different ways — and one may not work at all for your skin tone.
How IPL Works
IPL devices emit a broad spectrum of light wavelengths (typically 500–1200nm) in a flash. The light is absorbed by melanin (the pigment) in your hair follicle, converted to heat, and that heat damages the follicle enough to stop or slow regrowth. Because IPL scatters light across a wide spectrum, it covers a larger area per flash but delivers less targeted energy than laser.
Result: IPL typically achieves 70–90% hair reduction after 8–12 sessions.
How At-Home "Laser" Devices Work
True at-home laser devices (like the Tria Beauty 4X) use a single, precise wavelength — 810nm diode laser — the same wavelength professional clinics use. This targeted beam delivers more energy directly to the follicle with less scatter. At-home lasers are limited in power output by FDA safety regulations (they cannot match clinic-grade devices), but they're more effective per pulse than IPL.
Result: The Tria 4X typically achieves 70–80% reduction in 3 months vs. 6–8 months for IPL.
The Skin Tone Problem
This is the most important factor most people ignore. Both IPL and laser work by targeting melanin — which means they work best when there's high contrast between dark hair and light skin. If there's too little contrast (light hair + light skin, or dark hair + dark skin), the devices either don't work or can cause burns.
| Skin Tone (Fitzpatrick) | IPL Safety | At-Home Laser Safety |
|---|---|---|
| I–II (Very fair/Fair) | ✅ Safe, effective | ✅ Safe, effective |
| III (Medium) | ✅ Safe, effective | ✅ Safe |
| IV (Olive/Medium dark) | ⚠️ Use lowest setting | ⚠️ Caution |
| V–VI (Dark/Very dark) | ❌ Burn risk | ❌ Not safe |
Important exception: Nd:YAG 1064nm laser is safe for dark skin tones — but at-home Nd:YAG devices don't really exist yet. Dark skin tones should see a professional using an Nd:YAG or diode laser instead.
Best At-Home IPL Devices 2026
Braun Silk-Expert Pro 5 — Best Overall IPL
The Braun Silk-Expert Pro 5 is the most reliable at-home IPL device available. It has a built-in skin tone sensor that automatically adjusts energy output for your exact skin color — meaning it's safer for a broader range of tones (up to Fitzpatrick IV) and more effective per flash. 400,000 flash lifespan. Used consistently, most users see 80%+ reduction in 3–4 months.
Ulike Air 3 — Best for Sensitive Skin
The Ulike Air 3 uses sapphire ice-cooling technology to keep the treatment head cold during use, dramatically reducing the burning sensation common with IPL. It's one of the most comfortable devices we've tested and still delivers solid results.
Tria Beauty 4X Laser — Fastest Results
If you want the most powerful at-home option and have fair-to-medium skin, the Tria 4X is the only true at-home diode laser. It delivers clinical-grade 810nm laser energy (limited to FDA-safe power levels) and shows faster results than any IPL device. Expensive at $449, but unmatched effectiveness for the right skin type.
→ See Full At-Home Hair Removal Reviews
IPL vs Laser: Which Should You Choose?
For most people with fair-to-medium skin: start with IPL. The Braun Silk-Expert is safer, covers larger areas faster, and is much more affordable than the Tria. For people who want the fastest possible results and have fair skin, the Tria 4X is worth the investment. For darker skin tones (Fitzpatrick V–VI), skip both and see a professional using Nd:YAG laser — it's not worth the burn risk.