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Traditional saunas heat the room itself. An electric or wood-burning heater warms a mass of stones to 300–500°F, and the stones radiate that heat into the cabin until air temperatures reach 150–185°F. Pour water over the stones and you get löyly — the burst of steam that defines the Finnish sauna experience. That’s the fundamental difference between traditional and outdoor infrared saunas, which use light panels to warm your body directly at lower air temps. Traditional gives you the full range: dry heat, wet steam, or anything in between.
Placing a traditional sauna outdoors adds a few practical advantages. Ventilation is simpler. You don’t need to worry about moisture damage to interior walls. Wood-burning stoves become an option since the chimney vents straight through the roof. And if you live somewhere with real winters, stepping from a 180°F sauna into cold air is about as close to the Finnish original as you can get without moving to Helsinki.
Cabin saunas are the closest match to a traditional Finnish sauna room. Flat walls, flat benches, full standing height, and proper upper and lower tiers so you can choose your heat level. The Dundalk Georgian is our most popular cabin — 6-person capacity in Eastern White Cedar, built in Canada for cold climates. SaunaLife’s G-series and GL-series cabins offer a more modern look with Thermo-Spruce construction and optional glass fronts.
Barrel saunas are the most popular outdoor style overall. The curved shape means less dead air volume, so they heat faster and use less energy. SaunaLife’s ERGO series (E6, E7, E8) features ergonomic interior benches that work with the curve instead of against it. Dundalk’s Harmony and Tranquility barrels are handcrafted from Eastern White Cedar. True North offers pine, white cedar, and red cedar options with optional porches. Browse all outdoor barrel saunas to compare.
Cube saunas are a newer style with clean lines and glass fronts. SaunaLife’s CL-series ranges from the 2-person CL3G up to the 8-person CL12GCP with a built-in changeroom. They look architectural and work well as a backyard focal point.
Pod saunas split the difference between barrel and cabin — compact footprint, distinctive rounded shape, easier to fit on a patio. The SaunaLife G3 and Dundalk MiniPOD are two of the most popular models for smaller yards.
Most outdoor traditional saunas ship without a heater so you can pick the one that fits your setup. Electric heaters from Harvia and HUUM are the practical choice — set the temperature, preheat from your phone with WiFi-enabled controllers, and you’re sweating in 30–60 minutes. Wood-burning stoves skip the electrical hookup entirely. No electrician, no 240V circuit, no panel upgrade — just a chimney, firewood, and 45–90 minutes of patience. They’re the right call for off-grid properties or anyone who wants the ritual of building a fire before every session.
Heater sizing depends on your sauna’s interior cubic footage. Each sauna product page lists verified heater pairings for both electric and wood-burning options, so you don’t have to guess. If you go electric, plan for a dedicated 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician — our electrical requirements guide covers what to expect.
The wood your sauna is built from determines how it handles moisture, UV exposure, and temperature swings. Eastern White Cedar (Dundalk, True North) is naturally rot-resistant and aromatic — it’s been the go-to for Canadian-made saunas for decades. Thermo-Spruce (SaunaLife) is heat-treated to remove moisture from the wood cells, making it dimensionally stable and resistant to warping. Red Cedar (True North, SunRay) offers rich color and natural oils that repel insects and decay. Hemlock (SunRay) is a lighter, more affordable softwood that performs well in milder climates. Staining or oiling the exterior every 2–3 years extends the life of any wood type. For a deeper breakdown, read our complete guide to sauna wood types.
Manufacturer capacity ratings assume everyone is sitting shoulder-to-shoulder. A "6-person" sauna comfortably fits 3–4 adults who want to stretch out. If you’re buying for a family or plan to have friends over, size up. Models with changing rooms give you dedicated space for cooling down, storing towels, and stacking firewood without eating into sauna room.
2-Person | 3-Person | 4-Person | 5-Person | 6-Person | 8+ Person
Every sauna ships with the full structure, benches, door, and hardware. Most arrive as kits that two people can assemble in a weekend — barrel saunas take 4–8 hours, cabins and cubes take 2–6 hours depending on size. You provide a level surface (concrete pad, compacted gravel, or a rated deck), basic hand tools, and an electrical connection if you’re using an electric heater. Our team is available by phone if you hit a snag during assembly.
Shipping is free on most orders. SaunaLife models ship at a flat $950 rate (or $1,990 for the CL12GCP and G11). Financing through Shop Pay splits the cost into monthly payments with 0% APR on qualifying orders — a $5,000 sauna works out to around $208/month over 24 months.