Call an Expert Now! +1 (833) 419-1774
+1 (833) 419-1774
Mo-Fr: 9AM - 5PM EST
Sauna cabins are the closest thing to a traditional Finnish bathhouse you can put in your backyard. Flat walls, a peaked or pitched roof, full standing height inside, and proper upper and lower benches so you can actually pick your heat level. If you've used a sauna at a high-end gym, hotel spa, or Nordic resort, this is the shape you've used.
They're the right choice when interior comfort matters more than footprint. A barrel sauna heats faster and sheds snow naturally, but you give up headroom and the curved benches take getting used to. A cube sauna looks sharper in a modern yard but tops out at one bench tier in the smaller sizes. A pod-style sauna splits the difference for tight spaces. The cabin wins on usable interior: two-tier benching, full-height doors, room for three or four adults to stretch out without bumping knees.
Most of what we sell in this category is outdoor. If you're after an indoor cabin sauna for a basement or addition, browse our full indoor sauna lineup for kits sized to fit existing rooms.
A "6-person" cabin comfortably seats 3–4 adults who want to lie down or sit without elbows touching. Spec-sheet capacity is generous. If you host, plan for family bathing, or just want to lie flat on the upper bench, size up one tier from the marketing number. Our smallest models like the Dundalk Granby 2–3 person cabin work for solo and couple use. The SaunaLife G4 and Dundalk Georgian at the 5–6 person tier are the family-bathing sweet spot.
This is the cabin's biggest interior advantage over barrel and pod shapes. Heat stratifies, and the upper bench can sit 30–40°F hotter than the lower. Sit low when you want a gentler session, climb up when you want full Finnish-style intensity. The True North 5-person cabin and the SaunaLife GL-series both ship with two-tier benches as standard.
This is where the cabin shape pulls ahead the most. Because the footprint is rectangular, manufacturers can extend the structure into a covered porch or a fully enclosed changeroom without redesigning the whole sauna. The Dundalk Georgian with changeroom and the SaunaLife G11 two-room outdoor sauna give you somewhere to cool down, store towels, and step out of cold winter wind before driving wet hair across the yard. Browse all outdoor saunas with changing rooms if this is a priority.
Almost every cabin in this collection is built for traditional heat (electric or wood-burning). Electric is the practical default. Set the temperature, wait 30–60 minutes, you're sweating. We carry the matched Harvia electric heaters the manufacturers recommend, plus HUUM heaters if you want a 230°F max temperature and serious stone mass for softer steam. Wood-burning is the choice for off-grid setups or anyone who wants the crackle of a real fire. These need a chimney and take 60–90 minutes to come up to temperature, and our wood-burning sauna heaters include everything you need for a fully off-grid build. A handful of models here are infrared cabins; those run at lower air temperatures and plug into household 120V or 240V circuits.
Eastern White Cedar (Dundalk's "Canadian Timber" line) and Nordic Spruce or Thermo-Aspen (SaunaLife and True North) are the dominant materials in this collection. Cedar is the gold standard for outdoor exposure: naturally rot-resistant, dimensionally stable, and it weathers gracefully to a silver-grey if you don't oil it. Thermo-treated spruce and aspen have been baked in a low-oxygen kiln to make them more rot-resistant than untreated softwoods, with a richer brown tone. If you live somewhere with real winters (interior heartland states, the Northeast, the Mountain West, Canada), pair the wood with 1.5"+ wall thickness and a heater sized above the room's cubic footage.
We don't carry every cabin sauna on the market. We carry the ones that hold up.
Dundalk LeisureCraft. Built in Ontario from Eastern White Cedar. The Granby and Georgian cabins are long-running best sellers because they're engineered for actual Canadian winters. The Georgian comes in three configurations: standard, with porch, or with full changeroom. This is what people buy when they live somewhere cold and want it to last 20+ years.
SaunaLife. The widest range of cabin styles we carry, from the entry-level 6-person G4 kit at a sub-$7K starting point to the pre-assembled G6 luxury cabin that arrives nearly ready to use. The GL-series adds glass fronts and modern clean lines if you want a cabin shape with a more contemporary look.
True North Saunas. Canadian-made cedar cabins at competitive pricing. The Quattro and the standard outdoor cabin are consistently among our most-reviewed family models, with optional pine, white cedar, and red cedar finishes.
SunRay Saunas. The accessible entry point for cabin-shape outdoor saunas. Hemlock and red cedar construction at lower price points than the Canadian brands. A solid first sauna if you're not buying for a sub-zero climate.
Kohler. The C2 outdoor cabin in Douglas Fir or weathered grey spruce brings the same engineering that's in their bathroom fixtures to the backyard. Premium price, premium finish, and the cleanest factory-cut joinery in this category.
Every cabin in this collection arrives as a kit (with the exception of the pre-assembled SaunaLife G6). You'll get the wall panels, roof, benches, door, and hardware. Most models don't include the heater. That's intentional, so you can match the heater to your room size, voltage, and preference for electric or wood. A two-person crew can typically assemble a cabin over a weekend with basic hand tools. Our step-by-step outdoor sauna assembly walkthrough covers the full process for kit-style cabins.
You'll need to prep a level base. A 4-inch compacted gravel pad is the easiest DIY option for cabin saunas. A poured concrete slab is the most durable. An existing deck works if it's rated for the loaded weight (sauna plus people plus stones, often 1,500–3,000 lbs depending on size). The base needs to be flat across the full footprint. Unlike a barrel that sits on two cradles, a cabin loads weight evenly across the perimeter.
For electric heaters, plan a dedicated 240V circuit at 30A or 40A depending on heater size. Each product page lists exact electrical specs. This isn't DIY work. Every cabin sauna with an electric heater needs a licensed electrician for the final hookup. Our team is on call by email and phone if you hit a snag during assembly.
1-Person Outdoor Sauna | 2-Person Outdoor Sauna | 3-Person Outdoor Sauna | 4-Person Outdoor Sauna | 5-Person Outdoor Sauna | 6-Person Outdoor Sauna | 7-Person Outdoor Sauna | 8+ Person Outdoor Sauna