By Brian Reese, Rife technology expert and author of THE RIFE WAY: The Untold Story of Frequency Technology and the New Science of Self-Healing
If you’re trying to choose the right Rife machine in 2026, you’ve probably already noticed something frustrating:
Everything sounds good.
Every company talks about frequencies, power, innovation, and “results.”
A few make wild promises.
Some sound technical enough to impress you.
Others sound simple enough to tempt you.
But once you look closer, the market gets confusing fast.
You’ll see machines that cost a few hundred dollars.
Others cost several thousand.
Some are basically DIY frequency-generator setups with software and cables.
Others are premium plasma systems that look more like a finished product.
And on the surface, they all get called the same thing:
Rife machines.
That’s the problem.
Because in real life, you are not just choosing a machine.
You are choosing an ownership experience.
You are choosing:
- how much setup you can tolerate,
- how technical you want to get,
- how much guidance you need,
- what kind of delivery method fits your life,
- and whether you are likely to actually use the machine once the excitement wears off.
That’s why we wrote this expert-level Rife machine buyer’s guide.
This is not a hype piece.
It’s not a miracle-claims article.
And it’s not a “buy the most expensive thing and hope for the best” pitch.
It’s a practical, honest, step-by-step buyer’s guide for first-time buyers and serious wellness consumers who want to make a smart decision.
Our goal is simple:
Help you understand what actually matters before you spend real money on a Rife machine.
Bottom line: The best Rife machine is usually not the one with the longest spec sheet. It’s the one that fits your life, your budget, your personality, and your likelihood of actually using it consistently.
Summary of Key Points
- Choosing a Rife machine is really about choosing the right ownership experience for your life. The most important factors are ease of use, your tolerance for complexity, plasma vs. contact delivery, support, and whether you’ll actually use the system consistently.
- In 2026, the market breaks into clear tiers: low-end DIY systems ($300–$1,500), mid-level prosumer systems ($2,000–$7,000), high-end plasma workstations ($7,000–$11,000+), integrated plug-and-play plasma systems ($14,997+), and practitioner-grade systems ($30,000–$50,000+).
- Higher price does not automatically mean better “effectiveness,” but it often does mean a better ownership experience through less setup, better workflow, stronger support, easier day-one usability, and a higher likelihood of long-term consistency.
- The best Rife machine for you is not the one with the most hype, the biggest spec sheet, or the highest or lowest price. It’s the one that fits your budget, matches your personality, aligns with your preferred workflow, and works in the context of your real life.
Editorial Guardrails First
Rife machines and frequency-based wellness devices are best understood as general wellness tools. They are not approved to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
This article is educational and informational only. It is not medical advice.
If you are pregnant, nursing, have a seizure disorder, significant cardiac issues, implanted electronic devices, or any serious medical condition, get clearance from your clinician first.
And if anyone is promising guaranteed outcomes, disease cures, or telling you to ignore medical care, that is your sign to walk away.
The mature, responsible lane here is simple:
General wellness only. No miracle claims. No fantasy thinking.
What a Rife Machine Really Is
In plain English, a Rife machine is a frequency-based wellness device that generates low-energy electromagnetic signals and delivers them either through:
- contact methods, such as hand cylinders, pads, or footplates, or
- a plasma tube, where you sit or lie near the field during a session.
That is the simple definition.
For consumers, though, the technical definition is only half the story.
Because when people shop for a Rife machine, they are rarely just asking:
“What is this machine?”
What they are really asking is:
- Which type should I buy?
- Why are prices all over the place?
- Is plasma worth it?
- Do I need something plug-and-play or DIY?
- What will I actually use?
- What is worth paying for?
- Which machine fits me?
Those are the questions that matter.
And that’s exactly why choosing a Rife machine is not really about shopping for frequencies.
It’s about shopping for a workflow you can actually live with.
How Does a Rife Machine Actually Work?
If you’re new to Rife technology, this short video will help you understand the basics.
