I spent years doing everything right for sleep. Taking magnesium, no screens, cool bedroom, and still waking at 3 am wondering what I was missing. It wasn’t until I started obsessing over my outdoor light exposure and the wavelengths coming out of my home lighting that things actually shifted. In fact, this is one of the most impactful changes I’ve ever made.
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Why I Choose Amber Light Bulbs
Light is the most powerful signal your body receives all day. Not just as light to see, but the information our cells are reading from the light. The spectrum of light entering your eyes tells your hypothalamus what time it is. This determines whether melatonin rises on schedule or gets suppressed for another 90 minutes while you lie in bed wondering why you can’t fall asleep.
The problem: standard LED lighting, including “warm white” bulbs, emits the same wavelengths of blue light as noon sunlight. Your overhead lights, your lamp, and your bathroom vanity are telling your cells it’s midday at 9 pm. Every night.
After years of testing (and a house that now glows like a very cozy campfire after 6 pm), here’s exactly what I use, why it works, and where to get it. And pro tip: I use timers in my house so the right lighting goes on in lamps at sunset and off around bedtime without any extra work. Those are all linked below.
In This Post
Why “Warm White” LEDs Still Aren’t Enough
This was the thing that surprised me most when I first started researching this properly. A 2700K “warm white” LED looks yellowish and feels softer than a daylight bulb. However, it still emits a measurable spike in the blue wavelength range (440–480nm) that suppresses melatonin. The warmth you see is partially filtered. The circadian-disrupting portion of the spectrum is still very much present.
What your body actually needs in the evening is light with no emissions below 530nm, in the amber/red spectrum with no blue and no green wavelengths. This is what’s called a true amber or low-blue spectrum, and it’s genuinely different from a warm white LED.
Your eyes contain specialized cells called melanopsin receptors. These cells have nothing to do with vision; they exist only to signal your master clock about what time it is. They’re exquisitely sensitive to short-wavelength blue light around 480nm. When they detect it, they signal the suprachiasmatic nucleus to suppress melatonin output.
Even dim light can interfere with a person’s circadian rhythm and melatonin secretion. A mere eight lux — about the level of most bedside lamps — has an effect. (Harvard Medical School)
A true amber bulb engineered to have zero emissions below 530nm can’t trigger those receptors. Your brain reads it as firelight. This triggers safe, post-sunset, begin repair mode.
The Exact Amber Bulbs and Lamps I Use
Evening Amber Light Bulbs (the Most Important Swap)
The body is used to and primed for bright overhead light during the day, so overhead lighting wasn’t my first priority in auditing my home light environment. I researched to find circadian-friendly bulbs for evening and put these in lamps so they’re always at eye level or below.
These go in every lamp in my main living spaces and any rooms we’re in after about 6 pm. Namely, the kitchen, living room, and dining room. This is where most circadian disruption happens, and it’s where the change makes the fastest difference. I also have these in our bedrooms.
You can get the lightbulbs I use from Healthy Home Lighting here (and use code wellnessmama to save 10%).
The bulbs I chose from Healthy Home are no-flicker, no-EMF, and have the right light wavelengths. They come with three modes: daylight, sunset, and campfire. I have our evening bulbs set to campfire mode automatically and they all come on at sunset. So we simply turn off any overhead light and switch to “night mode” in our home.
- Zero blue light emissions — not just reduced, eliminated
- Flicker-free and low EMF
- Bright enough for everyday tasks, not just reading
- Standard E26 base, which fits most lamps and fixtures
I also use digital timers, so these come on automatically. All the timers and lamps I use are linked here.
Red Bulbs For the Bedroom and Bathroom
In the bedroom and bathroom, I go further. I opt for true red light, which contains no blue or green wavelengths at all. Red light above 600nm has essentially zero effect on the circadian system. It’s what photographers use in darkrooms. I use these in bedside lamps and the bathroom vanity for the hour before sleep.
Find the flicker-free red light bulbs I use here.
Note that these are different than red light therapy panels. While the light is still beneficial, those are their own category, and I actually don’t recommend using them at night or right before sleep.
The Three-Setting Bulb (Easiest Option to Start With)
If you want one bulb that does it all without swapping, a circadian lightbulb that cycles through daylight, amber, and deep red with your existing light switch is the simplest entry point. No app, no smart home setup, no Wifi or Bluetooth, you just flip the switch.
I don’t think the full red light bulbs are necessary unless you really want to go low light in the evening. The three settings of the Healthy Home Bulbs will work in most cases.
The Lamps Themselves
Bulbs are only half of the equation. Overhead lighting is actually the worst offender because it enters your eyes from above, the same angle as a high-noon sun. In our house, we turn off all overhead lights by around 6 or 7 pm and switch to floor and table lamps, positioning them below eye level. The angle matters as much as the spectrum.
My Daily Lighting Schedule
The goal is to treat light as a biological input throughout the day, not just something that helps you see. Here’s how our household actually runs this.
- Morning (wake – 9 am): Outside within 30 minutes of waking, no sunglasses, glasses, contacts, or windows. If I can’t get outside, I open all the curtains and stand near an open window. Full-spectrum or bright indoor lights are fine for this part of the day.
