how to build a sauna cheap
You can build a simple, safe, and effective sauna on a budget by using reclaimed materials for the structure, keeping the footprint small, and choosing an efficient heater (often electric or a small wood stove) instead of buying a full commercial kit.
Quick Scoop
A cheap DIY sauna is mostly about three things: scavenging or reclaiming materials, keeping the design small and simple, and spending where safety really matters (heater, wiring, ventilation).
Plan: Size, Style, Budget
Before touching a tool, decide what you’re actually building.
- Choose type:
- Indoor corner sauna (in a basement or spare room).
- Tiny freestanding outdoor sauna (shed‑style or cabin‑style).
- Keep it small:
- 1–2 person footprint, roughly 4×4 to 5×5 ft (about 1.2–1.5 m square) drastically cuts lumber and heater size.
- Budget strategy:
- Spend on: heater, electrical work, basic insulation, a bit of interior cladding.
- Save on: framing lumber, exterior siding, benches, windows/door by using pallets and salvaged materials.
Think of it like building a minimalist “hot shed”: cozy, tight, simple, not a spa palace.
Cheap Materials & Sourcing Tricks
Using reclaimed or free materials is where the real savings come from.
- Structure and framing:
- Pallets from hardware stores or warehouses (often free) can become wall framing and cladding if you de‑nail and sort them.
* Misc scrap lumber and offcuts from local sawmills, building sites (with permission), or classified listings.
- Exterior and floor:
- Gravel and a few concrete slabs for a small outdoor base instead of a full slab.
* Simple shed roofing like bitumen felt or leftover shingles to keep water out.
- Doors and windows:
- Facebook Marketplace / classifieds often have free or near‑free glass doors, windows, and even skylights.
- Interior:
- If you can’t afford full cedar, mix: cedar only where you touch (benches, backrests) and cheaper softwood higher up or outside the seating area.
- Real‑world “dirt cheap” example:
- One ongoing off‑grid pallet sauna project targets around 50 USD total by using free pallets, salvaged plastic, and second‑hand glass, spending mainly on nails and a low‑cost skylight.
Simple Step‑by‑Step Build (Budget Version)
This is a generic sequence most DIY sauna builds follow, adapted for a low‑cost, small sauna.
- Pick and prepare the spot
- Outdoor: clear a small area, level it, lay down gravel and a few concrete slabs so the sauna doesn’t sit in mud.
* Indoor (unfinished basement/garage): choose a corner with concrete floor and enough height, away from flammable clutter.
- Build the base and floor
- Lay simple joists or pallet frames on your base.
- Deck over with boards; leave tiny gaps between boards or a small drain route if moisture is an issue.
- Frame the walls and roof
- Use 2×3/2×4 or pallet lumber to frame a small box, reinforcing the corners and the heater wall.
* Keep the roof low enough for efficient heating but high enough to sit on an upper bench comfortably (often around 6.5–7 ft / 2–2.1 m).
- Add basic insulation and vapor control
- Even cheap saunas benefit a lot from insulation; thin mineral wool or similar between studs is fine.
* On the hot side, add a foil vapor barrier or heat‑resistant plastic (not regular thin plastic that can melt near the heater).
- Interior cladding
- Line the inside with smooth boards (ideally softwoods like cedar, spruce, or similar) and make sure there’s no exposed metal where skin will touch.
* Use wood screws from the back or hidden surfaces so metal doesn’t get hot against skin.
- Benches
- Build a simple two‑level bench out of smooth boards; upper bench roughly at shoulder height when seated, lower bench about normal chair height.
* Add simple backrests so you don’t lean directly against hot walls.
- Door and ventilation
- Hang a light wooden or glass door that seals reasonably but not perfectly airtight.
- Provide:
- A small fresh‑air intake near the heater.
- An exhaust vent high on the opposite wall or near the ceiling, adjustable.
- Install heater (safely)
- Cheap options:
- Small electric sauna heater sized for your volume (often 3–6 kW range for tiny rooms).
- Cheap options:
* Small wood‑burning stove or dedicated sauna stove if you’re off‑grid, plus chimney and heat shields.
* Maintain clearances to combustibles exactly as the heater/chimney instructions specify, add heat shields, and never skip a proper chimney or vent.
- Finishing touches
- Add a simple thermometer and maybe a basic LED strip in a protected channel for indirect light.
* Use a wooden bucket/ladle and smooth any sharp edges on benches and walls.
Cost‑Saving Ideas vs Spending Smart
Here’s a snapshot of where people usually save versus where they choose to invest a bit more.
| Area | Cheap Options | Worth Spending On |
|---|---|---|
| Structure | Reclaimed pallets, scrap studs, basic shed roof felt. | [7]Solid base so it doesn’t rot or shift. | [3]
| Interior wood | Mixed species, cheaper softwoods higher up or behind backs. | [5]Cedar or similar on benches and where skin touches. | [5]
| Heater | Small but correctly sized electric or wood heater, not oversized. | [1][5]Certified unit, proper flue or wiring installed by a pro. | [6][1]
| Insulation | Thin but continuous insulation and basic vapor barrier. | [3]Sealing around heater wall and ceiling to avoid heat loss and moisture problems. | [3]
| Doors/Windows | Second‑hand glass door, salvaged window or skylight. | [7]Tempered glass and solid latches for safety and heat retention. | [3]
Safety, “Latest” DIY Trends, and Forum Wisdom
Recent DIY sauna content and forum discussions lean toward small, efficient, and reclaimed‑material builds rather than huge luxury rooms, especially for off‑grid or backyard setups.
- Safety non‑negotiables:
- Always follow heater and chimney clearance rules, protect nearby walls with non‑combustible shields, and never use random space heaters not designed for saunas.
* Hire an electrician for any high‑voltage wiring instead of improvising; this is one of the few places a “cheap” approach can become dangerous fast.
- Current DIY trends:
- Micro saunas in unfinished basements, using cedar deck boards and a small heater to keep costs far below commercial kits.
* Off‑grid pallet saunas in the woods with green roofs and salvaged doors/windows to push total cost under 100 USD.
- Forum‑style tips:
- Builders often recommend: go smaller than you think, insulate better than you think, and choose a reliable heater over fancy finishes.
Mini‑TL;DR:
To build a sauna cheap, keep the footprint small, raid pallets and salvaged
lumber for the shell, insulate lightly but continuously, and invest your main
money in a safe, appropriately sized heater and proper ventilation.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.