A Rife machine is a non-invasive wellness device that delivers low-energy electromagnetic frequencies to the body, usually through a plasma tube or contact accessories like hand cylinders, pads, or footplates.
The core idea goes back to Dr. Royal Raymond Rife’s resonance theory: that different structures respond to different frequencies.
Today, many people explore Rife technology as part of a general wellness routine to support relaxation, recovery, and overall balance.
The Big Idea: Buy the Workflow, Not the Brochure
This is the most important idea in the entire article.
Most first-time buyers think they are choosing between machines.
They’re not.
They’re choosing between very different ownership experiences.
Some systems are cheap, flexible, and highly customizable, but they require real time, effort, and technical patience.
Others cost more, but they remove friction and make it easier to build a consistent wellness routine.
That’s why the smartest way to choose a Rife machine is not to ask:
“Which one has the most impressive specs?”
The smarter question is:
“Which one gives me the best chance of using it consistently, confidently, and responsibly in real life?”
That’s how serious buyers think.
Because the truth is simple:
A cheaper machine you never use is expensive.
A premium machine you use consistently for years may be worth every penny.
Step 1: Understanding the 4 Main Types of Rife Machines
The Rife market looks confusing because very different systems all get sold under the same label.
But once you break them into buckets, the category becomes much easier to understand.
Tier 4 — Low-End / DIY Rife Machines ($300–$1,500)
This is the cheapest entry point into the category.
Think Spooky2 and similar DIY ecosystems.
In this tier, you’re usually buying:
- a small digital frequency generator,
- basic contact accessories,
- PC software, often Windows-only,
- and a system you install, configure, update, and maintain yourself.
What You’re Really Buying
You are buying affordability and flexibility.
But you are also buying responsibility.
You will likely be the one handling:
- software setup,
- drivers,
- troubleshooting,
- cable management,
- configuration,
- protocol selection,
- and ongoing learning.
Pros
- lowest cost of entry
- highly flexible
- good for experimenters
- strong DIY community
Cons
- steep learning curve
- more software dependence
- more setup friction
- support tends to be more community-driven than concierge-style
- easy for the machine to become a project instead of a routine
Best For
Tech-savvy tinkerers who enjoy learning systems and don’t mind hands-on experimentation.
Not Ideal For
Busy professionals, overwhelmed beginners, households, or anyone who wants plug-and-play simplicity.
Tier 3 — Mid-Level / Prosumer Rife Machines ($2,000–$7,000)
This is the serious hobbyist or small-practice tier.
It usually includes more purpose-built hardware than entry-level DIY, but the workflow is still more technical and hands-on than many beginners expect.
Typical systems in this range include GB4000 combos and TrueRife packages.
What You’re Usually Getting
- a dedicated frequency generator
- a separate amplifier
- optional plasma or bed emitters
- better hardware
- better accessories
- more formal documentation
What You’re Really Buying
You are buying stronger hardware than low-end DIY, but you are still very much in “operator mode.”
This is usually still a multi-piece setup.
That means:
- generator
- amplifier
- tube or pads
- cables
- knobs, keypads, menus, or software
- notes, routines, and setup awareness
Pros
- stronger, more durable hardware
- more polished than entry-level DIY
- more recognizable “prosumer” brands
- scalable bundle options
Cons
- still technical
- still more hands-on than plug-and-play buyers want
- older-school interfaces on many systems
- more friction than most beginners realize
- you are still both the operator and the user
Best For
Serious hobbyists, technically comfortable users, and people who want stronger hardware but don’t mind a workstation-style experience.
Not Ideal For
People who want simplicity, modern UX, or the easiest possible path to consistency.
Tier 2 — High-End Plasma Workstations ($7,000–$11,000+)
This is where the category starts to feel truly premium.
Examples include Resonant Light PERL + ProGen 3 and Beam Ray-style packages.
These systems often have better build quality, stronger support, and more premium plasma delivery setups.
But there is an important distinction here:
Most high-end plasma workstations are still modular.
