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The True North Pod is the one model in True North's Canadian-built sauna lineup that doesn't look like anything else in the backyard. The curved, teardrop silhouette is a single continuous arc from the floor to the peak of the roof, with no flat ceiling, no boxy corners, and no roof-to-wall seams that leak heat. That shape is the point. Heat naturally rises into the vaulted ceiling and circulates back down without pooling in dead corners the way it does in a flat-walled cabin, and the aerodynamic profile sheds rain and snow the same way a True North barrel sauna does.
You also get headroom most barrel saunas can't match. Standing height runs near 89 inches at the peak, which means taller bathers aren't ducking under the ceiling on the upper bench. If you've ever felt cramped in a 6-foot barrel, the Pod is the obvious step up.
Every Pod is handcrafted in Ontario, Canada from 1.55-inch thick solid wood, comes standard with a roof membrane plus a second layer of roof boards, and ships with fascia boards to protect the end grain. That's the same weather-protection package True North puts on their flagship outdoor cabin, and the result is a sauna engineered for genuine four-season use rather than a fair-weather kit.
The Pod is available in three lengths: 8 foot, 9 foot, and 10 foot, covering a 4 to 8 person seating range. A 4-person Pod fits two adults comfortably for daily use with room for a guest or two. The 6-person 9-foot model is the sweet spot for families who want to sauna together without rotating in shifts. The 10-foot 8-person Pod is the right pick if you host regularly or want a true social sauna for a group. Width stays consistent across all three sizes (84.5 inches max, 80.25 inches at the base), so the footprint difference is entirely in length.
Pine is the entry price point: solid, functional, and the right call if budget is the deciding factor. White Cedar sits in the middle, nearly as rot-resistant as Red Cedar with a brighter, lighter color that suits Scandinavian-style backyards. Red Cedar is the premium tier, naturally insect and moisture resistant, aromatic when heated, and the longest-lasting option for harsh climates. For a sauna that's going to live outside in real winters, we recommend stepping up to one of the cedar options.
The optional 1-foot porch turns the Pod from a single-room kit into a two-stage ritual, giving you a covered spot to step out, cool down, and step back in without being exposed to weather. The porch reduces interior length by a foot, so factor that into your seating math. Optional front and rear windows add natural light and a view, which matters more than you'd expect when the alternative is staring at a wood wall for 20 minutes.
The closest cousin in True North's range is the Schooner barrel sauna. Both share the same wood options, similar capacity ranges, and the same weather-resistant build. The barrel heats marginally faster because of its tighter cylindrical profile, but the Pod gives you more usable interior volume and significantly more headroom. Barrel benches sit you below the curve, while Pod benches let you sit upright.
Compared to True North's outdoor cabin sauna, the Pod takes a smaller footprint for the same capacity. Cabins give you flat walls for hanging shelves and a traditional Finnish feel; Pods give you a contemporary architectural look that becomes the visual centerpiece of a yard. Neither is objectively better. It's a question of aesthetics and how the structure will sit in your space.
If you're cross-shopping pod-style saunas across multiple brands, browse our full outdoor sauna pod collection to compare True North against SaunaLife's G3 and Dundalk's MiniPOD. Each takes a slightly different approach to the pod format.
Pods don't ship with a heater integrated. This is intentional, so you can match the heater to your setup and preferences. The Pod's interior volume scales with length, so heater sizing matters: an 8-foot Pod runs about 360 cubic feet of interior space, the 10-foot pushes closer to 450, and you'll want to size the heater to the upper end of that range for fast heat-up in cold climates.
For electric, most buyers pair the Pod with an 8-9 kW unit from our Harvia heater range or HUUM's design-forward electric heaters. Harvia is the reliable workhorse pick; HUUM produces better steam quality and a cleaner aesthetic. For an off-grid setup or a more traditional ritual, the Pod pairs cleanly with a wood-burning sauna stove, no electrical panel work required, just a properly installed chimney.
Every electric install needs a dedicated 240V circuit, typically 30A or 40A depending on heater size. A licensed electrician should size and run that circuit before delivery. Our complete guide to sauna electrical requirements covers wire gauge, breaker sizing, and panel capacity math in detail.
The Pod arrives as a partially pre-assembled kit with pre-cut wood, benches, the door with tempered glass, vents, hardware, and an installation guide. Two people can assemble it in a weekend with basic hand tools. The interior comes standard with two premium benches, a three-peg towel hanger, and a vent kit with cover.
You'll need to provide a level surface across the full footprint. The three workable options are a poured concrete pad (most durable, best for permanent installs), a compacted gravel base (the easiest DIY foundation and the most common choice), or an existing deck rated for the loaded weight of the Pod plus occupants. Unlike a barrel sauna that sits on cradle supports, the Pod has a flat floor, so the foundation needs to be level across the entire base, not just along two contact points.
For a full walkthrough of site prep, foundation options, and the assembly sequence, read our complete outdoor sauna buyer's guide. It covers everything from choosing a backyard location to first-fire startup.
If you're still deciding between styles, our broader outdoor sauna collection lets you compare pods against barrels, cubes, and cabins side by side.