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Diy Sauna Kits

Indoor and outdoor sauna kits from SaunaLife, Dundalk, Kohler, SunRay, Finnmark, and True North. Barrel, cabin, cube, pod, and infrared styles that ship as pre-cut components and assemble in a weekend with basic tools.

Explore Our Diy Sauna Kits

SaunaLife G2 | 4-Person Traditional Outdoor Sauna

Original price $5,799.00
Original price $5,799.00 - Original price $5,799.00
Original price $5,799.00
Current price $4,990.00
$4,990.00 - $4,990.00
Current price $4,990.00
+ Shipping

Description The Garden-Series Model G2 Outdoor Sauna from SaunaLife is a truly superior quality sauna at an unmatched value. Exceptional 1.65”-thic...

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SaunaLife CL7G | 6-Person Outdoor Cube Sauna

Original price $9,199.00
Original price $9,199.00 - Original price $9,199.00
Original price $9,199.00
Current price $7,990.00
$7,990.00 - $7,990.00
Current price $7,990.00
+ Shipping

Description Beauty & Luxury Enjoy the unsurpassed luxury of the SaunaLife Cube-Series Model CL7G outdoor home sauna kit. Its modern Scandinavia...

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SaunaLife CL5G | 4-Person Outdoor Cube Sauna

Original price $6,899.00
Original price $6,899.00 - Original price $6,899.00
Original price $6,899.00
Current price $5,990.00
$5,990.00 - $5,990.00
Current price $5,990.00
+ Shipping

Description Transform your backyard into a private Scandinavian wellness retreat. The SaunaLife CL5G Cube Sauna is a masterpiece of design and craf...

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SaunaLife CL4G | 3-Person Outdoor Cube Sauna Kit

Original price $5,799.00
Original price $5,799.00 - Original price $5,799.00
Original price $5,799.00
Current price $4,990.00
$4,990.00 - $4,990.00
Current price $4,990.00
+ Shipping

Description The SaunaLife CL4G is a 3-person outdoor cube sauna kit handcrafted in Northern Europe. Its full-length panoramic bronze glass front se...

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SaunaLife CL3G | 2-Person Outdoor Cube Sauna

Original price $4,599.00
Original price $4,599.00 - Original price $4,599.00
Original price $4,599.00
Current price $3,990.00
$3,990.00 - $3,990.00
Current price $3,990.00
+ Shipping

Description Experience luxurious wellness at home with the SaunaLife Cube-Series Model CL3G 2-Person Sauna. This stunning outdoor sauna combines sl...

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SaunaLife CL12GCP | 8-Person Outdoor Cube Sauna with Changeroom

Original price $12,699.00
Original price $12,699.00 - Original price $12,699.00
Original price $12,699.00
Current price $10,990.00
$10,990.00 - $10,990.00
Current price $10,990.00
+ Shipping

Description Experience ultimate outdoor relaxation with the SaunaLife Model CL12GCP Cube-Series Sauna Suite. Designed for up to 8 people, this all-...

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Types of DIY Sauna Kits

Every sauna in this collection ships as a kit. That means pre-cut lumber, hardware, benches, a door, and instructions. You provide the foundation, basic tools, and a friend. The differences come down to style, location, and heat source.

Barrel sauna kits are the most popular entry point for outdoor builds. The curved stave construction sheds rain and snow naturally, heats quickly because there's less dead air inside, and looks right at home in most backyards. Dundalk's Canadian Timber barrels use Eastern White Cedar, while SaunaLife's ERGO barrel series features ergonomic interior benches and Thermo-Spruce construction. Both brands ship everything you need to assemble in a single weekend. If you're comparing shapes and sizes, the outdoor barrel sauna collection breaks it all down.

Cabin and cube kits give you flat walls, full standing height, and proper two-tier bench layouts. Cabin-style kits from Dundalk (the Georgian and Granby) and True North look like miniature Finnish saunas you'd find lakeside. SaunaLife's CL-series cube kits take a more architectural approach with glass fronts and clean lines. Cubes work particularly well as statement pieces on a patio or deck. You can compare all the glass-front and flat-wall options in our cube sauna lineup.