That means they may be premium, but they are not always simple.
Common Features
- plasma emitters as the main delivery method
- heavier-duty enclosures
- refined engineering
- better warranty structures
- more formal support
- more clinic-style presence
What You’re Really Buying
You’re buying better hardware and stronger support than lower tiers.
But in many cases, you are still dealing with:
- separate components
- external generators
- stands
- cables
- fixed-room placement
- more technical setup than a normal consumer may want
Pros
- premium feel
- stronger build quality
- plasma delivery
- better support than lower tiers
- good fit for dedicated users and clinic-like environments
Cons
- still multi-piece in many cases
- less portable
- often best in a dedicated room
- more involved than many first-time buyers expect
- premium cost without full integration
Best For
Dedicated users, serious enthusiasts, and clinics that want premium plasma hardware and don’t mind a fixed workstation-style setup.
Not Ideal For
People who want one box, one screen, and minimal friction.
Tier 1 — Integrated Plug-and-Play Plasma Systems (~$14,997+)
This is the top consumer tier.
This is where Rife technology systems like Eden Life fit.
At this level, you are not just paying for “more machine.”
You are paying for integration, simplicity, support, and ease of use.
What You’re Usually Getting
- single-chassis design
- built-in plasma-based delivery
- integrated touchscreen
- no external laptop required for standard use
- on-device program library
- easier Day 1 experience
- optional scans, consults, and guided support
Eden Life Example
- around $14,997 one-time
- or about $1,497/month for 12 months lease-to-own
- integrated plasma-based unit
- built-in touchscreen
- large preloaded program library
- optional scan-informed workflow and guided support
- concierge-style onboarding and support options
What You’re Really Buying
You are buying a simpler ownership experience.
Instead of:
generator → amp → cables → menus → setup
You are moving closer to:
plug in → turn on → tap a program → start
That difference matters.
A lot.
Because this is the tier where you are deliberately trading more money for:
- less friction
- less troubleshooting
- easier consistency
- stronger support
- a better chance of actually using the system long term
Pros
- simplest workflow
- modern user experience
- less setup friction
- no cable jungle for normal use
- easier for everyday consumers to use consistently
- stronger support ecosystem
- better fit for guided wellness routines
Cons
- highest consumer price tier
- still a wellness device, not a medical device
- more ecosystem-based than a mix-and-match modular approach
Best For
Busy professionals, parents, households, and practitioners who value convenience, simplicity, guidance, and repeatable daily use.
Not Ideal For
Buyers who mainly want maximum customization at minimum cost.
Bonus Tier 0 — Practitioner-Grade Systems & Super Coils ($30,000–$50,000+)
This is really a clinic or wellness-center tier, not a normal consumer tier.
These systems are built for:
- higher throughput,
- heavier use,
- more complex setups,
- and more professional operating environments.
Typical packages may include:
- industrial-grade amplifiers
- large plasma emitters or super coils
- dedicated room setups
- training
- service agreements
- advanced hardware and software
Best For
Established wellness centers, biohacking clinics, and specialty practices.
Not Ideal For
Almost all home users.
Quick bucket Rife machine comparison
- DIY: cheapest entry, most tinkering
- Mid-level: better hardware, still hands-on
- High-end plasma workstation: premium feel, still often modular
- Integrated plug-and-play: most expensive consumer tier, least friction
- Practitioner-grade: clinic-level systems, overkill for most home users
Step 2: Decide Which Bucket Fits Your Life
Now that you understand the tiers, the next question is simple:
Which ownership experience fits you best?
This is where a lot of buyers get honest for the first time.
Because many people think they want flexibility until they realize flexibility often means more setup, more learning, and more troubleshooting.
A better way to think about it is this:
If You Love Tinkering
You may be very happy in the DIY or mid-level prosumer tiers.
You probably won’t mind:
- software
- cables
- manual setup
- external boxes
- experimentation
- technical problem-solving
You may even enjoy it.
