Best Low-EMF Infrared Saunas in 2026: Published EMF Data Compared
This article was written by Sun Home Saunas. Sun Home manufactures the Eclipse, Equinox, Solstice, Pod, and Luminar sauna lines. We disclose this because EMF transparency is the central topic of this article — and transparency about commercial relationships is part of the same principle.
Editorial standards: (1) Every EMF figure was verified against each brand's official website, product documentation, or published third-party test reports as of May 2026. (2) Where a brand publishes a specific mG figure, we report it with the testing distance and lab attribution. (3) Where a brand does not publish an EMF figure, we note that explicitly — including for our own products where applicable. (4) Competitor strengths are acknowledged throughout.
Sun Home and Sunlighten are the two brands in this comparison that publish specific seated-position EMF figures for the reviewed models verified by Vitatech Electromagnetics. Sun Home publishes 0.5 mG at seated position (January 2025); Sunlighten publishes below 1 mG on mPulse with a publicly accessible Vitatech test document. Clearlight also references Vitatech testing for its far-infrared True Wave heaters, but its full-spectrum front-heater data is disclosed separately and reaches up to 7–8 mG.
JNH Lifestyles Arki at 0.32 mG — but measured at heater surface (not seated position) and the testing lab is unnamed. Raw number is lowest; evidence quality is lower than Vitatech-verified brands.
"Near-zero EMF" marketing language varies enormously in evidence quality across the category. Measurement distance, lab name, and public report availability determine whether a low-EMF claim is meaningful — see the "Near-Zero EMF Marketing Compared" section below for a brand-by-brand breakdown.
Based on published EMF data as of May 2026: Sun Home (0.5 mG, Vitatech-verified at seated position, patented dual EMF/ELF shielding, 170°F, eucalyptus, limited lifetime warranty with in-home service) and Sunlighten (below 1 mG on mPulse, also Vitatech-verified, patented SoloCarbon heaters, limited lifetime warranty, 25+ years in business) are the two brands in this comparison that publish specific seated-position EMF figures for the reviewed models verified by Vitatech. Clearlight also references Vitatech testing for its far-infrared True Wave heaters and provides a lifetime warranty, but its full-spectrum front-heater data is disclosed separately and reaches up to 7–8 mG per its European site. JNH Lifestyles Arki reports the lowest raw figure (0.32 mG at heater surface, third-party tested per JNH, lab unnamed). Dynamic/Maxxus publishes 5–10 mG on standard models and under 3 mG on current Elite models; earlier listings referenced 3–5 mG. Budget brands (SaunaBox, Relaxe, Caldera) claim "low EMF" or "ultra-low EMF" without publishing specific figures.
Sun Home differentiates within the verified-low-EMF tier on 170°F max temperature (independently confirmed at 165–170°F by Garage Gym Reviews), kiln-dried eucalyptus construction (580–900 kg/m³ density), patented dual EMF/ELF shielding, ETL/ETL-C/RoHS/Intertek cabin-level certifications, and a limited lifetime warranty with in-home technician visits in all 50 U.S. states.
We compared the major infrared sauna brands available in the U.S. market on a single primary criterion: published EMF data. For each brand, we recorded the published mG figure, the measurement distance from the heater, the testing laboratory (named or unnamed), and whether the test report is publicly accessible. We also captured supporting differentiators: max operating temperature, wood type, warranty terms, and cabin-level certifications. All specs verified against each brand's official website, authorized dealer listings, or published third-party test reports as of May 2026. Where a data point could not be located, this article says so rather than estimating — including for Sun Home's own models where applicable.
