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A 5-person traditional sauna is the size where a home sauna stops being a solo retreat and becomes a place you actually host in. Two on the upper bench, two below, room for a fifth, and enough air volume that the heat stays even from corner to corner. It's the sweet spot for families and anyone who saunas with a partner and friends without jumping to a full 6-or-more footprint.
The defining feature here is traditional heat: a Finnish-style stove that warms the air to roughly 160–195°F and turns water-on-stones into löyly, the soft steam that rolls across the room a beat after the splash. That's the ritual infrared can't reproduce, and it's why this category exists. Most models in this collection run a Finnish electric stove, with wood-burning an option on cabins and barrels. If you're weighing heat types across capacities, our full traditional sauna lineup compares them side by side.
This is the size where heater sizing starts to matter a lot. A 5-person room generally runs 300–425 cubic feet of interior volume, which puts you in the 6kW to 8kW range for a properly sized electric heater. Undersize it and you'll watch the thermometer stall at 150°F while the benches near the door stay cool. Insulated outdoor cabins like the True North Quattro or the Dundalk Georgian sit at the upper end of that range; tighter barrels can run lower.
Two brands cover most buyers. Harvia's reliable workhorse line heats in 30–45 minutes, has the widest US parts network, and won't surprise you, which is why it's our default reliability pick. HUUM's high-stone-mass heaters warm a bit slower but hold a heavier load of stones, translating to softer, longer-lasting löyly when you ladle water across them. Match wattage to your room from the full electric heater range, or go with a wood-burning stove if you're off-grid or want the fire-tending part of the experience. Wood-burning works at this scale but needs a chimney run, clearance to combustibles, and a stove rated for the cubic footage.
Most 5-person buyers land outdoors, and the collection reflects that. The True North Quattro is a White Cedar outdoor cabin with a porch and 2-tier seating, and the True North 5-person cabin is the more rustic, value-minded version of the same idea. Outdoor cabins demand a level pad (concrete or compacted gravel works, a rated deck can work) plus weather-grade construction if you live anywhere with real winters. Canadian-built saunas from True North and Dundalk are engineered for that climate, which is why they tend to outlast cheaper kits by a decade or more.
Indoor at 5-person is tighter but doable. The Kohler C1 indoor kit offers a 5-person configuration in spruce at roughly 66" wide by 46" deep, which fits a dedicated basement or gym room. The advantages indoors are short winter walks, no weather sealing, and easier electrical because the panel is usually close. If you want the indoor route across more capacities, browse our indoor sauna collection.
The middle path is a barrel. We carry several 5-person barrels here, including the Dundalk Tranquility and the True North 8-foot barrel, plus the SaunaLife EE8G glass-front. Barrels heat efficiently because of the curved shape, but the bench geometry takes some getting used to at this capacity. If a barrel is what you actually want, browse our full barrel sauna selection rather than treating it as a runner-up here.
We don't stock every brand at this size. We carry the ones that hold up.
True North handmakes cabins, barrels, and pods in Ontario from pine or cedar. Their Quattro cabin, 5-person cabin, Schooner and 8-foot barrels, and Pod and Large Pod all seat five comfortably. Honest construction at competitive pricing, built for cold climates.
Dundalk LeisureCraft handcrafts in Eastern White Cedar in Ontario. The Georgian Cabin is their flagship at this size, also available with a changeroom or a covered porch, and the Tranquility barrels round out the lineup. These are the saunas people buy when they live somewhere that actually gets cold.
SaunaLife brings modern Thermo-Spruce and spruce builds: the EE8G and CL7G for barrel and cube fans, the glass-front GL6, and the pre-assembled G6 cabin at the luxury end. Worth knowing: SaunaLife ships at a flat freight rate, not free, so factor that into the total.
If budget isn't the constraint, Kohler (yes, the bathroom brand) makes the C2 outdoor and C1 indoor kits with 5-person configurations in Douglas Fir or spruce. They're the premium tier of this collection by a wide margin, with engineering and finish quality that matches what you'd expect from a $30K+ custom build.
A 6kW to 8kW heater needs a dedicated 240V circuit, hardwired, on its own breaker, sized to the heater's amperage. No plug, no sharing with another appliance. Indoor installs where the panel is within 20 feet typically run a few hundred dollars for a licensed electrician. Outdoor detached saunas, where you're trenching conduit across the yard, cost more because of the trenching, heavier-gauge wire for voltage drop, and often a subpanel near the sauna. A licensed electrician has to confirm the exact circuit, breaker, GFCI, and run distance for your home and the heater you choose. Our electrical hookup walkthrough covers what to ask them and how to read the spec sheet on each heater.
One thing we tell every customer: have the electrician on-site for a 15-minute conversation before the sauna ships. They'll spot panel-capacity or run-distance issues that are far easier to solve before a heavy crate is sitting on a pallet in your driveway.
Every sauna in this collection ships with the structure, benches, door, and hardware via curbside freight, fully insured (SaunaLife at a flat rate). Most models don't include the heater, since picking the right 6–8kW heater (electric vs. wood-burning, brand, controller) is a separate decision tied to your electrical setup and how you want to use the room.
You'll provide a level foundation (concrete pad, compacted gravel, or a deck rated for the loaded weight of the sauna plus five adults), the 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician, basic hand tools, and a weekend for assembly. Outdoor cabins in the Georgian or Quattro class take roughly 10–15 hours of build time for two people across two days; barrels are faster once the cradles are level. We can talk you through any of it by phone, which is part of what you get buying from Topture instead of a marketplace listing.
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