If You Do Not Love Tinkering
You probably need to stay away from systems that depend heavily on your willingness to be the engineer.
In that case, a simpler integrated or more guided system may save you from an expensive mismatch.
This is not about intelligence.
It’s about fit.
Some buyers want control.
Others want a routine.
Both are valid.
But the wrong fit usually leads to frustration.
Step 3: Decide Whether You’re a DIY Buyer or a Plug-and-Play Buyer
This is the biggest buying decision most consumers will make.
Ask yourself these questions:
- Do I enjoy technical setup?
- Am I willing to troubleshoot hardware and software?
- Do I realistically want to build custom workflows?
- Will I stay consistent if using the machine takes effort?
- Do I want to figure things out myself, or do I want a guided experience?
DIY Buyer Mindset
- “I like options.”
- “I don’t mind learning.”
- “I’d rather pay less and do more.”
- “I enjoy technical systems.”
Plug-and-Play Buyer Mindset
- “I want something I’ll actually use.”
- “I’m already busy.”
- “I don’t want a hobby machine.”
- “I want a complete system, not a pile of parts.”
There is no universally right answer.
But there is a right answer for you.
And once you know which type of buyer you are, the decision gets much easier.
Step 4: Choose Plasma vs Contact
Now let’s talk about delivery method.
This is another big decision because it changes the feel of the ownership experience.
Contact Systems
These use things like:
- hand cylinders
- footplates
- pads
- other direct-contact accessories
In real life, that often means:
- more setup steps
- more cables
- more positioning
- more tactile involvement each session
Contact systems are not inherently bad.
In fact, they can be a perfectly reasonable entry point.
But they usually ask more from the user.
Plasma Systems
These use a plasma tube or plasma-based emitter that creates a field around you while you sit or lie nearby.
In real life, that often means:
- more hands-free use
- less physical setup on the body
- easier positioning
- a smoother daily workflow
That’s one big reason many high-end buyers prefer plasma.
Our View
If your top priorities are:
- convenience,
- consistency,
- simplicity,
- and building a routine you will actually stick with,
then plasma usually has a clear workflow advantage.
If your top priority is lower entry cost and you don’t mind a more involved setup, contact systems may still make good sense.
Again, this is not about “good vs bad.”
It’s about what fits you.
Step 5: Evaluate the Day 1 Experience
This is one of the most overlooked questions in the category.
Ask yourself:
What happens when this box shows up at my house?
That question reveals almost everything.
A first-time buyer should want answers like:
- Can I use it the same day?
- Do I need a laptop?
- Do I need special software?
- Are programs already loaded?
- Is the interface intuitive?
- Is there a clear way to get started?
A Strong Day 1 Experience Looks Like:
- simple setup
- intuitive controls
- preloaded programs
- clear onboarding
- named playlists or structured starting points
- minimal technical burden
A Weak Day 1 Experience Looks Like:
- software dependency
- too many loose components
- no clear “start here” workflow
- unclear instructions
- a lot of guesswork before the first session
For beginners, momentum matters.
If the first experience is confusing, usage often drops fast.
And once the machine feels like work, it tends to get used less and less.
Step 6: Look at the Program Library and the Starting Point
A lot of buyers get distracted by giant lists of frequencies or technical specs.
That is usually not where the real value is.
The better question is:
Will this machine help me know where to start?
That’s what matters most.
A beginner-friendly machine should reduce the “blank page” problem.
It should help answer:
- What do I run first?
- How often should I use it?
- How long should a session be?
- How do I keep this simple?
That’s why preloaded program libraries matter.
Not because every buyer needs thousands of options on day one.
But because a structured starting point makes it easier to begin and easier to stay consistent.
This is one of the reasons integrated, program-rich systems appeal to first-time buyers and busy households.
They make the first steps easier.
And easy first steps often lead to better long-term use.
Step 7: Decide Whether You Need Guidance, Scans, or Consults
This is where the market really separates.
Some buyers want a machine and nothing else.