Pod sauna kits split the difference between barrel and cabin. Compact footprints, distinctive rounded shapes, and easier placement on smaller properties. The SaunaLife G3 and Dundalk MiniPOD are two of the most popular pod kits we carry.

Indoor sauna kits range from infrared cabin kits that snap together in under two hours to traditional kits like the SaunaLife X2 that install inside a spare room, basement, or garage. Most indoor infrared kits from SunRay and Finnmark are plug-and-play on a standard 120V outlet, so you don't need an electrician. Traditional indoor kits require a dedicated 240V circuit.

This collection sits within our broader home sauna catalog, which includes pre-assembled models and custom options alongside these kits.

How to Choose the Right Kit

Indoor or outdoor?

Start here, because it narrows everything else. Indoor kits work in basements, spare bedrooms, bathrooms, and garages. You'll need a room that can handle heat and moisture, but the build itself is simpler since the structure is already enclosed. Outdoor kits require a level foundation (gravel pad, concrete slab, or a rated deck) and potentially an electrical run from your panel to the sauna site. If you're leaning outdoor, our outdoor sauna collection covers every style and size.

Heat type matters more than you'd think

Traditional sauna kits use an electric or wood-burning heater to heat the air to 150–185°F. You throw water on the stones for steam (loyly). Infrared kits use panels that heat your body directly at lower air temperatures (120–150°F). The experience is fundamentally different. If you want the classic Finnish sauna feel with steam and high heat, go traditional. If post-workout recovery at a more comfortable air temp is the priority, infrared sauna kits are worth a look. Finnmark's Trinity series even combines both heat types into a single hybrid cabin.

Size it for how you'll actually use it

Manufacturer capacity ratings are generous. A "4-person" sauna comfortably seats two adults who want elbow room, or three who don't mind being close. If you plan to use it with a partner or host friends, go one size up from what sounds right. The biggest regret we hear from customers is buying too small.

Wood species

Cedar is the classic sauna wood and comes in two main varieties. Western Red Cedar (used by SunRay and Kohler) is naturally resistant to moisture, smells great, and stays cool to the touch. Eastern White Cedar (Dundalk's signature) handles freeze-thaw cycles particularly well and is grown specifically for northern climates. Thermo-treated spruce and aspen (SaunaLife, Finnmark) go through a high-heat kiln process that improves dimensional stability and moisture resistance without chemicals. Hemlock is a budget-friendly option common in SunRay's indoor kits. All of these perform well in sauna conditions, so the choice comes down to aesthetics, climate, and budget.

Assembly difficulty varies by style

Indoor infrared kits are the easiest. Snap-together panels, a screwdriver, and 30 minutes to 2 hours. Outdoor barrel kits take 4–8 hours with two people and basic hand tools. Cube and cabin kits are modular panel systems that typically take 2–4 hours for smaller models and up to two full days for larger builds like the SaunaLife G4 or Dundalk Georgian. None of these require carpentry skills. If you can assemble heavy furniture, you can build a sauna kit.

Brands We Carry

SaunaLife covers the widest range of outdoor kit styles: ERGO barrels (E6, E7, E8), glass-front barrels (EE-series), cubes (CL-series), pods (G3), and traditional cabins (G4, G11). Thermo-Spruce and Nordic Spruce construction across the line. If you're looking for a modern design with glass features, SaunaLife is usually where you'll land.

Dundalk LeisureCraft builds everything in Ontario, Canada from Eastern White Cedar. Their barrel, cabin, and pod kits are designed specifically for harsh winters, and the wood is naturally resistant to rot and moisture. The Georgian cabin and Harmony barrel are long-standing favorites for anyone who lives somewhere that actually gets cold.

True North offers barrel, pod, and cabin kits in Pine, White Cedar, or Red Cedar with honest construction and competitive pricing. The Schooner barrel seats up to 8 and is one of our most reviewed outdoor models.

SunRay is the indoor kit specialist. Their traditional and infrared models come in hemlock or red cedar and are among the most affordable kits we carry. Finnmark Designs focuses on full-spectrum infrared and hybrid kits built from Thermo-Aspen with integrated red light therapy panels. And Kohler's C1 and C2 kits bring bathroom-grade engineering to the sauna space at a premium price point.

