Best Low Blue Light Bulbs and Amber Book Lights for Sleep
If you only change one thing about your evening lighting, make it this. A dedicated amber or low-blue bulb for the last hour or two before bed is the single highest-leverage sleep upgrade on this site, and it costs less than a nice lunch. Unlike a smart bulb warmed to 2200K, which still emits blue, these bulbs are built to remove essentially all short-wavelength light. Your eyes read them as a warm campfire glow, and your body clock reads them as night.
New to why blue matters? Start with blue light and sleep explained. Otherwise, here is what to buy.
What to actually look for
- Truly blue-free, not just "warm." You want a bulb rated around 1600K to 2000K that blocks light below roughly 530nm. "Soft white" and "warm" LED bulbs do not qualify; they still emit blue.
- Flicker-free. Cheap LEDs flicker at frequencies you cannot consciously see, which can drive headaches and eye strain. Look for a bulb explicitly tested flicker-free.
- Dim enough. Remember you are sensitive to even dim evening light. A lower-wattage amber bulb, or one on a dimmer, beats a bright one.
- Low EMF, if that matters to you. A plain amber bulb has no radio, so it emits far less EMF than a smart color bulb. One more reason the bedside light does not need to be smart.
Amber sleep bulbs
Hooga Sleep Light Bulb, 1600K amber, check current price
Hooga's amber A19 is the easy recommendation: a standard screw-in E26 bulb at 1600K that the company rates as 99.94 percent blue-free, in a 7W output with a long rated lifespan. It drops into any lamp, throws a warm low-blue glow, and costs a fraction of a smart bulb. Hooga is one of the more transparent brands in this space about spectrum and flicker, which is why it is our default pick for the bedside lamp. If you want it dimmer still, there are lower-wattage versions.
Check Hooga sleep bulb priceBlockBlueLight SweetDreams Bulb, check current price
The SweetDreams bulb aims to be a whole-home evening bulb: rated 100 percent blue-light-free, zero flicker, and low EMF, designed to replace ordinary 40W and 60W bulbs in the rooms you use at night. It costs more than the Hooga and is often sold direct rather than on Amazon, but if you want to convert several fixtures to blue-free evening light and care about the flicker and EMF specs, it is the thorough option.
Check SweetDreams bulb priceAmber book lights, for reading in bed
If your wind-down is reading, a clip-on amber book light beats lighting the whole room. It puts a small warm pool of low-blue light exactly where you need it and leaves the rest of the bedroom dark, which is what your melatonin wants.
Hooga Amber Book Light, 1600K clip-on, check current price
A rechargeable clip-on at 1600K amber with a 1200mAh battery, three brightness levels (roughly 17.5, 35, and 70 lumens), and a bendable neck that grips books, notepads, and e-readers. On the low setting it runs a long time per charge and puts out just enough light to read without waking your brain up. There is also a dual amber-and-red version if you want the deepest low-blue option for the very last minutes before sleep. For readers, this is a cheaper and often better buy than an amber ceiling bulb.
Check Hooga book light priceWhat to skip
Skip "warm white" and "soft white" LED bulbs sold as sleep-friendly; if the box does not state a low Kelvin rating and blue-blocking, it still emits blue. Be wary of unbranded amber bulbs with no flicker or spectrum data, since flicker is the common failure at the bottom of this market. And do not overspend on a color smart bulb to run it at its warmest as your "sleep bulb"; a $15 amber bulb does that one job better than a $60 smart one. That is the whole argument in smart bulbs vs dedicated circadian bulbs.
The one-line takeaway
Put a Hooga 1600K amber bulb in your bedside lamp, or clip an amber book light to whatever you read, and switch to it for the last hour before bed. It is the cheapest and most effective lighting change you can make for sleep. Everything else on this site is optimization on top of that.
Build the rest of the system with the room-by-room guide, or handle mornings with a sunrise alarm clock.