What is a sauna tent?
A sauna tent is exactly what it sounds like: A real sauna that packs into a bag. With a wood-burning stove, chimney and three-layer insulation that reaches 80–100 degrees in 20–30 minutes. The only thing separating it from the wooden sauna in your neighbour’s garden is that you can take it anywhere.
No building permit. No electrical installation.
The tent unfolds in two minutes. The stove goes in the centre, the chimney pipes are assembled and pushed through the opening at the top. Add firewood, light it up, and wait. It really is that simple.
There are no legal issues either. Sauna tents require no building permit because they are temporary structures without a foundation – the same category as caravans and garden furniture.
What does it cost to run?
A typical sauna session of 60–90 minutes uses 3–5 kg of birch wood. That works out to roughly €1–2 per session. Compare that to a gym membership at €40–65 per month or a visit to a public sauna at €10–15. Most people recoup the cost of their sauna tent in under a year.
What does it do for the body?
People who sauna 2–3 times a week have a 27% lower risk of cardiovascular disease. The heat dilates blood vessels, trains the circulatory system and improves sleep and recovery. The recommended dose is 57 minutes per week across 2–3 sessions – far more realistic when the sauna is right in your garden.
Durability and maintenance
A quality sauna tent lasts 5–10 years with proper care. The secret is simple: leave the tent open for 15–20 minutes after use so it dries, and store it dry. Rolling it up while damp is the start of mould, rusty zips and deteriorating seams.
Sauna tent, pop-up sauna or mobile sauna?
Many names for the same thing. Whether you’re searching for a sauna tent, pop-up sauna, mobile sauna, portable sauna or tent sauna, you’ll find it here.