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Traditional vs Infrared Sauna
A traditional sauna heats the air around you with a wood or electric stove, often with steam off water poured on hot rocks. An infrared sauna uses radiant panels to heat your body directly at a lower ambient temperature. Both get you sweating, but they differ in feel, install complexity, and what it costs to run.
| Traditional Sauna | Infrared Sauna | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $3,000-$10,000+, based on size and heater type | $1,500-$6,000, based on size and panel quality |
| Operating temperature | 150-195°F, heats the air | 120-150°F, heats the body directly |
| Heat-up time | 30-45 minutes to reach temperature | 10-15 minutes to reach temperature |
| Install requirements | Higher-power electrical circuit or wood stove venting | Standard 110V or 220V outlet, easy retrofit |
| Energy use | Higher, heats the whole cabin's air volume | Lower, panels target the body, not the air |
| Experience | Intense heat, optional steam, a social ritual feel | Gentler heat, often used for longer sessions |
| Maintenance | Rock replacement, stove upkeep, ventilation checks | Panel bulb or emitter replacement over time |
| Best for | Traditional ritual, steam lovers, higher heat tolerance | Easy install, lower running cost, gentler daily use |
The verdict
Traditional saunas deliver the more intense, classic experience, but they ask more of your electrical setup and energy bill. Infrared trades some of that intensity for a simpler install, faster heat-up, and lower running cost, the easier entry point for most backyards.
FAQs
Is infrared sauna heat as effective as traditional sauna heat?
Both trigger a genuine sweat and relaxation response, but differently: infrared heats your body directly at a lower temperature, while traditional saunas heat the surrounding air at a much higher temperature. The intensity and sensation differ, even though both work your cardiovascular system.
Does a home sauna need special electrical work?
Traditional electric heaters often need a dedicated 220V circuit sized to their wattage, while many infrared saunas run on a standard 110V household outlet, much easier to retrofit into an existing space.
Which sauna type uses less energy?
Infrared, generally. It heats your body directly instead of the full air volume of the cabin, and it reaches usable temperature faster, which shortens total run time.
Ironwood Equipment LLC carries both — compare specs and get freight quoted to your ZIP at checkout.