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An 8 person barrel sauna is the biggest version of a shape that's been a backyard staple for a reason. Long, low, cylindrical, with two facing benches running the length of the cabin. At this size you're looking at interior lengths of roughly 9 to 10 feet, which gives you enough bench to seat a real group without anyone perching on a corner.
Here's the part most retailers won't tell you. "8-person" is a manufacturer rating, not a comfort rating. On True North's 9-foot and 10-foot barrels, you can technically fit 8 adults across two benches if everyone sits upright shoulder to shoulder. In practice, most owners use these for 4 to 6 adults at a time with room to recline, plus a kids' tier for family sessions. If your real use case is two adults plus the occasional gathering, a 5 person outdoor sauna or 6 person barrel sauna will heat faster and cost less to run. If you actually entertain in groups of 6 to 8, this is the size that earns its footprint.
The other reason people land here: longer barrels give you the option to lie down. A 10-foot interior bench is long enough for most adults to stretch out flat — something you simply can't do in shorter barrel models or in most outdoor cube saunas at comparable price points.
The barrel shape isn't decorative. It's functional. Heat rises and circulates around the curved ceiling, which means hot air doesn't pool in dead corners the way it can in a square cabin. In a long barrel, that circulation extends down the full length of the cylinder — so a sauna stove placed at one end can effectively heat the entire 9 or 10 foot interior, as long as you've sized the heater correctly.
The trade-off: curved walls eat into headroom and shoulder room near the floor, and the bench width at the top of the curve is narrower than the bench at the seat line. This is why a barrel rated for 8 people is rarely as roomy as an 8-person cabin sauna. For a deeper comparison of shapes, our barrel sauna vs. square sauna guide walks through the trade-offs in detail.
What you get in return is a faster heat-up time relative to interior volume (the cylinder has less air to heat than a same-length cabin), a more iconic look, and a structure that handles snow loads, rain, and wind better than a flat-roofed cabin in most climates.
The 8-person barrel category is narrow. Most major brands cap their barrels at 6 people — Dundalk Leisurecraft's largest barrel, the Tranquility MP, tops out at 6 — so the genuine 8-person barrels in our catalog come primarily from True North.
The True North 8 Person 10' Long Barrel is the pure-barrel flagship. A 10-foot interior length, roughly 79" diameter, available in pine, white cedar, or red cedar. The 10-foot bench gives full lie-down room for taller adults and the cabin volume justifies a larger heater for proper heat distribution.
The True North 6-8 Person 9' Long Barrel is the practical middle option. 9-foot interior, slightly wider profile (about 90" outside), same wood choices. Heats a bit faster than the 10-foot model and works well for groups of 5 to 6 adults in real comfort, with room for 8 in tighter rotation.
The True North Schooner is the most popular long-barrel model and ships in lengths up to 10 feet, with optional 2-foot covered porch. The porch is useful — it's where you cool down between rounds and keep firewood dry if you're running a wood stove. If you want the longer cabin without giving up an outdoor landing zone, this is the one.
For shoppers who like the silhouette but want a cabin-style interior, the SaunaLife G11 is a 2-room 8-person outdoor sauna with a built-in changing room and 2-tier seating. It's not technically a barrel — it's a cabin form built from thermo-spruce — but it competes for the same buyer and is worth comparing if a separate changing room matters to you. Browse SaunaLife for the full line.
Every True North barrel in this collection is offered in three wood options, and the price gap between them is real money. Here's what each wood actually delivers.
Pine is the entry point. It's a softer wood with a lighter color, takes heat well, and resists warping when properly kiln-dried (which True North does). Pine has more visible knots and a less refined grain pattern than cedar, but it's structurally sound for sauna use and it's the budget that gets most buyers into a long barrel without a five-figure spend.
White cedar is the middle tier and the most common upgrade. Naturally rot-resistant, dimensionally stable in changing humidity, and far less prone to resin weeping than pine. The grain is tighter, the color is a uniform pale cream, and the aroma is the classic sauna scent most people associate with traditional Finnish-style cabins.
Red cedar is the premium option. Western red cedar resists rot and insects better than almost any softwood, has the deepest natural color, and develops a beautiful silver-grey patina as it weathers. It also has the lowest thermal conductivity of the three — meaning the bench surface stays cooler against bare skin at full sauna temperature. If this sauna is a multi-decade purchase, red cedar earns its premium.
Across all three woods, True North uses thicker lumber than most budget barrel kits, which directly addresses the most common barrel sauna failure mode: thin staves that warp, gap, or crack within the first few seasons.
This is where a lot of 8-person barrel buyers get burned. A 10-foot barrel has roughly 1.5 to 1.7 times the interior volume of a standard 6-foot model, and the heater has to scale accordingly. Undersize the heater and you'll wait an hour to hit 175°F, then watch the temperature crash every time someone opens the door.
For a 9-foot or 10-foot True North barrel, you're typically looking at an electric heater in the 8 to 10.5 kW range, or a properly sized wood-burning stove. Browse our large sauna heaters for the right capacity bracket. If you prefer the ritual of a fire (and a long barrel is one of the few sauna shapes where wood-fire really shines), our wood-burning sauna heaters include outside-feed models that let you stoke without opening the cabin door.
Each True North product page lists verified heater pairings — these are the heaters we know work for the cabin volume and electrical hookup. Stick with those unless you've sized a non-listed option yourself with the manufacturer's CFM/cubic-foot guidance. For voltage requirements and dedicated-circuit specs, our sauna electrical requirements guide walks through what your electrician needs to know.
An 8-person barrel is a serious piece of weight — roughly 1,500 to 2,500 pounds dry, more once it's loaded with people, water, and heater stones. The foundation matters more than buyers expect.
The cleanest option is a 4-inch reinforced concrete pad sized to the barrel cradle footprint plus a few inches of overhang on each side. Compacted crushed gravel (4 to 6 inches deep over a level subgrade) is a strong DIY alternative and drains better than concrete in heavy-rain climates. Pressure-treated decking can work but has to be engineered for the load — a standard residential deck framed for human occupancy is rarely rated for an additional 2,500-pound point load. Always confirm with a contractor before placing a barrel of this size on existing decking.
The barrel cradle itself is non-negotiable. True North includes the cradle with every kit, and it must sit on level, solid ground or the staves will pull out of alignment over time, opening gaps between boards. Spend the day getting the foundation right — the rest of the assembly is forgiving, but this step isn't.
Two people can typically assemble a 9-foot or 10-foot True North barrel in a weekend. The staves are pre-cut and the steel banding system pulls everything together as you tighten — no specialty tools required beyond standard hand tools. Plan one day for foundation prep, one day for the cabin, and a separate visit from your electrician for the heater hookup.
Long barrels handle cold climates exceptionally well. The cylindrical shape sheds snow, the Canadian-built True North models are designed for Ontario winters, and the small footprint per cabin volume means heat-up times stay reasonable even in single-digit temperatures. In hot, humid climates, ventilation gaps and the natural rot resistance of cedar do the heavy lifting — pine works too but earns the upgrade to white cedar in the Southeast.
If you're still weighing this against other shapes and sizes, our outdoor sauna buyer's guide covers placement, drainage, permits, and the rest of the planning checklist. And if you're not sure 8-person is the right capacity for your real-world use, our broader outdoor sauna collection lets you compare every shape and size side by side.