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A traditional sauna heats the air with an electric or wood-burning stove loaded with stones. You ladle water onto the rocks and the burst of steam that follows is löyly (pronounced LOH-lu), the Finnish word at the heart of the practice. Air temperatures run 150–195°F, humidity moves with each pour, and the experience is closer to a Finnish countryside cabin than the lower, drier warmth of infrared sauna models.
This is the original method. The North American Sauna Society defines it as a wood-lined room heated by a stone-topped stove, with humidity controlled by water poured on the rocks. Everything on this page follows that definition.
Where you put the sauna shapes which model fits. Indoor saunas slot into spare rooms, finished basements, or large bathrooms with proper ventilation and a dedicated 240V circuit. They're the more affordable starting point: no foundation work, no weatherproofing, faster to wire up. Most of our indoor traditional cabins are 1–4 person units in Nordic spruce, aspen, or hemlock.
Outdoor traditional saunas need a level surface (concrete pad, compacted gravel, or rated deck) and a heater rated for the cubic footage of the room. They cost more upfront because the wood and construction have to handle weather. But they hold heat longer in winter, and they free up the room you'd otherwise lose indoors. The outdoor traditional lineup covers barrels, cabins, cubes, and pods, all detailed below.
Cabin saunas are the closest thing to a Finnish countryside sauna. Flat walls, flat benches, full standing height, and proper upper and lower bench layouts so you can pick your heat level. They're available indoor (compact, panel-built) and outdoor (kits built from solid timber). Dundalk's Georgian cabin is one of our best-selling 6-person outdoor models, and True North's outdoor cabin lineup is consistently top-reviewed.
Barrel saunas heat faster than cabins because there's less dead air at the top, and the curved roof sheds rain and snow on its own. They're the most popular traditional style outdoors and typically the most affordable entry point. Most of the barrels in this collection live in our barrel sauna collection: Dundalk's Canadian Timber series, SaunaLife's glass-front EE-series, and True North barrels in pine, white cedar, or red cedar.
Cube saunas are a newer style with clean lines, panoramic glass, and a modern architectural look. SaunaLife's CL-series cubes range from a 2-person CL3G up to the 8-person CL12GCP with a built-in changeroom. Browse cube-style outdoor models if design matters as much as function.
Pod saunas split the difference: compact footprint, distinctive rounded shape, easier to position on a patio. The SaunaLife G3 and Dundalk MiniPOD are the two we ship most often in this category.
The heater is the soul of a traditional sauna. Pick wrong and you'll either wait 90 minutes for a session or chase steam that never comes.
Electric heaters are the practical choice for most people. Set a temperature, wait 30–60 minutes, and the room is ready. Harvia heaters are the workhorse: reliable, widely stocked, and built to handle daily use. HUUM heaters carry more stones (up to 595 lbs on the HIVE), produce some of the best steam in the industry, and lean into design. Saunum's climate-equalizer technology spreads heat more evenly through the room. The full lineup lives in our electric sauna heater collection. Most need a dedicated 240V circuit; smaller 3.5kW units can sometimes run on 240V at lower amperage. Always consult a licensed electrician, since requirements vary by local code.
Wood-burning stoves give you the original experience. No electricity, no controller, no app, just fire, stones, and the smell of cedar smoke. Harvia and HUUM both make excellent options, and you can find them in our wood-fired sauna stove selection. The trade-offs are real: you'll wait 45–90 minutes for the room to heat (longer with HUUM's heavier stone mass), you need a chimney, and you'll be feeding wood through every session. For off-grid setups or anyone who wants the ritual, it's worth it.
If you can't decide, hybrid saunas like the Finnmark Trinity combine a traditional stone heater with infrared panels in the same cabin, so you can switch between löyly and infrared depending on your mood.
We carry the brands worth owning, not every brand on the market.
Dundalk LeisureCraft. Handcrafted in Ontario from Eastern White Cedar. The Canadian Timber series is built for sub-zero winters, and the Georgian cabin and Harmony barrel have been our long-running best sellers in this category.
SaunaLife carries the widest range of outdoor styles we offer: glass-front barrels (EE-series), modern cubes (CL-series), pods (G3), and traditional cabins (G2, G4, G6) in Nordic spruce, thermo-spruce, and thermo-aspen. Consistent build quality across the line.
True North. Canadian-made barrels, cabins, and pods in pine, white cedar, and red cedar. Honest construction at competitive pricing. The True North outdoor cabin is one of our top-reviewed models for families.
If you're looking for an accessible price point, SunRay offers indoor and outdoor traditional saunas in hemlock and red cedar. A solid entry for first-time buyers who want a complete kit with a Harvia heater included.
Finnmark Designs makes hybrid models (Trinity, Trinity XL) that run a traditional stone heater alongside infrared panels and red light. Useful if you want both experiences in one cabin without buying two saunas.
At the premium end of this collection, Kohler offers indoor and outdoor traditional saunas in Douglas Fir with bathroom-grade engineering.
Size up. A "6-person" rating fits about three to four adults who actually want to sit without bumping elbows. Solo and couples buyers usually land on 2–3 person models. Families and entertainers do best in 5–8 person cabins or barrels.
Indoor cabins start at 1-person units that tuck into a 4-by-4 corner. Outdoor cabins and barrels scale up from there. The largest models in this collection (the SaunaLife CL12GCP cube suite and Dundalk's 8-person barrels) include built-in changerooms. To narrow the choice by capacity, jump straight to the right size below.
If you're going electric, you'll need a dedicated 240V circuit (typically 30A or 40A depending on heater kW) installed by a licensed electrician. Indoor installations with the panel in the same building usually run $450–$900. Outdoor installations are the variable — runs of 25–75 feet from the panel push costs to $1,500–$3,800 or more because of trenching, conduit, and heavier-gauge wire. Permits typically add $50–$300 depending on the jurisdiction. Wood-burning heaters skip all of this; you only need a chimney and a level base.
Site prep matters as much as wiring. A barrel sauna needs cradle supports on level ground. A cabin or cube needs a flat surface across the full footprint. Plan base prep separately from assembly — pouring a concrete pad is often a one to two day project before the sauna kit even arrives.
1-Person Traditional Sauna | 2-Person Traditional Sauna | 3-Person Traditional Sauna | 4-Person Traditional Sauna | 5-Person Traditional Sauna | 6-Person Traditional Sauna | 7-Person Traditional Sauna | 8+ Person Traditional Sauna