Call an Expert Now! +1 (833) 419-1774
+1 (833) 419-1774
Mo-Fr: 9AM - 5PM EST
The 3-person size is the most popular home sauna we sell, and the reason is simple: it's the smallest cabin that gives one person room to fully recline on a bench while still fitting two adults sitting upright. A 2-person works for a couple sitting side-by-side, but the 16-20" bench depth typical at that size means nobody lies down. Step up to 3-person and bench depth jumps to 20-24", interior length stretches to roughly 60-70", and one person can actually stretch out flat for a 30-minute session.
The other reason 3-person dominates: it covers the realistic use case for most households without the cost or footprint of a larger cabin. A solo user gets full-recline room. A couple has elbow room. A third adult or a child joins occasionally. You're not paying for empty bench space you'll use twice a year.
Every retailer in this industry plays loose with capacity claims. Here's what 3-person honestly looks like in our cabins.
The honest read: 3-person means two adults comfortably plus one child, or a third adult squeezed in for shorter sessions. Three full-grown adults sitting on a single L-shaped or bench layout will be touching shoulders. That's not a flaw — that's how the math works at this footprint. If you regularly host three adults who each want their own personal space, look at our 4-person saunas instead.
What 3-person does well: solo recline, two-person comfort, occasional third. If that's your use case, you're in the right collection.
This is the question that stalls most buyers. Both heat types are well-represented at 3-person, and the right answer depends on what you want from a session.
Traditional (Finnish) saunas heat the air to 170-190°F using an electric heater or wood-burning stove loaded with stones. Pour water on the stones and you get löyly — the burst of steam that defines the Finnish experience. Sessions run 10-20 minutes at high intensity. The air feels hot and dense; the heat is enveloping. This is the style with thousands of years of Finnish cultural history and the bulk of the long-term health research behind it.
Infrared saunas heat your body directly using 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 first-timers or anyone heat-sensitive. Many users prefer infrared for post-workout recovery and longer relaxation sessions. The Finnmark FD-3 and FD-5 Trinity XL are full-spectrum models that include near, mid, and far infrared wavelengths in the same panels. See the full infrared sauna lineup for the broader range across sizes.
The electrical reality also matters. A 3-person infrared usually runs on a standard 120V household outlet — plug it in and go. Traditional 3-person cabins almost always need a dedicated 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician. If installation hassle is a factor, infrared is the easier path.
Can't decide? Hybrid saunas combine both — the Finnmark FD-5 Trinity XL fits 3-4 people and includes infrared panels, a traditional Harvia heater with stones, and built-in red light therapy in a single cabin. See the full indoor hybrid options.
The 3-person size is one of the few where indoor and outdoor are equally common, so the choice comes down to what you have space for and what experience you're after.
Indoor 3-person saunas fit in a basement, finished garage, home gym, or large spare bedroom. Footprint is typically 5-6' wide by 4-5' deep. No foundation needed — the existing floor works as long as it's level. Assembly is 3-5 hours for two people. Most use Hemlock (hypoallergenic, no aroma), Red Cedar (aromatic, naturally rot-resistant), or Thermo-Aspen (stays cool against skin). Browse the full indoor sauna range.
Outdoor 3-person saunas need a foundation (concrete pad, gravel base, or rated deck), weatherproof electrical, and potentially a permit depending on jurisdiction. More involved, but unlocks the traditional Finnish hot-cold contrast — sauna to outdoor air to plunge — that's hard to replicate indoors. Aesthetically, a backyard sauna at dusk in winter is a different experience entirely. Models like the Dundalk Granby cabin, SaunaLife E6 barrel, and SunRay Seneca cabin all sit in this 3-person outdoor space. Compare across the full outdoor sauna lineup or our 2-person outdoor models for tighter footprints.
We've curated this collection around the brands that actually deliver at this size — not every label that claims to.
Finnmark Designs builds full-spectrum infrared cabins from Thermo-Aspen, with hidden carbon panels, low EMF design, and integrated red light therapy. The FD-3 and FD-5 Trinity XL are the flagship 3-4 person models. See the full Finnmark collection.
SunRay Saunas covers the value end — Hemlock and Red Cedar construction, in both infrared and traditional, indoor and outdoor formats. Models include the Hampton 300TN, Aspen HL300K2, Savannah HL300K, Westlake HL300LX, Aurora 300SH barrel, and Seneca 300D5 outdoor cabin.
SaunaLife handles the modern outdoor side. The CL4G is a 3-person cube with thermo-spruce exterior and full-glass front — clean Scandinavian aesthetics, fast assembly, designed for daily outdoor use. The E6 ERGO barrel covers the traditional shape in 3-person. See SaunaLife's full lineup.
Dundalk Leisurecraft is the heritage brand for outdoor — handcrafted in Ontario from Eastern White Cedar, with the Granby cabin and MiniPOD covering the 3-person size. Browse the Dundalk collection for the full range.
Dynamic rounds out the budget end with low-EMF infrared cabins for buyers prioritizing price-per-square-foot.
Plan for the cabin's exterior footprint plus clearance, not just interior dimensions.
Indoor 3-person cabins typically run 60-72" wide x 47-51" deep x 75-80" tall on the exterior. Plan a minimum 6' x 5' clear floor area, with at least 6" of airflow clearance behind and on each side. Door swing needs unobstructed space — measure twice. Ceiling height minimum is 7'.
Outdoor 3-person cabins are typically 6-7' wide x 5-7' deep depending on style (cube, barrel, or cabin). Plan for 24" of clearance on all sides for maintenance access and to satisfy local fire code. The foundation needs to be flat, level, and load-rated for the loaded weight of the sauna plus three occupants — usually 1,500-2,500 lbs total. A 4-inch concrete pad is the gold standard. Compacted gravel works and drains naturally. Check our outdoor sauna planning and installation guide for the full site-prep walkthrough.
Heat type drives everything here.
3-person infrared indoor — most plug into a dedicated 120V, 20-amp household outlet (the SunRay HL300K, HL300K2, and Savannah are examples). No electrician required for wiring, though we still recommend a dedicated circuit so the sauna isn't sharing a breaker with anything else.
3-person traditional indoor — needs a dedicated 240V, 30-40 amp circuit installed by a licensed electrician. Heater wattage at this size is typically 4.5-6 kW, which puts you in 240V territory. Models like the SunRay Hampton 300TN and Westlake HL300LX fall here.
3-person hybrid — same 240V dedicated circuit as traditional, since hybrids include a stone heater plus IR panels.
3-person outdoor — same specs as indoor equivalents but with outdoor-rated conduit, weatherproof disconnect, and a wire run from your panel that may be longer (and more expensive). Budget $400-$1,500 for electrician work depending on heat type and run distance.
Always consult a licensed electrician before any electrical work. Local code varies. For the full breakdown, read our sauna electrical requirements guide. It covers code-level specifics our customers most often miss.
For heaters compatible with traditional 3-person cabins, see our electric sauna heaters in the 4.5-6 kW range. Each cabin's product page lists the verified heater pairing.