PEMF device on a peer-reviewed medical journal
PEMF UKTHE EVIDENCE

Does PEMF therapy actually work?

An honest, evidence-led look at where PEMF is well-supported, where it's promising, and where the marketing has gotten ahead of the science.

Reviewed 2026-05-07

In 40 seconds

PEMF therapy has a real, well-documented evidence base — strongest for bone healing (FDA-cleared 1979), post-surgical recovery (FDA-cleared 1987), knee osteoarthritis (60% pain reduction in 2024 systematic review), and chronic musculoskeletal pain. Evidence is promising but earlier for sleep, fatigue, neurological conditions, and wellness uses. Some marketing claims (cancer cures, anti-ageing) are not supported and should be ignored. The honest summary: PEMF is well-evidenced for some conditions, promising for others, and not magic for any.

Strongest evidence (FDA-cleared or Level 1)

Promising but smaller evidence base

Emerging / patient-reported but limited RCT data

Claims that are NOT supported

Be sceptical of marketing that claims PEMF:

These overpromises damage the credibility of legitimate PEMF use. PEMF UK does not make these claims.

Why dose matters

Most failed PEMF studies have one thing in common: insufficient dose. PEMF is dose-dependent. Treatment frequency, intensity, and duration all matter. Cheap home devices used inconsistently rarely produce clinical effect. Clinical-grade systems used in proper protocols consistently outperform.

What to do with this

If you have one of the strong-evidence conditions, PEMF is worth trying — preferably at a clinic using clinical-grade equipment, in a structured protocol, alongside other appropriate care. If you have one of the emerging-evidence uses, be more cautious about expectations and budget. If you're being sold "miracle cure" claims, walk away.

Frequently asked questions

So does PEMF actually work?

Yes — for the conditions where the evidence is strongest (non-union fractures, post-surgical recovery, knee osteoarthritis, certain pain conditions). For other uses (sleep, energy, longevity, anxiety) the evidence is more mixed and patient-reported. PEMF is well-evidenced for some things, promising for others, and not magic for any.

Is it pseudoscience?

No. PEMF has been FDA-cleared since 1979 for non-union fractures and 1987 for post-surgical use. The mechanism — voltage-gated calcium channels, nitric oxide release, mitochondrial ATP — is well documented in peer-reviewed research. Quack claims (curing cancer, reversing ageing) exist in the marketing space but are separate from the legitimate clinical evidence.

Why does some research show no benefit?

Mostly dose: PEMF effects are dose-dependent (frequency, intensity, treatment duration). Studies using sub-therapeutic doses fail to show effect. Studies using clinical-grade doses for adequate periods generally show benefit. Treatment protocol matters as much as device quality.

How do I know if a clinic is using clinical-grade PEMF?

Ask which device they use. Pulse PEMF, Curatron, NewMed/Magnacore, OMI Pro, Bemer Pro — all clinical-grade. Ask about frequency, intensity, and protocol per condition. Reputable clinics will tell you. PEMF UK's clinic directory will publish device verification when launched.

Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?

We list every credible PEMF therapy provider in the UK so you can find one near home.