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SaunaLife designs and manufactures sauna kits in Northern Europe, with most production based in Estonia. The brand has a clear identity: modern Scandinavian shapes, thermally modified woods, and pre-assembled wall panels that make DIY installation realistic for one or two people on a weekend. You won't find rustic cedar barrels here — SaunaLife leans contemporary, with flat planes, big tempered-glass fronts, and clean exterior lines that fit modern backyards.
Topture is an authorized SaunaLife dealer. Every kit ships from our Chicago warehouse with full freight insurance, and warranty claims go through us — not a phone tree at the manufacturer. If you're early in your research, our outdoor sauna buyer's guide covers planning, foundation, electrical, and placement before you commit to a model.
The most important thing to understand about SaunaLife is the wood. The exterior on the Cube Series, GL-Series cabins, and most barrel models is thermo-spruce — Nordic spruce heated to roughly 400°F in an oxygen-free chamber. The thermal modification permanently changes the cell structure, making the wood significantly more resistant to moisture, rot, and insects than untreated softwoods, without any chemical preservatives. It's the same process used on Scandinavian building facades that are expected to weather outdoors for decades.
The interior benches and walls on most models use thermo-aspen. Aspen is chosen for a different reason: low thermal conductivity. At 180°F+, untreated pine or hemlock can feel uncomfortable to lean against. Thermo-aspen stays cooler to the touch, doesn't off-gas resin, and is splinter-free after thermal treatment. A few SaunaLife models — the G2, G4, G6, and indoor X2 — use Nordic spruce or aspen rather than the thermo-treated versions. Each product page lists the exact woods used so there's no guesswork.
This matters because cedar saunas get most of the attention in this category, but thermally modified spruce holds up just as well outdoors and tends to come in at a lower price point for the same build quality.
The Cube Series is SaunaLife's most popular line — five models built around the same design language: a panoramic tempered-glass front, flat walls, a level floor, and pre-assembled wall panels. Cubes give you more usable interior space than barrels at the same footprint because the walls don't curve in toward your shoulders.
If you're focused specifically on this shape, the dedicated outdoor cube sauna collection has shape-vs-shape context.
SaunaLife's lineup goes well beyond cubes.
The G-Series is the cabin and pod range. The G2 is a 4-person cube-style cabin in Nordic spruce. The G3 is a 4-person outdoor pod with a thermo-spruce shell — a softer, rounded shape that fits transitional yards. The G4 is a 6-person traditional Nordic spruce cabin with two-tier seating. The G6 is a pre-assembled 5-person cabin (one of the few SaunaLife models that arrives fully built, not as a kit). The G11 is a thermo-spruce 8-person cabin with a built-in changing room and porch.
The GL-Series — GL4 (4-person) and GL6 (6-person) — are glass-front cabin kits in thermo-spruce and thermo-aspen, with a porch and two-tier seating. The GL6 includes WiFi heater controls. These sit between the Cube Series and the larger G-Series cabins.
The X-Series is SaunaLife's indoor line. The X2 is a 2-person indoor traditional sauna in Nordic spruce and aspen — designed to fit basements, bathrooms, or dedicated wellness rooms — the only fully indoor model in the SaunaLife range.
The ERGO barrel series features ergonomically contoured benches. The E6 (3-person), E7 (4-person), and E8 (6-person) come with multiple window options — glass door, glass door + rear window, or full glass front. The EE6G (4-person) and EE8G (6-person) are the dedicated glass-front barrel models. If you'd rather start with the shape, browse all outdoor barrel saunas.
Three questions matter most: how many people will use it regularly, what shape fits your space and aesthetic, and whether you want a kit or a pre-assembled unit.
For solo or couples use, the CL3G or CL4G are the practical picks — small footprint, fast heat-up, lower electrical draw. Most customers in this bucket also consider the indoor X2 if outdoor placement isn't ideal. See 2-person outdoor saunas for context.
For regular use with a partner or small family, the CL5G, GL4, or E7 hit the right size. Cubes give the most modern look, GL4 adds a porch, E7 brings the traditional barrel silhouette. 4-person saunas across all brands is a useful comparison page.
For households or entertaining, look at the CL7G, CL12GCP, GL6, G11, or E8/EE8G. The CL12GCP and G11 both include a changing room — a feature most outdoor sauna owners say they wish they'd prioritized sooner. 8-person outdoor saunas covers this segment.
If you want zero assembly, the G6 is the only fully pre-assembled model in the lineup. It costs more, but it arrives ready to set on the foundation.
SaunaLife sells the cabin shell. The heater is sold separately so you can match it to your power, climate, and preference. Each product page lists verified heater pairings — but here's the general logic.
Most buyers go with an electric heater in the 6–9kW range. The two brands SaunaLife pairs with most often are HUUM (massive stone capacity, hottest temperatures in the industry, premium löyly) and Harvia (the reliability workhorse — proven track record, fewer reported issues, often our default recommendation). Both work well in cubes and ergo barrels. The HUUM DROP and Harvia KIP are the most common picks for the CL4G and CL5G; the HUUM HIVE and Harvia Cilindro size up well for the CL7G and CL12GCP.
If you'd rather skip the electrical work entirely, the larger Cube and G-Series models also accept wood-burning sauna heaters. Wood-fired heat feels different — softer, more radiant, with the ritual of building a fire. It's the right pick for off-grid setups or anyone who wants the traditional Finnish experience.
For a deeper look at the brand-vs-brand decision, the complete home sauna guide walks through heater sizing, controls, and stones in detail.
Three things to plan before the kit ships:
Foundation: A flat, level, solid base. A 4-inch concrete pad is the gold standard. Compacted crushed gravel (4–6 inches deep) works well and drains naturally. A reinforced deck rated for the loaded weight is also fine. The G6 and CL12GCP are heavy enough that a concrete pad is the right call. An uneven base causes door alignment issues and wall-panel gaps — this is the one step worth doing right.
Assembly: SaunaLife kits arrive flat-packed with pre-assembled wall and roof panels. Two people can typically complete the build in a weekend with a drill, level, and rubber mallet. The G6 ships pre-assembled and just needs to be set on the foundation.
Electrical: Electric heaters in this kW range need a dedicated 240V circuit installed by a licensed electrician. The exact requirements (amperage, wire gauge, breaker size) depend on the heater model — your electrician will confirm based on your panel and local code. Always consult a licensed electrician before any electrical work; the information here is for general reference only.
If you're cross-shopping Finnmark Designs or other brands before committing, that's the right move — different builds suit different yards. But for modern Scandinavian shapes with thermo-treated wood at this price point, SaunaLife is hard to match.