Your face holds tension in places you don’t notice until something presses it out: the clenched jaw, the puffy under-eye morning after salty takeout, the tight band across your forehead. Gua sha is the old trick for that, and the Glokore is the plugged-in version of it.

It’s an electric gua sha, a smooth heart-shaped tool that keeps the traditional scraping shape but adds vibration, warmth, and red and blue light. The pitch is that you get the contouring ritual of a jade stone plus a few technologies a rock can’t offer.

For this electric gua sha review we went through Glokore’s own product claims, the way its four modes are supposed to work, the wider research on gua sha and red light, and how it stacks up against a plain stone tool and pricier LED wands. We weighted what holds up over what sounds good in an ad.

The short version: it’s a genuinely handy $49.99 depuffing and glow tool that contours the jaw and neck nicely, as long as you go in knowing what an at-home device can and can’t do, and you ignore the brand’s headline “87%” stat. Let’s get into it.

What the Glokore electric gua sha is

The Glokore electric gua sha facial tool with its blue light strip lit

The Glokore is a rechargeable, handheld facial tool shaped like a classic gua sha stone, with a curved edge that sits along your jaw, cheekbone and neck. Instead of relying purely on your hand pressure, it drives a high-frequency vibration and warms up, and it carries LED light in the head.

Traditional gua sha is a centuries-old practice of gently scraping the skin to boost microcirculation and ease muscle tension. The Glokore keeps that motion and shape, then layers technology on top so the results lean less on your technique.

It’s small, light and cordless, so it lives on a bathroom shelf and charges by USB. The contact surface is smooth, which is the point: it should glide, not drag.

The four modes, and what each actually does

The Glokore electric gua sha held in a hand showing its lit massage-mode display

Glokore calls this a 4-in-1 tool, and the modes show on a small display when you cycle the power button. Here’s the honest read on each.

Facial massage (vibration) is the workhorse. The vibration relaxes tension and helps move fluid, which is what gives you that morning de-puff. It’s the mode you’ll use most.

Therapeutic warmth gently heats the head. Warmth relaxes muscles and, more usefully, helps a serum or oil sink in, so pairing it with your skincare is the smart move.

Red light therapy uses light in the roughly 630 to 660nm range that’s genuinely studied for stimulating collagen and calming inflammation. On a small home device it’s gentle, so think slow, cumulative support, not a dermatologist’s panel.

Blue light targets oil and blemish-causing bacteria, which is why Glokore frames it as the acne and oil-control mode. If breakouts aren’t your issue, you’ll mostly stick to the first three.

How you actually use it

A model demonstrating the upward and outward strokes used with the Glokore electric gua sha

Start on clean skin and add a facial oil or serum so the tool glides instead of tugging. Turn it on, pick a mode, and work in slow, upward and outward strokes along the jaw, up the cheeks, and out toward the hairline, then down the sides of the neck to drain.

Sessions run about 5 to 10 minutes, and the sweet spot is roughly 3 to 5 times a week. Like any skin tool, the effect is cumulative. Most guidance says give it 4 to 12 weeks of steady use before you judge it.

One real quirk worth flagging: you need slip. Dragging a warm tool across dry skin is uncomfortable and pointless, so a serum or oil isn’t optional, it’s part of the running cost.

What owners say

Because Glokore is a newer, direct-to-consumer brand, there isn’t a deep independent review base yet, so weight this accordingly and lean on the detailed comments over the one-liners.

On Glokore’s own page, buyers who’ve used stone gua sha for years say the shape translates well. One writes that it’s “much easier to sculpt your jawline” than a jade tool and “much better suited to contour your face” than other electronic models they’d tried. Another, a longtime red-light user, likes that “it gives the red light and massage at the same time.”

A model using the Glokore electric gua sha along the jaw and neck

A third owner calls out the vibration for easing tension and even helping with headaches. The recurring themes are the comfortable glide, the contouring on the jaw and neck, and how easy it is to fit into a nightly routine.

The part the ad won’t tell you

Here’s the honest bit. Glokore’s page claims “up to 87% reduction in fine lines within just two weeks.” That’s an in-house testimonial figure with no independent clinical trial behind it, so treat it as marketing, not a promise. No $50 home tool is erasing wrinkles by 87% in a fortnight.

What it really delivers is the same thing any good gua sha does, amplified: circulation, lymphatic drainage, less puffiness, and a temporary sculpted look. The keyword is temporary. The de-puff and glow are real and immediate. The lasting change, if any, is subtle and depends entirely on you using it consistently.

Honestly, that’s fine, as long as you buy it for what it is. A relaxing five-minute ritual that visibly de-puffs your face is worth $50 to a lot of people. A permanent face-lift in a drawer isn’t what’s on offer here, from Glokore or anyone else in this category.

How it compares

The cheapest rival is the plain stone gua sha, a jade or rose quartz tool for about $10 to $20. It contours just as well if you have the technique and the patience, but you supply all the effort and get no heat, no vibration and no light. The Glokore’s whole case is taking the guesswork and elbow grease out.

At the other end sits Solawave, the well-known LED wand that bundles red light, microcurrent, warmth and vibration for well over $100. It’s a more established brand with a slimmer wand shape. The trade-off is price and form: Solawave is a pen you trace along lines, while the Glokore is a broad gua sha head built to contour the jaw and neck, at roughly a third of the cost.

If you want the pure tradition, buy the stone. If you want the tech without the premium price, the Glokore is the middle path.

Pros and cons

What we liked

  • Combines vibration, heat, red light and blue light in one $49.99 tool, undercutting LED wands like Solawave
  • Gua sha shape genuinely contours the jaw and neck, and owners find it easier to sculpt with than a plain stone
  • Rechargeable, cordless and light, so it's easy to actually keep using a few times a week
  • Warmth mode doubles as a way to help serums and oils absorb

What we didn't

  • The brand's 87% fine-line claim is an in-house figure with no independent trial behind it
  • Benefits like de-puffing and contouring are real but temporary, and need consistent use
  • Newer direct-to-consumer brand, so the independent review base is still thin
  • You have to use a serum or oil for glide, which is an ongoing cost the price doesn't mention

Who it’s not for

If you already own a jade gua sha and enjoy the manual ritual, you may not need the electric upgrade. The stone does the contouring for a fraction of the price, and the tech is a convenience, not a transformation.

Skip it too if you’re expecting a device that removes wrinkles or replaces professional treatments. At-home LED and vibration are gentle by design, and the real-world payoff is glow and de-puffing, not a structural change.

A couple of safety notes: patch test the heat and light first, keep the blue light away from your eyes, and if you’re pregnant, have had recent facial surgery, or have a skin condition, check with a doctor before starting. The people shown using the tool in Glokore’s materials are models, not our staff, so treat the marketing imagery as illustration.

For nearly everyone curious about a first at-home face tool, though, the Glokore is an easy, low-cost way in. It’s the same “do the ritual, feel the difference” logic behind the wellness gadgets in our Pulsetto review and Moonbird review, just aimed at your jawline instead of your nervous system. You’ll find more of the self-care tools we’ve dug into over in our beauty hub and our best sleep gadgets roundup.

Verdict

The Glokore electric gua sha earns a 9.1. For $49.99 it does exactly what a good gua sha should, and the added heat, vibration and light make the ritual easier and a little more effective, at a price that embarrasses the $150-plus wands.

Go in clear-eyed. Ignore the 87% headline, expect de-puffing and glow rather than a face-lift, and commit to a few short sessions a week with a serum. Do that, and it’s a genuinely satisfying little tool. Treat it as a miracle, and you’ll be disappointed, same as with anything in this category.

Check today's Glokore price