What's in the Kit and What You'll Need

Every kit ships with the sauna structure (pre-cut lumber or panels), benches, a door, hardware, and assembly instructions. Most outdoor traditional kits don't include a heater, and that's intentional. It lets you choose between electric and wood-burning, and pick the right size for your specific room volume. We carry full sauna heater ranges from Harvia, HUUM, and Saunum, and each sauna product page lists verified heater pairings so you don't have to guess at compatibility. Indoor infrared and hybrid kits from SunRay and Finnmark include integrated heating panels, so the heater question doesn't apply.

You'll need to supply a level surface for outdoor kits (gravel pad is the easiest DIY option), basic hand tools (drill, level, tape measure, rubber mallet), and an electrical connection for electric heaters. Most require a dedicated 240V circuit on a 30A or 40A breaker. A licensed electrician should handle all electrical work. Each product page lists the exact electrical specs so your electrician knows what to prepare. For a full breakdown, read our guide to sauna electrical requirements.

If the idea of picking a heater separately feels overwhelming, our heater packages bundle the heater, stones, and controller into one purchase. Pair any outdoor kit with the right package and you've got a complete sauna with a single order.

Browse DIY Sauna Kits by Location

Indoor Sauna Kits | Traditional Sauna Kits

Frequently Asked Questions

How hard is it to assemble a DIY sauna kit?
Most kits are designed for homeowners, not carpenters. Indoor infrared sauna kits snap together in 30 minutes to 2 hours with a screwdriver. Outdoor barrel sauna kits take 4-8 hours with two people and basic tools (drill, level, tape measure, rubber mallet). Larger cabin and cube kits can take 1-2 days. No specialized skills are required for any of them.
What tools do I need to build a sauna kit?
A cordless drill, a level, a tape measure, and a rubber mallet cover most kits. All specialized hardware (screws, bands, hinges) is included. Larger cabin kits may benefit from having a socket set for panel bolts. You don't need a table saw or any woodworking equipment.
Do DIY sauna kits include a heater?
It depends on the type. Indoor infrared sauna kits include integrated heating panels. Most outdoor traditional sauna kits do not include a heater so you can choose the right electric or wood-burning model for your space. Each sauna product page lists verified heater pairings for easy matching.
Do I need an electrician for a DIY sauna?
For traditional saunas with electric heaters, yes. Most electric sauna heaters require a dedicated 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician. Small infrared saunas that run on 120V can plug into a standard household outlet with no electrician needed. Wood-burning sauna kits don't require any electrical connection at all.
What kind of foundation do I need for an outdoor sauna kit?
A solid, level surface is essential. The three most common options are a compacted gravel pad (easiest DIY approach), a poured concrete slab (most durable), or an existing deck rated for the weight. Barrel saunas ship with cradle supports. Cabin and cube kits need a flat base across the full footprint. Each product page lists weight and footprint specs.
What is the difference between a sauna kit and a custom-built sauna?
A sauna kit includes pre-cut lumber, hardware, benches, a door, and instructions designed to fit together without modification. You assemble it as designed. A custom build means sourcing your own lumber, designing the layout from scratch, and building from the ground up. Kits cost significantly less, go up faster, and don't require construction experience. Custom builds offer total design freedom but require carpentry skills and considerably more time.
Can I put a DIY sauna kit in my basement?
Yes. Indoor sauna kits work well in basements, spare bedrooms, garages, and bathrooms. Indoor infrared kits are self-contained cabins that sit on any flat floor. Traditional indoor kits like the SaunaLife X2 install inside an existing room using pre-assembled wall panels. You'll need adequate ventilation and, for traditional kits, a dedicated 240V electrical circuit installed by a licensed electrician.
What wood is best for a DIY sauna kit?
The most common sauna woods are Western Red Cedar, Eastern White Cedar, Thermo-Spruce, and Nordic Spruce. Cedar is naturally resistant to moisture and decay, smells pleasant, and stays relatively cool to the touch. Thermo-treated woods (used by SaunaLife and Finnmark) are heat-treated to improve stability and moisture resistance. All perform well in sauna conditions. Hemlock is a budget-friendly option common in indoor kits.