Others want a system.
That system may include:
- onboarding
- expert consults
- scan-informed prioritization
- custom playlists
- follow-up guidance
- support in refining the routine over time
This matters because many first-time buyers are not really asking:
“What machine should I buy?”
What they are really asking is:
- What should I run?
- What should I focus on first?
- How do I avoid overdoing it?
- How do I make this make sense?
That’s where guidance can add real value.
If You Like Self-Direction
You may not care much about scans or support programs.
If You Want Structure
You may value guidance much more than you initially realize.
For some people, that guidance is what turns the machine from a gadget into a sustainable wellness system.
And that distinction matters.
Step 8: Compare Support, Warranty, and Uptime
This is one of those things people ignore until something breaks.
A Rife machine is not just the machine itself.
It is also:
- the onboarding
- the responsiveness of support
- the warranty structure
- the repair process
- the turnaround time
- the replacement policy
- the overall confidence that you are not on your own
Questions Serious Buyers Should Ask
- What does the warranty actually cover?
- What is the repair timeline?
- Is there a loaner or swap option?
- How do I get help if I’m confused?
- Is onboarding included?
- Is support email-only, or is there real human help?
This matters especially at the premium end.
Because when you are paying more, you should not just be paying for hardware.
You should be paying for reduced friction and stronger ownership support.
That includes uptime.
Step 9: Understand the Real Price of a Rife Machine
Here’s where a lot of consumers make a mistake.
They compare sticker prices, but they do not compare ownership value.
In 2026, Rife machine prices range roughly like this:
- $300–$1,500 for low-end DIY kits
- $2,000–$7,000 for mid-level prosumer systems
- $7,000–$11,000+ for high-end plasma workstations
- $14,997+ for integrated plug-and-play plasma systems
- $30,000–$50,000+ for practitioner-grade systems and super coils
That price spread is real.
But price alone does not tell the story.
What buyers are really paying for as they move up the ladder is often:
- less setup
- better build quality
- easier workflow
- stronger support
- more polished interfaces
- more structured program libraries
- more guidance
- better uptime
In other words:
Higher price does not automatically mean more “effectiveness.”
But it often does mean a better ownership experience.
That distinction is critical.
Because a mid-tier or premium system may be worth it if it gives you a much better chance of consistent use.
Want to compare pricing in more detail?
Read the full breakdown here:
Rife Machine Prices (2026): How Much Does a Rife Machine Cost?
Step 10: Think About Daily Life, Not Just the Sales Page
This is where all of this gets practical.
What actually changes in daily life between tiers?
Low-End / DIY
You boot a Windows computer.
Open software.
Choose or build a program.
Make sure the correct generator is selected.
Check cables, pads, or other accessories.
Then you run the session.
If you enjoy that process, great.
If you don’t, that process becomes the barrier.
Mid-Level / Prosumer
You walk up to a rack, cart, or setup station.
Confirm generator → amplifier → tube or pads.
Use menus, a keypad, or other controls.
Track your workflow manually.
Better hardware than DIY, but still more operator-driven.
High-End Plasma Workstation
You get more premium plasma hardware and stronger support, but you may still be managing a fixed workstation with multiple components.
Premium? Yes.
Simple? Not always.
Integrated Plug-and-Play Plasma
You place the unit where you want it.
Plug it in.
Turn it on.
Tap a preloaded protocol.
Press start.
That’s the real difference.
This is why integrated systems appeal so strongly to busy people and first-time buyers.
They trade more money for less friction.
And less friction usually means better consistency.
What Matters Most to a First-Time Buyer? Rank Ordered
If I had to rank what matters most for the average first-time consumer, this is the order I would use:
- Ease of use — If it’s hard to use, you probably won’t use it.
- Fit with your personality: DIY vs plug-and-play — The wrong fit here creates regret fast.
- Delivery method: plasma vs contact — This affects convenience, setup, and consistency.
- Day 1 usability — Can you get started quickly and confidently?
