Call an Expert Now! +1 (833) 419-1774
+1 (833) 419-1774
Mo-Fr: 9AM - 5PM EST
Mini heaters exist for one reason: small rooms heat fast, and an oversized heater wastes electricity, overshoots temperature, and dries the air out before stones get hot enough for proper steam. If your sauna is under about 220 cubic feet — a typical 1- or 2-person cabin, a converted closet, an outdoor pod, or a barrel under 6 feet long — a 3.5kW to 6kW heater is the right tool.
The math is straightforward. Cubic footage = length × width × height. A 4×5×7 sauna is 140 cubic feet. A 5×6×7 is 210. Both fall squarely into mini-heater territory. If you're at the edge of the range or have a glass door, an uninsulated wall, or a log construction, size up by one step rather than down. Glass and exterior walls bleed heat, and an undersized heater never quite catches up.
For broader context on heater sizing, voltage, and how mini units compare to mid- and full-size options, the electric sauna heater collection has the full range. Pair this with our complete home sauna guide if you're still working through the build.
Manufacturer ratings are the source of truth. Each heater specifies a cubic-foot range it can handle, and those numbers already account for typical insulated wood construction. Pick the heater whose range includes your room volume — not just barely, but comfortably in the middle.
Quick reference for our most common mini-heater pairings:
If you're putting a heater in a 2-person sauna, a 3.5kW or 4.5kW is usually right. For a 3-person cabin, you're typically at 6kW or just above. Check the cubic feet on the product spec sheet before you commit.
Three manufacturers cover the mini-heater range we stock:
HUUM — the Estonian brand known for design-forward, glass-front heaters and the highest stone capacity in the industry. The CLIFF Mini 3.5kW is the wall-mounted entry point, the STEEL Mini 3.5kW is the budget-friendly stainless option, and the HIVE Mini 6kW is the floor-mounted tower with a sculpted basket and 330 lbs of stones. Browse the full HUUM heater range if you want to compare to their larger units. HUUM heaters use an external WiFi controller (UKU) sold separately.
Harvia — the Finnish workhorse. Reliable, proven, fewer reported element issues than design-led competitors. The KIP series covers 4.5kW and 6kW with built-in time and temperature controls, no external controller needed. The Cilindro Half 6kW is a wall-flush cylinder for tighter footprints. Both come as standalone units or bundled Harvia packages with stones and a controller.
Saunum — the Estonian newcomer with a patented climate equalizer that mixes hot ceiling air with cooler floor air, evening out the temperature gradient. The Saunum Air 5 at 4.8kW is the smallest unit they make, and it's purpose-built for compact saunas where the "hot head, cold feet" problem is most noticeable.
Every mini heater we carry runs on 240V. None of them are 120V plug-and-play units — they all require a dedicated 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician.
This is the most common point of confusion. Some smaller infrared saunas plug into a standard household outlet, but traditional electric sauna heaters — even at 3.5kW — pull more amperage than a 120V circuit can safely deliver. The few 120V options that exist on the market are typically commercial-only or commercial-rated and are not the heaters in this collection.
If you've seen a Harvia model advertised with a 240V plug version, that's accurate for some specific units — but most still need to be hardwired. Verify the wiring method on the product page before assuming. For the full electrical picture — circuit sizing, wire gauge, breaker requirements — read our sauna electrical requirements guide. Always consult a licensed electrician before any electrical work, since local codes vary.
The single biggest difference between a thin, dry sauna and a deep, soft sauna is stone mass. More stones = more thermal mass = better steam (löyly) when you ladle water over them. This is where mini heaters separate from each other.
The HUUM HIVE Mini holds 330 lbs of stones — an unusually large mass for a mini-class heater, and the reason HUUM owners describe the steam as "like a warm misty hug." The CLIFF Mini and STEEL Mini hold around 132 lbs. The Harvia KIP holds about 50 lbs — smaller mass, faster heat-up, drier feel. Saunum sits in between with 99–154 lbs depending on configuration.
Stone mass also affects heat-up time. More stones take longer to reach temperature but hold heat better between sessions and through the steam cycle. The controller you pair with matters too — a good preheat schedule via WiFi means stone mass becomes a feature instead of a wait.
Mini heaters come in two control styles:
Built-in controls. The Harvia KIP-B series has a knob on the heater itself for time and temperature. Simplest possible setup, no separate controller to wire. Trade-off: you walk into the sauna to adjust it, and there's no remote preheat.
External controls. HUUM, Saunum, and the Harvia KIP-W variants require a wall-mounted controller wired separately. The HUUM UKU and Saunum AirIQ both offer WiFi versions for remote preheat from your phone — useful if you want the sauna ready when you finish work.
Stones and the controller are usually sold separately on the individual heater product page. Heater packages bundle the heater, stones, and a controller into one cart line at the same total price — convenient, not discounted.
Clearance from combustible walls is set per heater — minimums are listed in each product manual and on the product page. A safety guardrail (the perforated cage that mounts above the stones) is required if your benches sit close to the heater, and it's not optional if you have kids in the family.
If you're choosing a heater for a sauna you haven't built yet, start with the room. Pre-built kits in the sub-220 cubic foot range ship with manufacturer-recommended heater pairings on each product page, which removes the sizing guesswork.
If your sauna is custom or DIY, get the room built and insulated before you commit to a heater. Wattage requirements shift if you swap an insulated wall for a glass panel, or change the ceiling height by a foot. The cubic-foot ranges we list are based on standard insulated construction.
For wood-fired alternatives in small saunas, see our wood-burning sauna heater range — though most wood stoves are sized for larger rooms and don't have great mini-class options.