Products

Check out the available devices and supplements to potentially make lucid dreaming more accessible.

Inclusion on this site does not constitute an endorsement.

Note: No current or past devices have demonstrated the ability to routinely induce lucid dreams. This page is intended to serve as a complete listing of past and current devices—not to sell devices. Please do your own research before deciding if any devices are right for you. 

On the market

Somni Mask

Sleep mask senses with motion sensors and an accelerometer that uses light and sound stimulation.

Arenar iBand+

Headband with EEG sensing that uses light and sound stimulation.

Sleep mask that uses light stimulation.

Hypnodyne ZMax

Headband with EEG sensing that uses light, sound, vibration stimulation.

Foc.us

Device that uses tACS.

Not yet in the market

Prophetic Halo

Headband with EEG sensors that uses focused ultrasound for stimulation.

InstaDreamer

Wristband with PPG, temperature, and accelerometer sensing that uses vibrational stimulation.

The Lucid Dreamer

Headband with EEG sensing that uses transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS), and light and sound stimulation

Aladdin

Headband with EEG sensing that uses transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS)

Inteliclinic Neuroon Open

Sleep mask with EEG and EOG sensing that uses light and sound stimulation

No longer on market

REM-Dreamer

Sleep mask that uses infrared light sensing that uses light and sound stimulation.

The Novadreamer

Sleep mask that detects eye movements that uses light stimulation

deepONE Cube

Bedside cube using pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF)

Headband with EEG sensing that uses light stimulation

Luciding LucidCatcher

Headband with EEG and skin conductance sensing that uses transcranial direct current stimulation (tACS)

The first lucid dreaming device created by Keith Hearne that uses vibrational stimulation

Any products we should add?