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Let's be straight about this category, because most retailers won't be. At 5-person, indoor saunas get specific. You're past the basement-corner solo cabin and into a room that seats a small group, which means a bigger footprint, a more serious heater, and a real decision about where in the house it lives.
This is a curated collection, not a wall of options. We carry what holds up at this size rather than padding the page with cheap kits that warp or underheat. So this is less "browse 30 cabins" and more "here's the right way to think about a 5-person indoor build, and the unit we trust for it."
The Kohler C1 Indoor Sauna Kit is our 5-person indoor pick, available in Graphite Grey at $17,680 or in Scandinavian Spruce at $15,186. Yes, that Kohler, the bathroom-fixture company, and the engineering pedigree shows. It's a traditional Spruce cabin that configures from 2 up to 5 people, so the same kit flexes from an intimate session to a full group.
At 65.8" wide, 46.1" deep, and 83.5" tall, the C1 is a substantial indoor room. The finish quality is the reason to spend here. This is the cabin you buy when you want it to look built-in, like part of the house, not a box bolted into a corner. If you're cross-shopping, our broader traditional sauna lineup shows where Kohler sits against the rest of what we stock.
Most people don't realize the biggest reason an indoor group sauna beats a backyard one: it actually gets used. A detached sauna out in the yard looks great in the listing photos and then sits cold from November to March, because nobody wants to cross a frozen lawn in a towel. Indoors, the sauna is part of the house. Down the hall, ten steps, ready when you are. The cold months are exactly when you want heat, and an indoor build is the version that survives them.
The other reason is the social one. Five-person capacity is enough for a real group session, family on a Sunday, friends after a workout, a partner who wants in while you're already mid-sweat. The Kohler C1's traditional layout gives you bench room to share that without anyone crammed against the heater. At this size the sauna stops being a solo recovery box and becomes a room people gather in.
A 5-person indoor build is a traditional-heat decision. The C1 runs on a real Finnish-style stove, which means 160–190°F and the water-on-stones löyly that infrared cabins can't reproduce. That ritual, pour, hiss, the wave of heat across the room, is the whole reason to go traditional at this scale.
If your heart is set on infrared instead, that's a different room and a different page. At 5-person, infrared options thin out fast, so most buyers who want radiant heat step down a size. Browse our infrared saunas to see what's available, but for a true 5-person group room, traditional is the practical answer.
Plan the room before the order. The C1's roughly 66" by 46" footprint wants a dedicated space, a spare room, a finished basement zone, or a wide spot in a home gym. The number that surprises people is the 83.5" height. In a basement with ductwork or a garage under low joists, measure that ceiling first, because it's the spec that ends an order after it ships.
Leave a few inches of clearance around the cabin for airflow and a clean door swing, and make sure the room itself can breathe. Indoor saunas need a path for air to move, which matters more at group size than it does for a single-person unit.
A real upside of an indoor 5-person sauna is that your electrical panel is usually nearby, which keeps install cost well below trenching power across a yard to a detached building. That proximity is a legitimate reason to put the sauna inside.
That said, a traditional stove heater for a room this size needs a dedicated 240V circuit on its own breaker. The exact amperage, wire gauge, and any GFCI requirement depend on the heater your configuration ships with and your home's panel, so have a licensed electrician confirm the specifics before the crate arrives. Our guide to sauna electrical requirements covers exactly what to ask, and you can browse our sauna heaters to understand the power a traditional room of this size calls for.
Here's what the industry won't tell you about group-size indoor saunas: this is the size where cheap kits fail hardest. A 5-person room has a lot of wall, a lot of seams, and a big heat load, and budget cabins warp, gap, and underheat exactly because there's more of everything to get wrong. The corner that stays cool, the door that no longer seals after a winter, the bench that bows. We've seen all of it.
That's the reasoning behind a curated page with one trusted cabin rather than a wall of options. The Kohler C1 is built to a fixture-company standard, with the joinery and finish that keep a big indoor cabin tight and even-heating for the long haul. The price reflects that. You're not paying for a brand name on a box; you're paying for a 5-person room that still seals and heats evenly in year five.
It's the same logic we apply everywhere on the site: curation over catalog. We'd rather stand behind one cabin we'd put in our own basement than list ten we'd quietly warn you away from.
The C1 ships as a complete kit, pre-cut Spruce walls, benches, door, and hardware, designed to assemble in place. It's not a from-scratch lumber build. Two people and a methodical afternoon will stand it up, and we'll talk you through any step by phone. That hand-holding is part of buying from Topture instead of a marketplace listing.
You provide a level indoor floor, the dedicated 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician, room ventilation, and basic hand tools. Saunas ship curbside freight, fully insured. If 5-person is more room than you need, you can step down to our 4-person indoor saunas for a wider range of infrared and traditional options, or size up to 6-person indoor-capable cabins if you're hosting a crowd.
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