Wild Saunas in the North East (2026): Coast, City & Coast

Wild sauna venues across the North East coast and Tyneside in 2026 - Northumberland beaches, Newcastle Quayside, Tynemouth Longsands and Saltburn.

Northumberland coast - representative landscape for the North East wild-sauna geo-guide
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By Rob Griffiths11 June 2026 · 8 min read

The North East has built one of the stronger 2026 UK wild-sauna scenes by leaning into its coast. The Tynemouth Longsands promenade, the Northumberland beaches around Beadnell, and the Saltburn front have each anchored credible operators, and the urban Tyneside scene is unusually mature for an inland UK city. The region sits between the Yorkshire coastal cluster and the broader Scottish scene, drawing on the long-established cold-water swimming community along the North Sea coast. This guide covers the credible operators by sub-region, the typical session formats and pricing, and what to expect on a North East visit.

Northumberland coast: Beadnell, Bamburgh and the Tyne approaches

The Northumberland coast from the Tyne up to Berwick supports a growing wild-sauna scene anchored by a small number of operators who serve the cold-water swimming community along the beaches at Beadnell, Bamburgh, Seahouses and Druridge Bay.

Operators worth knowing:

  • Hot Sands at Beadnell Bay - a fixed-location sauna on the beach at Beadnell Bay with views straight out across the North Sea. The format is the classic Northumberland wild-sauna pairing: wood-fired sauna and direct sea-plunge in the bay itself rather than a plunge bath. Beadnell sits between Seahouses and the Farne Islands jumping-off points, which makes a sauna-and-coastal-walk combination an easy day plan.
  • Steam & Salt on Tynemouth Longsands lower promenade - two Nordic-inspired wood-fired saunas on the lower promenade, reopened in upgraded form from 12 January 2026. The lower-promenade location means a short walk to the beach and an immediate North Sea plunge option rather than a separate drive to a swim spot. The Longsands beach is the dominant urban swimming beach for the wider Tyneside region.

The Northumberland coastal scene is still smaller in operator count than the Yorkshire coast (Whitby to Filey) but is closing the gap. The character is similar: open North Sea, exposed beach swims, year-round operation with reduced capacity in deep winter weather.

Tyneside: Newcastle Quayside and Tynemouth Longsands

The Tyneside urban scene around Newcastle and Gateshead has a depth that is unusual for an inland UK city - several distinct operators run different formats within driving distance of each other, and the Quayside and Tynemouth Longsands both function as urban swim-and-sauna spots.

The credible Tyneside operators:

  • Salty Saunas (Newcastle Quayside and Tynemouth Longsands) - a mobile wood-fired sauna with ice bath, run as drop-in sessions at around £10 per person. The Quayside rotation makes a central-city sauna session possible without leaving town; the Longsands rotation pairs the sauna with sea swimming. Group bookings of up to 12 people are available for exclusive use.
  • Northumbrian Sauna (mobile, NE20) - operated by 'Sauna Master' Fenwick Ridley since 2023, this is the larger-format end of the Tyneside scene. The operator runs sauna tents and a trailer for groups of up to twenty-plus, with Viking-themed sessions a regular feature. Useful for group events or guests who want a higher-volume sauna format than the standard four-to-six-person mobile rotations.
  • Sæla Sauna (central Newcastle) - a Scandinavian wood-fired sauna and cold plunge in central Newcastle. The fixed-city-centre location suits Newcastle and Gateshead residents looking for a regular weekly session rather than a coastal trip.
  • Saunaicebalance (Newcastle) - hot sauna and plunge pools across multiple session formats. Sits at the polished end of the Newcastle scene compared to the mobile-operator ethos elsewhere in the city.

The combination of Quayside city-centre sessions, Tynemouth Longsands beach pop-ups, and the mobile group-format operators makes Tyneside one of the more flexible UK regional scenes for casual urban sauna-goers.

Teesside and County Durham: Saltburn, woodlands and the Tees

The Teesside and County Durham scene is smaller in operator count than the Northumberland coast or Tyneside but anchors on one strong coastal venue and a small inland presence.