- Program library and clear starting point — Does the machine help you know where to begin?
- Guidance options — Do you want expert support, scan-informed prioritization, or a fully self-directed path?
- Support, warranty, and uptime — What happens after the sale matters.
- Total cost of ownership — Do not compare price alone. Compare real-life value.
- Build quality and engineering credibility — Can the company explain the machine clearly and credibly?
- Portability and footprint — Will it fit your actual environment and lifestyle?
That is the hierarchy that matters in real life.
Not hype.
Not fantasy.
Not brochure copy.
Real use.
A Simple Decision Framework
If you feel overwhelmed, use these three questions.
1. What Is My Realistic Budget?
- Under $1,500: you are mainly in DIY territory
- $2,000–$7,000: you are in prosumer territory
- $7,000–$11,000+: high-end plasma workstations
- $14,997+: integrated premium consumer systems
- $30,000+: clinic / practitioner territory
2. Do I Enjoy Tinkering?
- Yes: DIY or mid-tier may be a good fit
- No: you probably want something integrated, guided, or easier to run
3. How Much Is My Time Worth?
If you are busy, every hour you spend troubleshooting cables, software, and setup is time you are not spending on recovery, work, family, or life.
At that point, paying more for simplicity may not be a luxury.
It may be the smarter decision.
Struggling with chronic health issues and running out of answers?
It may be time to try a different frequency.
Think of an opera singer shattering glass — every organism has a frequency. We use the right one to help remove what’s not supposed to be there.
Our proprietary Rife Technology identifies and targets harmful toxins using high-intensity harmonic frequencies — supporting your body’s natural ability to heal itself.
Safe. Non-Invasive. Drug-Free.
Common Mistakes Buyers Make
Mistake #1: Buying Based on Hype
Loud marketing does not equal a good fit.
Mistake #2: Overestimating Your Tolerance for Complexity
A lot of people think they will enjoy the technical side more than they actually do.
Mistake #3: Focusing Only on Sticker Price
The cheapest machine is not always the cheapest ownership experience.
Mistake #4: Ignoring Support
Customer support matters most when you’re confused or something goes wrong.
Mistake #5: Buying the Wrong Bucket
A DIY buyer and a plug-and-play buyer should not buy the same type of machine.
Mistake #6: Confusing “More Specs” With “Better Fit”
A bigger spec sheet is not the same as a better daily workflow.
Mistake #7: Not Thinking About Ongoing Scans, Interpretation, and Targeted Frequency Support
A lot of buyers focus on the machine itself but forget to ask what happens after the first few sessions. Do you have a way to run ongoing scans, interpret the results, and adjust your approach over time?
Do you have guidance on how to target more specifically using an appropriate Rife frequencies list?
Or are you left guessing what to run and when?
Bottom Line
If you remember only one thing from this article, make it this:
The best Rife machine is not the one with the most hype, the longest spec sheet, or the lowest price. It’s the one that matches your life, your budget, your tolerance for complexity, and your likelihood of actually using it consistently.
That is how smart buyers think.
Stay medically grounded.
Buy the workflow you will actually use.
Think in years, not days.
And choose the machine that fits your real life, not the one that only looks good on a sales page.
That is the right way to choose a Rife machine.
10 Frequently Asked Questions
1. What’s the most important factor when choosing a Rife machine?
For most first-time buyers, it’s ease of use. If the workflow is too technical or annoying, the machine usually gets used less, no matter how impressive the specs sound.
2. What’s a realistic price for a good Rife machine in 2026?
A realistic range depends on the tier. DIY systems often run about $300 to $1,500. Mid-level prosumer systems usually range from $2,000 to $7,000. High-end plasma workstations often run $7,000 to $11,000+, while integrated plug-and-play plasma systems often start around $14,997.
3. Should I buy a DIY system or a plug-and-play system?
That depends on your personality. If you enjoy software, setup, cables, and experimentation, DIY may fit you well. If you want simplicity, consistency, and less friction, plug-and-play is usually the better choice.
