Bring wellness into your own space with home saunas built for everyday use, from compact one person cabins to roomy family models for indoor rooms and backyards. This collection lines up heat type, size, and brand side by side so you can compare an infrared, traditional, or hybrid unit in one place.
- Indoor fit: Slot a cabin into a spare room, basement, or bathroom and browse the full indoor saunas range for sizing.
- Heat type: Decide between gentle radiant warmth and classic steam by comparing infrared saunas against traditional heater models.
- Outdoor option: Prefer a garden or patio retreat? See the weather ready picks in outdoor saunas.
Home Saunas FAQ
Quick answers on choosing, pricing, placing, and powering a sauna for your home.
What is a home sauna?
A home sauna is a self contained heated cabin you install in your house or yard for regular personal use. It uses either an infrared heater that warms the body directly or a traditional heater that warms the air and rocks for a steamier session.
Home models come in one to six person sizes and ship from brands like Golden Designs, Dynamic Saunas, and Finnish Sauna Builders, so you can match the cabin to your space and routine.
How much does a home sauna cost?
Pricing for a home sauna ranges from about $2,000 for a compact one or two person infrared cabin up to around $23,000 for a large premium traditional or hybrid unit. Most shoppers land in the middle for a quality two to four person model.
Heat type, wood quality, capacity, and brand all move the price, so compare a few options across our infrared saunas and traditional ranges to find the best value.
Infrared or traditional for a home sauna?
It comes down to the heat you enjoy. Infrared saunas warm your body directly at a lower air temperature, run on a standard outlet in many cases, and heat up fast, which suits daily indoor use.
- Infrared: lower temperature, quicker warm up, easy indoor install.
- Traditional: higher heat, steam when you add water, a more classic ritual.
Compare both in our traditional saunas and infrared collections.
Where can I put a home sauna?
Indoors, a home sauna fits well in a basement, spare bedroom, home gym, bathroom, or large closet as long as the floor is level and the spot stays dry. Leave a few inches of clearance around the cabin for airflow.
If indoor space is tight, an outdoor model on a patio or deck works too. Browse outdoor saunas for weather ready cabins built to sit in the yard.
Do home saunas need special wiring?
It depends on the model. Many smaller infrared home saunas plug into a standard 120 volt household outlet, so no special work is needed. Larger infrared cabins and most traditional electric heaters draw more power and call for a dedicated 240 volt circuit installed by a licensed electrician.
Always check the product specs for the exact requirement before you buy, since capacity and heater size drive the electrical needs.

