Sauna Heater Size Guide: What kW Do You Need?

Sauna Heater Size Guide: What kW Do You Need? — HotColdHaven
The rule of thumb: about 1 kW of heater per 50 cubic feet of sauna volume — then add 20–30% for glass surfaces, high ceilings, outdoor/barrel builds, or weak insulation. This applies to traditional electric heaters; infrared and wood-fired work differently.

The heater is the heart of a traditional sauna, and matching it to your room is the difference between a fast, stable, enveloping heat and a unit that strains and disappoints. Here’s how to size it properly. (For the wiring and room build, see sauna room requirements.)

Step 1 — measure your volume

Multiply length × width × ceiling height in feet. A 6’×5′ room with a 7′ ceiling is 210 cubic feet. Keep ceilings to 6.5–7 ft — taller ceilings need a bigger heater for no real benefit.

Step 2 — apply the 1 kW / 50 cu ft rule

Room volumeApprox. room sizeHeater (well-insulated)
~150 cu ft4’×5’×7′~3 kW
~210–245 cu ft5–6’×5’×7′~4.5–6 kW
~300 cu ft6’×7’×7′~6–7.5 kW
~375 cu ft7’×7’×7’+~8–9 kW
Sauna heater sizing formula infographic
Volume ÷ 50 = base kW, then add for cold surfaces and exposure.

Step 3 — adjust for real-world heat loss

The base figure assumes a reasonably insulated room. Add capacity (typically 20–30%) for anything that bleeds heat:

  • Glass doors or walls — they conduct heat out.
  • Cold surfaces — uninsulated concrete, tile, brick or stone effectively enlarge the volume.
  • Outdoor & barrel saunas — more exposure, more loss.
  • High ceilings or poor insulation.

Voltage & wiring follow the size

Once you know the kW, the electrical follows: 3 kW and above means a hardwired 240V circuit with breaker and wire sized to the heater’s amperage; only small sub-2 kW heaters run on 120V. Full detail in room requirements.

Infrared & wood-fired are different

This rule is for traditional electric heaters. Infrared saunas heat your body directly at lower air temperatures and are rated by cabin model and person-count, usually on 120V — see best infrared saunas. Wood-fired kiuas heaters are rated by firebox and room volume and need a flue, not wiring.

Shopping? Compare heater inclusion across our outdoor and barrel roundups — many sell the heater separately, so size it before you buy.

FAQ

What size sauna heater do I need?

Use roughly 1 kW of heater output per 50 cubic feet of room volume, then add 20–30% for glass walls, high ceilings, outdoor or barrel saunas, or poor insulation. A typical 6’×5’×7′ room (~245 cu ft) suits about a 6 kW heater.

How do I calculate sauna cubic footage?

Multiply length × width × ceiling height in feet. For example 6 × 5 × 7 = 210 cubic feet. Count any cold surfaces (glass, tile, concrete) as effectively adding to that volume.

Does heater size affect electrical requirements?

Yes. Heaters of 3 kW and above need a hardwired 240V circuit, with the breaker and wire gauge sized to the heater’s amperage. Small heaters under ~2 kW may run on a dedicated 120V circuit.

What happens if the heater is the wrong size?

An undersized heater struggles to reach temperature and runs constantly; an oversized one wastes energy and can overheat the room. Sizing to the room volume (plus adjustments) avoids both.

Sources

  1. Sun Home Saunas — Electrical requirements / heater sizing (1 kW per 45–50 cu ft). sunhomesaunas.com
  2. Haven of Heat — Sauna electrical & insulation guides (sizing, cold-surface adjustment). havenofheat.com
  3. Homecraft Saunas — Heater & room sizing reference (volumes, ceiling height). homecraftsaunas.com

Educational only. Codes and conditions vary — confirm locally and consult a licensed professional.

David Kale

HotColdHaven

We research saunas and cold plunges in depth and translate the technical details into plain guidance. See how we evaluate. This is educational content, not professional advice — follow local codes and consult a licensed pro for electrical work.

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