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The 2-person size dominates home sauna sales for a real reason: it's the smallest size that fits two adults comfortably while still being small enough to install in the space most people have. A 1-person sauna works for committed solo users, but most households want the option for a partner, roommate, or occasional guest. Going up to 3 or 4-person adds cost and footprint you may not need.
Interior dimensions on a typical 2-person sauna run 48" wide by 36-48" deep. That's enough for two adults sitting upright next to each other, or one adult reclined across the bench. Bench depth is the main thing lost vs a 3-person — most 2-person cabins have 16-20" deep benches, which seats well but doesn't let you lie down fully. If reclining matters, upsize.
This collection covers every configuration at the 2-person size. The decisions you'll need to make: indoor or outdoor, traditional heat or infrared (or both — hybrid), and wood species.
An indoor 2-person sauna fits in a basement, spare bedroom, home gym, walk-in closet, or finished garage. It plugs into or wires into existing electrical service in your home. No foundation required — you're sitting on the existing floor. Assembly is 2-4 hours for two people. This is the path of least resistance for most buyers.
An outdoor 2-person sauna needs a foundation (concrete pad, gravel base, or rated deck), weatherproof electrical from your panel, and permits if your jurisdiction requires them. More involved, more expensive, but unlocks the traditional Finnish contrast — hot sauna to cold outdoor air, rinse-and-repeat. The aesthetic experience of a backyard sauna at dusk in winter is genuinely different from an indoor cabin, if that matters to you.
Our indoor sauna lineup and outdoor sauna collection let you filter by category beyond just size. If you're leaning outdoor, our outdoor sauna planning and installation guide walks through the full site-prep and permit process.
This is the question that stalls every buyer at this size. Here's the straight answer.
Traditional (Finnish) saunas heat the air to 170-190°F with an electric or wood heater loaded with stones. Pouring water on the stones creates löyly — the burst of steam that defines the Finnish experience. Sessions run 10-20 minutes at high intensity. This is the style with 2,000+ years of cultural history behind it and the one most of the large-cohort health studies are based on.
Infrared saunas heat your body directly through radiant wavelengths at 120-140°F air temperature. Sessions run 30-45 minutes at lower perceived intensity. The air stays breathable — easier on the airways, less suffocating for people new to sauna or sensitive to hot air. Deep tissue heating that's good for pre-workout warm-up, recovery, and longer relaxation sessions.
For a 2-person indoor, infrared is the easier install — runs on a standard 120V outlet, no electrician required for wiring. Traditional indoor saunas at this size need a dedicated 240V circuit. Our sauna electrical guide covers the specifics.
If you can't decide, a dual-heat hybrid sauna combines both in one cabin — the Finnmark FD-4 Trinity is the flagship in this category, adding red light therapy as a third modality.
A 2-person indoor sauna needs roughly a 5' x 5' floor area accounting for clearance on all sides. Minimum ceiling height is 7' (most 2-person cabins are 75-80" tall). Plan for at least 6" of airflow clearance on each side and behind the unit. The door needs to swing open — don't wedge it in so tight that the door only opens partway.
Basements are the most popular location because they tend to have unfinished space, existing electrical capacity, and a concrete floor that tolerates occasional moisture. Spare bedrooms work but plan for ventilation — a cracked window or HVAC return nearby helps manage post-session humidity. Garages work if climate-controlled (saunas don't like freezing temperatures between sessions — electronics can fail).
For outdoor 2-person saunas, footprint is typically 5-6' in each dimension. Plan for 24" clearance on all sides for maintenance access and local fire code compliance.
This is where buyers get tripped up. Heater size must match interior cubic footage, not person-count.
A typical 2-person sauna has 150-200 cubic feet of interior volume. That calls for a 3-4.5 kW electric heater for traditional models, or 1.5-2 kW worth of infrared heaters distributed around the cabin for infrared models. Oversizing the heater doesn't heat the room faster — it just overshoots the target temperature and cycles on-off more aggressively, which is hard on the heater.
For traditional 2-person, the Harvia KIP 4.5 kW or Saunum 3.5 kW are typical matches. For infrared 2-person, carbon heater arrays totaling 1.5-2 kW distributed across back and side walls are standard. All product pages list the specific heater recommendation per model. Browse our electric sauna heaters for compatible traditional units and our full heater lineup across all sizes.
The 2-person collection covers every major style.
Cabin: Rectangular indoor cabinets like the SunRay Sierra (HL200K infrared), SunRay Baldwin (HL200SN traditional), SaunaLife X2 (traditional indoor), and Kohler C1. These are the standard indoor format.
Barrel: Outdoor classic. SunRay Solace (200SH) in 2-person, Aurora (300SH) in 2-4 person, Oasis (300SC) with canopy porch. All Red Cedar. Curved walls heat fast; rustic aesthetic.
Cube: Modern outdoor shape. SaunaLife CL3G (2-person) and CL4G (3-person but often bought for 2). Thermo-treated spruce and aspen construction, full-glass front options. Compare across the full cube sauna lineup.
Pod: Rounded outdoor profile. Dundalk MiniPOD (CTC77MW) and Luna (CTC22LU) in 2-4 person White Cedar builds.
Corner/small footprint: SunRay Sedona (HL100K) is a 1-2 person infrared that tucks into a tight space. SunRay Logan (outdoor infrared, 200D6) is the smallest outdoor infrared option.
Most-asked question at this size. Short version:
Budget for electrician work if you're going traditional or hybrid: $400-$1,000 typical for indoor runs, $500-$1,500 for outdoor runs depending on distance from panel.
For a full overview of every home sauna option across sizes, browse our complete home sauna range.