Comparison · 2 picks

Barrel Sauna vs Cabin Sauna (UK 2026): Honest Comparison

By Wild Sauna UK editorial team 9 min read

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Barrel vs cabin is the most common shape question for a UK garden sauna. They use the same heater types, the same timber (cedar or thermo-spruce most commonly), and serve the same purpose - dry heat in the 70-90°C range. The difference is geometry, and geometry changes heat-up time, comfort, footprint, and price.

At a glance

All 2 options side by side.

Cabin Sauna Cabin Sauna 4.5 / 5 Barrel Sauna Barrel Sauna 4.4 / 5
Price £0£0
Best for The format to pick when you have the garden space (2x3m minimum), the £4,500+ budget, and the intent to use the sauna for proper evening sessions rather than 20-minute heat-and-leave routines. The format to pick when you want fast heat-up, the lowest plot footprint, and a price ceiling under £6,000.
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The picks in detail

#1 Best overall

Cabin Sauna

4.5 / 5
From £0
Cabin Sauna

Bottom line. The format to pick when you have the garden space (2x3m minimum), the £4,500+ budget, and the intent to use the sauna for proper evening sessions rather than 20-minute heat-and-leave routines. Better year-round, better resale on the house, less faff to maintain.

Pros

  • Full standing headroom and proper rectangular benches - more comfortable for longer 30-90 minute sessions
  • Wall space for shelves, robe hooks, a window, and a proper full-height door - more usable as a year-round garden building
  • Better thermal mass once warmed - the larger volume retains heat longer between stove top-ups
  • More configurable layouts: L-shaped benches, two-tier benching, separate changing area for larger plots
  • Industry-standard joinery (T&G boards, double-glazed window, insulated wall cavity) holds up to UK weather without seasonal re-tensioning

Cons

  • Heats up slower than a barrel - typically 60-90 minutes from cold because the larger air volume needs more energy
  • Footprint starts at around 2x2m for a usable two-person cabin; 2x3m+ for anything you'd actually call comfortable
  • Higher price for equivalent capacity - a comfortable two-person cabin sits at £4,500-£8,500, around £1,500-£3,000 above an equivalent barrel
  • Effectively permanent once sited - the joinery, insulation, and wiring don't tolerate disassembly
#2

Barrel Sauna

4.4 / 5
From £0
Barrel Sauna

Bottom line. The format to pick when you want fast heat-up, the lowest plot footprint, and a price ceiling under £6,000. The compromise is headroom and storage - acceptable for a sauna-as-pure-heat-experience, less so if you want to lounge for a full evening.

Pros

  • Heats up in 30-45 minutes from cold - the curved roof has nowhere for heated air to stratify high above the bench
  • Smallest footprint per usable bench length - a 6ft barrel sleeps two adults at full lie-down
  • No corners means less surface area exposed to UK rain and wind; thermal-mass losses are lower
  • Cheapest of the two formats for 2-3 person capacity - typically £2,500-£5,500 self-assembly delivered
  • Easier to relocate or sell - the staves disassemble in a day; cabins effectively don't move once sited

Cons

  • Standing headroom is limited - the curve narrows at the top, so anyone over ~5ft 10in sits to avoid bumping the staves
  • Stave-and-band construction does need annual re-tensioning of the steel bands; cabin joinery is fit-and-forget
  • Internal storage is awkward - no flat walls means no shelves, no robe hooks at standing height
  • The cylindrical shape limits door size; older / less mobile users find the low entry hard

How does the shape change the experience?

The cylinder vs rectangle distinction matters more than the marketing material suggests. In a barrel, the curved roof reflects radiant heat back toward the bench from every angle, and there is no high cold-air pocket because hot air has nowhere to stratify. You feel up-to-temperature within 30-45 minutes of lighting the stove or switching on the heater. In a cabin, hot air rises to the ceiling and the cooler air pools near the floor - which is why traditional Finnish cabins put the upper bench close to the ceiling and the heater on the long wall. A 2x3m cabin needs 60-90 minutes to reach a usable 80°C from cold; the same heater in a barrel hits 80°C in roughly half that time because it has less volume to heat and less surface area to lose heat through.

What footprint and headroom do they actually need?

A standard 6ft (1.8m) barrel sauna is 1.95m in external diameter and around 2m long, giving roughly 4 sq m of plot footprint. A 7ft barrel sleeps three adults sat upright and pushes to 2.3m diameter. Headroom inside is 1.8m at the centre line and drops sharply at the sides - users over 5ft 10in (1.78m) sit on the lower bench to avoid the staves.

A two-person cabin sauna starts at 2x2m external (4 sq m) but the usable internal area after wall thickness and bench drop is around 1.6x1.6m - tight for two adults sat side by side. The more comfortable size is 2x3m (6 sq m external), giving an internal 1.6x2.5m where two people can lie full-length on opposite benches. Standing headroom is the full 2-2.1m of the wall.

