Aufguss Explained: The German Sauna Ritual (UK Guide 2026)

Aufguss is the German sauna ritual of essential-oil steam infusions led by a trained Saunameister. What to expect and where to find it in the UK.

Wild Sauna UK logo - Aufguss German ritual UK guide
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By Rob Griffiths10 June 2026 · 8 min read

If you've spent time in a German or Austrian thermal spa, you've probably seen the ritual: someone in branded kit walks into the hot sauna with a bucket, a giant towel, and a small bottle of essential oil. Twenty people sit in silence as they pour, swing, and announce each round. That's Aufguss - and it's slowly arriving in the UK. This guide covers what the ritual actually is, what to expect on the bench, and where to find it on home soil in 2026.

What is Aufguss?

Aufguss (German for 'infusion' - literally 'pouring on') is a structured sauna ritual originating in continental European spa culture. A trained Saunameister (literally 'sauna master') performs three core actions in sequence:

  1. The infusion - water mixed with essential oils (eucalyptus, mint, citrus, pine, or proprietary blends) is poured onto the sauna's hot stones, producing a burst of aromatic steam.
  2. The wedeln (waving) - the Saunameister uses a large towel, fan, or flag to circulate the steam around the room. This forced convection dramatically increases the perceived heat: the air doesn't get hotter, but the sweat-wicking layer next to your skin is constantly stripped away, so heat transfer accelerates.
  3. The exit cue - guests applaud at the end of each round, and may leave between rounds if needed. Three rounds is typical, each 3-5 minutes, with the music cueing intensity.

Total session length is usually 10-15 minutes. Sessions are scheduled (not on-demand), often on the hour or half-hour, and are announced via the spa's PA system.

Where Aufguss came from

The ritual evolved in mid-20th-century German Thermen (thermal bath complexes) from the older Finnish tradition of throwing water on the stones (Finnish: löyly). German spa culture standardised the role of the trained attendant, added the choreographed waving with a large towel, and built the essential-oil infusion into a structured experience. The first formal Aufguss-Meister training programmes appeared in the 1970s.

By the 1990s, the format had spread across Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, and the Nordic countries. The Aufguss World Championship has run since 2012, with national qualifying rounds in around 25 countries. The Saunameister profession is genuinely competitive at the elite end - top performers blend choreography, scent design, music selection, and storytelling into 15-minute theatrical pieces.

What does an Aufguss session feel like?

Hotter than a normal sauna sit at the same air temperature. The forced convection from the towel-waving means the air moves past your skin at 1-2 m/s rather than the natural 0.1 m/s convection of a still sauna. That increases the rate at which heat transfers into your body roughly 5-10x for the duration of the wedeln.

Practical effects:

  • Sessions feel intense even for experienced sauna users - if you're used to 15-20 minute sits, a 10-minute Aufguss may push you harder.
  • The essential oils make breathing feel different - eucalyptus and mint open the airways and can feel stimulating; citrus and pine are milder.
  • The peak heat hits during the wedeln, not during the pour. You can prepare by sitting upright with relaxed shoulders.
  • The applause cue means leaving mid-round (without breaking the ritual) is awkward. If you need to leave, do it between rounds.

For first-timers: sit on the lower bench, not the top. The temperature differential between bench heights in a sauna is significant (often 15-20°C between top and bottom), and the wedeln amplifies that gap. Lower bench gives you the experience without the maximum-intensity heat exposure.

Where to experience Aufguss in the UK

UK Aufguss provision is still developing in 2026, but there are credible options across three categories.

Dedicated Aufguss venues - venues running scheduled Aufguss-Meister-led sessions on the hour:

  • Thermae Bath Spa (Bath) - runs scheduled aroma rituals in the Wellness Suite; not formally Aufguss-Meister certified but a related infusion-and-wedeln ritual format.
  • Beaverbrook Spa and selected high-end UK destination spas have added Aufguss-style sessions to their schedules in 2024-2025.
  • The Sauna Society mobile sauna events around London occasionally feature visiting Aufguss-Meisters.

Wild sauna communities - several UK wild-sauna operators (the mobile barrel-sauna pop-ups on beaches, lakes, and harbours that exploded post-2022) are training or hosting Aufguss-Meister-led sessions:

Competition events - UK Aufguss Championships first ran in 2023 and now schedule annually. Tickets to championship rounds are public; check the British Sauna Society calendar.

Etiquette: what to know before your first session

  1. Arrive 5 minutes before the scheduled start

    Aufguss sessions start sharply at the announced time. Late arrivals are typically refused entry once the door closes - it interrupts the ritual and lets cold air in. Allow time to shower, settle on the bench, and acclimatise to baseline temperature before the Saunameister arrives.

  2. Sit on a towel; don't lean on the wood directly

    Standard sauna etiquette applies. A bench towel goes under your full body footprint (not just buttocks). This protects the wood from sweat and is non-negotiable at every continental sauna venue.

  3. Stay silent during the ritual

    Conversation is paused once the Saunameister begins. The ritual is structured, intentional, and choreographed to music. Phone use is also forbidden - many venues confiscate phones at the changing-room stage.

  4. Applaud at the end of each round

    Applause cues the end of a wedeln round. The Saunameister will pause, often pour a smaller second infusion, and start the next round. Three rounds is typical; you're free to leave between rounds.

  5. Shower or plunge between sessions, then rest

    Continental spa protocol cycles between hot sessions and cold-water immersion (plunge pool, cold shower, or cold-water lake/sea). Then rest 10-20 minutes before another sauna round. Going straight from Aufguss to another sauna without cooling is intense, even for experienced users.

Frequently asked questions

Q01What does 'Aufguss' mean?
Aufguss is German for 'infusion' or 'pouring on'. In the sauna context, it refers to the ritual of pouring essential-oil-infused water onto the hot stones to release steam, followed by circulating the steam through the room using a large towel. The combined word encompasses both the steam infusion and the choreographed performance the Saunameister leads.
Q02Is Aufguss safe for everyone?
No - the same medical contraindications apply as for high-intensity sauna sessions. Aufguss is meaningfully more intense than a normal sit due to the forced convection, so anyone with cardiovascular conditions, low blood pressure, recent surgery, pregnancy, or sensitivity to essential-oil aromatics should consult a doctor first. See our sauna safety guide for the full list.
Q03What's the difference between Aufguss and a normal sauna?
Three differences. First, Aufguss is led by a trained Saunameister rather than self-directed. Second, the infusion involves specific essential-oil blends and structured rounds (typically 3 rounds of 3-5 minutes each). Third, the towel-waving phase actively circulates steam, which dramatically increases heat transfer to your skin compared to a still-air sauna sit at the same air temperature. The net effect is meaningfully more intense than a normal sauna.
Q04Do I need to book Aufguss in advance?
Usually no - most continental Aufguss venues run sessions on a fixed schedule (often on the hour or half-hour) and seating is first-come, first-served from the existing sauna users. For UK venues, the smaller scale means booking is sometimes required, especially at popular wild-sauna pop-ups and championship events. Check the venue's schedule before arriving.
Q05Why is there a championship for Aufguss?
The Aufguss World Championship (running since 2012) treats the ritual as a competitive performance art. Top Saunameisters blend choreography, scent design, music selection, and storytelling into 12-15 minute pieces judged on aroma, technique, atmosphere, and overall artistic impression. National qualifying rounds run in around 25 countries; the UK Championships first ran in 2023. It's the spa-industry equivalent of competitive cocktail-making or barista championships.