4. What’s the difference between plasma and contact systems?
Contact systems use pads, cylinders, or footplates that touch the body. Plasma systems use a gas-filled tube or plasma-based emitter that creates a field around you while you sit or lie nearby. Plasma usually offers a more hands-free workflow, while contact systems are often cheaper but more involved to set up.
5. Does paying more mean a Rife machine is more effective?
Not in any clinically proven way. What paying more often gets you is better build quality, better workflow, more polished interfaces, stronger support, larger program libraries, and easier daily use.
6. What does “integrated” or “single-chassis” mean?
It means the core components are built into one enclosure instead of being separate boxes wired together. In practical terms, it usually means less setup, less clutter, and a simpler user experience.
7. Are Rife machines FDA-approved?
No. Rife machines are not approved to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. They should be viewed as wellness devices, not medical treatments.
8. Are scan tools or guided consults necessary?
Not always. Some buyers prefer to self-direct. Others find that scans, consults, and guided support make it much easier to know where to start and how to stay consistent.
9. How important are warranty and support?
Very important. If you plan to use the machine regularly, support, repair timelines, onboarding, and replacement policies can matter just as much as the device itself.
10. What’s the biggest mistake first-time buyers make?
The biggest mistake is buying a machine that does not match their real-life personality and workflow. A technical system can be great for a tinkerer and terrible for a busy beginner. Fit matters more than hype.
Medical & Safety Disclaimer
This article is provided for educational and general wellness purposes only. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease, and it is not medical advice or a substitute for care from a licensed healthcare professional. Do not delay, avoid, or discontinue medical evaluation or treatment based on anything you read here.
Serious conditions: If you have symptoms that concern you—or you are being treated for a serious medical condition—work directly with your clinician. Reputable cancer information sources state that Rife machines cannot cure cancer and should not replace evidence-based care.
Who should get medical clearance first: Talk with a qualified healthcare professional before starting any new wellness routine, especially if you are pregnant or nursing, have a seizure disorder or significant cardiac condition, take prescription medications, or have an implanted medical device (such as a pacemaker, ICD, neurostimulator, or insulin pump). The FDA advises patients to keep consumer electronics that may create magnetic interference at least six inches away from implanted medical devices—if you have an implant, treat this as a medical safety question and don’t guess.
Any references to “benefits,” “results,” “scans,” “protocols,” or “frequencies” are presented in a general wellness context only and are not claims of medical effectiveness. Individual responses vary, and many factors can influence outcomes (including baseline health, sleep, stress, hydration, nutrition, consistency, and expectations). No outcomes are guaranteed.
About The Author

Brian Reese is one of the world’s leading experts on VA disability benefits and a bestselling author dedicated to serving those who served. Since 2013, his education and coaching have helped millions of veterans and families pursue the VA benefits they’ve earned — unlocking billions in tax-free compensation.
A former active-duty U.S. Air Force officer, Brian deployed to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom and received the Defense Meritorious Service Medal. He is a Distinguished Graduate of Management from the U.S. Air Force Academy and earned an MBA as a National Honor Scholar from Oklahoma State University.
In 2024, Brian was diagnosed with Stage 4 Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and completed thirteen rounds of chemotherapy — an experience that deepened his commitment to responsible, evidence-aware wellness education. He writes practical, compliance-aware guides on Rife frequency technology for general wellness — relaxation, sleep quality, stress management, and recovery support. He is the author of THE RIFE WAY: The Untold Story of Frequency Technology and the New Science of Self-Healing. His approach: educate first, avoid hype, cite balanced sources, and help people use frequency tools responsibly.
Beyond veteran advocacy and wellness education, Brian is an entrepreneur and investor who backs ventures that improve lives and create lasting impact. He is a supporter of Eden Life and its mission to make frequency-based wellness clear and accessible. His mission is to multiply every blessing God has entrusted to him by 100× — for His glory and the advancement of His Kingdom.