The Planning Portal's permitted-development limit (2.5m within 2m of a boundary, see our planning permission guide) catches more barrel saunas than cabin saunas, oddly - a 2.3m barrel with a 0.4m stove flue exceeds 2.5m total height the moment you push it against a fence. Cabins built to 2.1m wall height with a 30° pitched roof can sit 0.5m closer to a boundary without breaching the limit.

How do they hold up in UK weather?

Both formats survive UK winters when built in suitable timber. Western Red Cedar and thermo-treated spruce are the two common choices; thermo-spruce is cheaper and more dimensionally stable through wet-then-frozen cycles, cedar carries more cachet and a slightly longer expected life when oiled annually.

The differences in maintenance are real. Barrel staves are held together by 4-6 steel bands tensioned with bolts; UK humidity cycles cause the staves to swell and shrink, which loosens the bands. You re-tension once a year, takes 20 minutes with a spanner. Cabin construction uses tongue-and-groove boards over an insulated stud wall, fixed with screws - no re-tensioning. The trade-off is that cabin walls can be torn open and rebuilt board-by-board for damage; a barrel stave is a continuous shaped piece that you replace as a unit if it splits.

Roof leaks are more common on cabins than barrels - flat-and-pent roofs need correct fall, a barrel's curved roof drains itself. Most UK cabin failures we see in long-term review threads are bitumen-shingle roof failures at 5-7 years, not timber failures.

What do they cost installed in the UK?

Self-assembly delivered prices, summer 2026, mid-tier UK retailers:

  • Barrel, 2-person, electric heater: £2,500-£4,000 delivered self-assembly.
  • Barrel, 4-person, wood-burning stove: £3,500-£5,500.
  • Cabin, 2-person, electric heater: £3,800-£6,500.
  • Cabin, 4-person, wood-burning stove: £5,500-£8,500.

Add £400-£800 for a concrete slab base (essential for both - timber bases rot in 5-7 years in UK conditions), £200-£500 for the Part P notifiable electrical work (see planning + building regulations guide), and £300-£600 if you want a stove-and-flue install signed off by a HETAS-registered fitter (recommended for insurance reasons even when not strictly required).

Which one should you pick?

  1. Pick a barrel when ...

    Your budget ceiling is £5,500 installed, your plot is tight (4-5 sq m), you want the sauna for 20-30 minute heat-and-leave sessions, and you accept sitting (not standing) inside.

  2. Pick a cabin when ...

    Your budget reaches £6,500+ installed, you have 6+ sq m of plot space behind the house principal elevation, you want proper standing headroom for longer evening sessions, and you'd like a structure that resells well as a garden room.

  3. Pick neither (yet) when ...

    Your plot is under 4 sq m or the only available siting is in a conservation area / listed-building curtilage / front garden. Either build is going to need full planning permission and may be refused on amenity grounds. An indoor or infrared cabin against an internal wall is the more pragmatic answer (lower-spec heater, no planning footprint - see our infrared guide linked below).

Frequently asked questions

Q01Can a barrel sauna sit on grass or do I need a base?
You need a base. Timber staves resting on damp soil rot from the bottom up in 5-7 years; a concrete slab or 100mm compacted MOT type 1 with paving slabs lifts the timber clear and stops capillary water uptake. The same applies to a cabin sauna - both manufacturers void their warranties for direct-on-soil siting.
Q02Are barrel saunas warmer than cabins for the same heater?
Per kW of heater output, yes - a 6ft barrel reaches steady-state 80°C with a 4.5kW heater that would struggle in a 2x3m cabin. The cabin needs 6-7.5kW for the same effective temperature. The barrel's smaller air volume and reflective curved roof do the work. This translates to running cost: a barrel costs around 60-70% of an equivalent cabin's electricity bill per session.
Q03Do cabin saunas need planning permission more often than barrels?
Not really. Both formats fall under the same Class E permitted development limits (see our planning permission guide). The 2.5m height limit within 2m of a boundary catches barrels MORE often because the stove flue on a wood-burning barrel pushes total height above 2.5m. Cabin saunas with a 2m wall and shallow pitched roof can typically sit closer to a fence under PD.
Q04Which lasts longer in the UK climate?
Both reach 20+ years when built in thermo-spruce or Western Red Cedar with annual oiling. The failure modes differ: cabins tend to fail at the roof (bitumen-shingle replacement at 5-7 years), barrels need stave-band re-tensioning (20 minutes annually) and occasional stave replacement after 10-15 years. Neither is meaningfully shorter-lived; the difference is what part of the structure you maintain.
Q05Can I convert a barrel sauna to a cabin layout?
No, the formats are structurally different. The barrel's load path is the curved staves under band tension; the cabin's is the timber-frame wall under sheathing. You'd be rebuilding from the base up. If you want both formats over time, sell the barrel (they hold value well on secondhand markets - they disassemble) and buy the cabin you want.
Q06What about infrared cabins - where do they fit in this comparison?
Infrared is a different category - lower-temperature radiant heat (50-65°C) rather than the 70-90°C dry-heat range a traditional barrel or cabin reaches. Infrared cabins are smaller, cheaper, and typically indoor-only. Our infrared sauna guide covers that category separately.