How do you pick a sauna heater when four brands all look like they do the same thing?

The heater is the sauna. The cabin is a well-insulated box around it. Get the heater wrong and no amount of cedar will save the room, which is why this is the decision worth slowing down on.

Three questions settle it, in this order: how you are fuelling it, how big the room is, and whether the sauna is commercial. Everything else is preference. We carry Harvia, HUUM, Scandia, and Dundalk, covering electric, wood-burning, and gas.

Talk to a recovery advisor before you buy. Send us your room dimensions, how much glass you have, and what your electrical panel can supply. We will name the model. Undersized heaters are the most common and most expensive mistake in a sauna build, and this call prevents it. Call 866-861-6317.

Question one: electric, wood, or gas

Electric is what nearly every indoor sauna uses. Set the temperature, walk away, come back to a hot room in 30 to 45 minutes. It needs a dedicated circuit, and the bigger the room the bigger the circuit. This is the practical default.

Wood-burning needs no electrical connection at all, which makes it the only real answer for a cabin, an off-grid property, or anywhere running power is a project in itself. You get a heat quality and a crackle that electric does not reproduce. You also build a fire before every single session, and that friction decides whether the sauna gets used.

Gas is the specialist option. Scandia builds them, they are stainless throughout, and they earn their place in commercial rooms and in buildings with gas service but limited electrical capacity.

Question two: how big is the room

Sauna heaters are rated in kilowatts against room volume. The working rule is roughly one kilowatt per 50 cubic feet, then size up if you have a glass door, a large window, or uninsulated stone or tile, because those bleed heat continuously.

Every heater on this page lists a rated room volume. Measure your room, find the range, and if you fall between two models, take the larger one. An oversized heater cycles. An undersized heater runs flat out, never reaches temperature, and dies early.

The four brands, and what each is actually for

Brand Fuel Known for Choose this if...
Harvia Electric and wood The broadest range, residential through commercial. Virta, Forte, Legend, Pro series You want the widest choice and the safest bet. Most sauna makers ship Harvia as their standard heater for a reason.
HUUM Electric and wood Design-led Estonian heaters. The HIVE is a sculpture that happens to heat a room The heater is visible and you care how it looks. WiFi control through the UKU system is genuinely good.
Scandia Electric and gas US-built since 1962. The gas heaters are their signature You need gas, or you want an American-made heater with a long service record.
Dundalk Electric Matched to their own sauna cabins You are buying a Dundalk sauna and want the heater the cabin was designed around.

Harvia or HUUM

This is the choice most buyers actually face, and it is closer than the price difference suggests.

Harvia gives you range. If your room is an unusual size, or you need a Combi that generates steam as well as heat, or you are heating a commercial room all day, Harvia has a model for it and probably three.

HUUM gives you a heater you want to look at. The HIVE holds a large stone load in an open frame, which produces a softer heat and looks like nothing else on the market. The UKU controller lets you start the sauna from your phone on the drive home. If the heater is a visible object in a room you designed, this is the one.

Neither is a mistake. Buy Harvia for range and value, HUUM for design and control.

The thing that kills heaters

Stones. They are consumable, they crack under repeated heat cycling, and when they break down they choke the airflow through the heater. Restricted airflow means the element runs hot, and a hot element fails.

Most heaters take 30 to 60 pounds of stone. Stack them loosely so air moves through, and replace them every year or two. Packing them tight is the most common installation mistake in the category, and it will quietly destroy an expensive heater over a couple of seasons.

What we will tell you not to buy

Do not buy a commercial heater for a home sauna because you want it hot faster. It will not do what you think, it demands electrical service you likely do not have, and it will overshoot a small room. Size to the room.

Do not buy a wood stove for an indoor sauna without pricing the chimney first. The stove is the cheap part. The flue, the roof penetration, and the clearance requirements are where the money goes, and people find that out after they have bought the stove.

And if you have not bought the sauna yet, do not start here. Most of our traditional saunas ship with a heater sized to the cabin, which removes this decision entirely. This page is for people building a room, replacing a dead heater, or upgrading.

Common questions

What size heater do I need?

Roughly one kilowatt per 50 cubic feet of room volume, then size up for glass, windows, or uncovered stone and tile. Each product page gives a rated room volume. Between two sizes, take the larger.

Can I install it myself?

Mounting, yes. Electrical, no. Sauna heaters draw heavy current on a dedicated circuit, and larger units need three-phase service. Get an electrician to confirm your panel before you order, not after the pallet lands.

What is a Combi heater?

A heater with a built-in water reservoir and steam generator, so you can hold a humidity level rather than chase it with a ladle. Buy one if you specifically want held humidity. Do not buy one because it sounds like a better heater.

Can I put any brand's heater in any sauna?

Usually, if the kilowatt rating matches the room volume and the clearances work. Several sauna makers ship Harvia or HUUM as their standard option. Send us the sauna model and room dimensions and we will confirm the fit before you commit.

How often do stones need replacing?

Every one to two years with regular use. Replace them when they crumble. Degraded stones restrict airflow and kill the element. Stones are cheap. Heaters are not.

Do I need a separate controller?

Some heaters have integrated controls, some need an external unit, and some offer WiFi control as an upgrade. It is listed on each product page. Ask us if you are unsure, because buying the heater without the controller it requires is an easy mistake.

Send us your room dimensions and we will size it for you.

Length, width, ceiling height, how much glass, and what your panel supplies. That is all we need to name the right heater and stop you buying twice.

Call 866-861-6317 or book a 30 minute call.