- Daytime (9 am – ~5 pm): Natural light is always preferred. Standard indoor lighting for workspaces is fine. Screens are no issue during daylight hours.
- Early evening (~6 pm): Overhead lights off. Amber lamps on. If I’m using screens, I have a blue-light filter enabled.
- Late evening (8 pm – bed): Red or deep amber only in the bedroom and bathroom. No overhead lighting. This is the window where melatonin should be rising and I protect it carefully.
- Overnight: Complete darkness. Blackout curtains. A dim red nightlight only if needed for kids navigating to the bathroom.
You don’t have to do all of this at once. The single highest-leverage starting point is swapping the bedroom and living room lamps to amber light bulbs before your usual bedtime. That’s where I started. Most people notice a difference within a few nights.
What to Look for When Buying (So You Don’t Waste Money)
I’ve tested enough amber bulbs to know that not all of them do what they claim. Here’s what actually matters:
- Zero emissions below 530nm. This is the actual threshold for melatonin-safe light. Look for this in the spectral data, not just in marketing copy. If a brand doesn’t publish its spectral chart, that’s a red flag.
- Flicker-free certification. Cheap bulbs flicker at frequencies your eye can’t consciously detect, but that may contribute to headaches, eye strain, and nervous system load. Confirm the bulb is tested and confirmed flicker-free.
- Low EMF. Smart color-changing bulbs that use WiFi or Bluetooth to shift their spectrum emit significantly higher EMF than standard bulbs. I avoid them in bedrooms specifically.
- Color temperature alone isn’t enough. A 2700K rating means the light looks warm; it doesn’t mean it’s low-blue. Demand actual spectral data, not just a Kelvin number.
- Avoid the “colored shell” trick. A standard LED inside an amber or red plastic bulb will filter some blue light, but it won’t eliminate it. You want a bulb engineered at the spectral level, not just painted.
The Science: Why Light Is a Cellular Input, Not Just a Convenience
I’ve written about blue light and circadian rhythm in detail before, but here’s the condensed version for anyone coming to this fresh:
Your circadian clock, housed in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus, runs on a roughly 24-hour cycle, but it needs daily calibration from light to stay synchronized with the actual day. Morning light, especially the blue-wavelength spike at sunrise, resets the clock and triggers the cortisol pulse that wakes you up properly.
Everything downstream, including hormone production, immune function, overnight cellular repair, and metabolism, is organized around that signal.
In the evening, the same clock is meant to detect the absence of blue light as a sunset cue. Melatonin rises. Cortisol drops. Growth hormone prepares to pulse. Your brain’s glymphatic system begins clearing waste. Your body runs a very specific repair sequence overnight, and it depends entirely on melatonin starting on time.
When your home lighting keeps emitting blue wavelengths after sunset, melatonin is delayed, sometimes by 90 minutes or more. You’re not just staying up late. You’re postponing the entire repair cascade that should have started hours ago.
Switching your lights doesn’t solve everything. But it removes one of the most consistent nightly disruptors of the system that heals you while you sleep. For me personally, it was one of the highest-leverage changes I made, and one of the least expensive.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I change every bulb in the house?
You don’t have to. I started with the rooms we’re in during the two to three hours before bed, like the living room, bedroom, and bathroom. The garage, laundry room, and spaces we use briefly don’t need to change. I wanted to get those three spaces right first.
Is amber light bright enough to actually see by?
Yes! Good-quality amber bulbs provide enough light for cooking, reading, and normal evening activities. Colors render slightly differently (reds and yellows look rich, blues and greens go flat), but it’s perfectly functional. If you need more brightness for detailed work, a dedicated desk lamp with a red-spectrum bulb placed close to your task works well too. I like this option better than increasing overhead lighting.
What about blue-light blocking glasses… can I just use those instead?
Glasses help, but they’re a partial solution since they only protect the eyes. Your skin also contains photoreceptors that communicate with the circadian system. Glasses alone don’t give the full benefit of changing the light source itself. I use both: amber glasses when I have to be on screens in the evening, and amber bulbs for the general environment.
Can I just use a dimmer with my existing bulbs?
Dimming reduces total light intensity, which helps, but it doesn’t change the wavelength composition. A dimmed standard LED still emits the same proportion of blue light, just less of it. It’s better than full brightness, but not the same as a true amber spectrum.
What about smart bulbs that change color temperature?
Color-tunable smart bulbs can help, but most still emit residual blue wavelengths even at their warmest setting. And they use WiFi or Bluetooth, which I prefer to minimize in bedrooms. The dedicated amber and red bulbs I use are simpler, have lower EMF, and, in my testing, work better.
Is this safe for kids?
Yes! Honestly, I think it’s especially important for kids, whose circadian systems are still developing and who are often more sensitive to the stimulating effects of blue light before bed. My kids have had amber bedroom lamps for years. The warm light genuinely seems to help them wind down, which tracks with what the science says.
How quickly will I notice a difference?
Most people notice changes in how easily they fall asleep within a few nights of consistent amber lighting in the two hours before bed. If you’re already doing the other sleep fundamentals (no food close to bedtime, a cool room, total darkness), this is often the missing piece that makes them all click into place.
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Have you switched to amber lighting? What difference did you notice, and what products do you love? Leave a comment and let me know. I read every single one.