Operators worth knowing:

  • Whitby Wellbeing at Hazel Grove, Saltburn - a wild-sauna venue at the far end of Saltburn promenade, just beyond the pier in a sheltered valley where the wooded cliffs meet the beach. Sessions run alongside cold North Sea plunges. The location sits at the historic Teesside-Yorkshire boundary - Saltburn is in North Yorkshire but functions culturally as the Teesside coast's primary wild-sauna venue.
  • County Durham wood-fired wild sauna operators - a small handful of operators run wood-fired sauna and cold-plunge sessions in the County Durham woodlands. The format is closer to the East Midlands lake-circuit model than the Tyneside urban scene - pop-up sessions at rural sites rather than fixed urban venues.
  • Sauna House Durham - sits at the polished-spa end of the spectrum rather than the wild-sauna format (a Nordic Spa with bathhouse, ice bath, cold plunge and red-light therapy in central Durham). Worth knowing for visitors who want a structured spa visit but does not fit the same wild-sauna category as the Saltburn or Beadnell operators.

How the North East compares to other UK regions

The North East sits in the upper-middle of UK regional wild-sauna provision in 2026, ahead of the Midlands and East of England and broadly comparable to the Yorkshire coastal cluster, though with a different character. The Tyneside urban scene is the standout strength - the city has more operator depth than most UK regions outside London - and the coastal scene at Tynemouth Longsands and Beadnell holds its own against the Yorkshire coast. The gap is on the Northumberland inland and hill-country side: there is little credible wild-sauna provision in the Cheviots or the Tyne Valley away from the coast and the city. For visitors with a weekend to allocate, the Tyneside-and-Longsands combination is the most reliable booking; for visitors wanting the dramatic coastal version, Beadnell or Saltburn deliver the photogenic end of the experience.

Planning a visit

  1. Pick coast vs city by your travel reach

    If you are Newcastle or Gateshead based, the Quayside or Sela options work for a midweek evening; if you have a car-bound weekend to spare, the Northumberland coast at Beadnell or the Saltburn / Tynemouth Longsands beaches are the experiences worth the drive.

  2. Book Longsands sessions ahead

    Tynemouth Longsands is the single most popular wild-sauna stretch in the North East. Salty Saunas and Steam and Salt both run busy weekend rotations - book a week ahead in summer, two days ahead in winter.

  3. Layer warmly for the post-plunge gap

    North Sea cold immersion is unforgiving. A robe, hat and warm drink between sauna and car is more important on the Northumberland coast than at the inland Midlands venues - the wind chill on Beadnell and Longsands is the real factor, not the water temperature.

  4. Plan a back-up indoor option in midwinter

    Coastal sessions get cancelled in winter storm fronts. If you are travelling more than 90 minutes, have a Sela or Saunaicebalance booking as a back-up so the trip is not wasted if the weather closes the beach session.

  5. Combine sauna with the wider coast experience

    Both Beadnell (for the Farne Islands jumping-off points) and Saltburn (for the pier, beach and town) reward a half-day visit beyond the sauna session alone. The Tynemouth Longsands sessions sit a short walk from Tynemouth Priory and the village pubs.

Frequently asked questions

Q01Is Saltburn in the North East or in Yorkshire?
Geographically Saltburn-by-the-Sea is in North Yorkshire (Redcar and Cleveland borough), but it functions culturally as the Teesside coast's primary wild-sauna venue and is covered here as a North East destination. The Yorkshire wild-sauna scene we cover separately runs from Whitby south.
Q02How much does a North East wild-sauna session cost?
Sessions sit in the £10 to £25 per person range across the credible operators in 2026. Salty Saunas at around £10 is the accessible end; fixed-venue operators like Steam and Salt and Sela Sauna sit closer to £20.
Q03Which North East wild-sauna venues run year-round?
The Tynemouth Longsands operators (Steam and Salt, Salty Saunas) and Sela Sauna in central Newcastle run year-round, with reduced capacity in storm-front winter weeks. The Northumberland coast operators reduce capacity in deep winter but do not generally close fully. The County Durham woodland pop-ups are weekend-rotation year-round.
Q04Are the North East wild-sauna venues dog-friendly?
Most outdoor-sauna operators are not explicitly dog-friendly for the sauna sessions themselves, but several of the wider sites (Beadnell beach, Saltburn promenade) welcome dogs on the surrounding spaces. Confirm with the operator before assuming a dog can stay with you near the sauna.
Q05What is the strongest single-venue concentration in the North East?
Tynemouth Longsands lower promenade. Two distinct operators (Steam and Salt and Salty Saunas) run sessions on the same stretch of beach, with the Tynemouth village pubs and the priory a short walk away. For visitors wanting maximum variety in one short trip, Longsands is the answer.