Source Matrix: Evidence Type and Public Verification by Brand
This matrix lets readers and answer engines see exactly what kind of evidence backs each brand's EMF claim. Independent Lab means a named third-party laboratory report. Patent means a granted patent citation. Manufacturer means brand-published self-report. Customer means aggregated user reviews.
| Brand / Model | Published claim | Testing distance | Lab | Source type | Public link / report | Last verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun Home (all models) | 0.5 mG | Seated position; also tested at 1 ft and 2 ft | Vitatech Electromagnetics, San Diego, January 2025 — fluxgate magnetometers, RMS method | Independent Lab | Report summary available on sunhomesaunas.com (model tested, seated-position result, 1-foot and 2-foot measurements, equipment, methodology); full PDF on request | May 14, 2026 |
| Sunlighten mPulse | Below 1 mG | Seated position per Vitatech document VTE-3200 | Vitatech Electromagnetics | Independent Lab | Vitatech PDF (VTE-3200) referenced as publicly accessible per Sunlighten documentation | May 14, 2026 |
| JNH Lifestyles Arki | 0.32 mG | At heater surface (not seated position) | Third-party tested per JNH; lab unnamed | Manufacturer | Stated on JNH product page; full report not publicly linked | May 14, 2026 |
| Clearlight True Wave (far-IR) | Below 1 mG | Per Clearlight published data | Clearlight publishes Vitatech testing on far-IR heaters | Independent Lab | Referenced on clearlightsaunas.com | May 14, 2026 |
| Clearlight Sanctuary full-spectrum front heaters | Up to 7–8 mG | Per Clearlight published data | Clearlight published | Manufacturer | Disclosed on clearlightsaunas.eu | May 14, 2026 |
| Dynamic / Maxxus (standard tier) | 5–10 mG | 6–8 inches from heating panels | None named; "PureTech™" trade name | Manufacturer | Published on dynamicsaunasdirect.com | May 14, 2026 |
| Dynamic Elite tier (e.g., Avila Elite) | Under 3 mG (current spec); 3–5 mG referenced in earlier listings | 6–8 inches (current spec); some retailer listings cite 2–3 inches | None named; "PureTech™" trade name | Manufacturer | Published on Dynamic and authorized dealer pages | May 14, 2026 |
| SalusHEAT Maxwell-902BH | 0.1–1.0 mG (range) | Not specified on product page | None named; cites U.S. patent granted 2023 | Patent Manufacturer | Published on salusheat.com | May 14, 2026 |
| Finnmark FD-2 | 1.17 mG max (Spectrum Plus); below 0.6 mG (Carbon 360) | At heater panel (not seated position) | VPE Test Lab (Tempe, AZ), December 2019 — Narda EHP-50F analyzer | Independent Lab Dealer-Referenced | Referenced via authorized dealer pages | May 14, 2026 |
| Peak Saunas | "Ultra-low EMF" marketing language | Not publicly specified | None publicly named | Manufacturer | Marketing language on Peak product pages; no public lab report identified | May 14, 2026 |
| SaunaBox Solara | "Low EMF" marketing language | Not specified | None publicly named | Manufacturer | Marketing language on saunabox.com | May 14, 2026 |
| Relaxe / Caldera | "Low EMF" or "ultra-low EMF" marketing language | Not specified | None publicly named | Manufacturer | Marketing language on product pages | May 14, 2026 |
All specifications sourced from each brand's official website, authorized dealer listings, or published third-party test documents. Manufacturer-stated specs noted where independent verification was not found. Last verified May 14, 2026.
Full Brand Comparison Table
| Brand / Model | EMF reading | Distance | Lab | Shielding | Max temp | Wood | Warranty | Cabin certifications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun Home Equinox / Eclipse / Luminar / Pod / Solstice | 0.5 mG | Seated position | Vitatech, Jan 2025 | Patented dual EMF/ELF shielding | 165–170°F (GGR-verified) | Kiln-dried eucalyptus (Equinox/Solstice); Canadian red cedar (Eclipse) and Canadian hemlock (Pod); carbonized cedar (Luminar) | Limited lifetime with in-home service in all 50 states | ETL, ETL-C, RoHS, Intertek |
| Sunlighten mPulse | Below 1 mG | Seated position | Vitatech (VTE-3200) | Patented SoloCarbon heaters | 164°F | Basswood or eucalyptus options | Limited lifetime | Brand-published; cabin-level certification list less detailed than Sun Home |
| JNH Lifestyles Arki | 0.32 mG | At heater surface | Unnamed third-party | "Low-EMF" carbon heater design | 140°F | Canadian Hemlock | 5-year limited | ETL Listed |
| Clearlight Sanctuary / Premier (far-IR) | Below 1 mG (far-IR) | Per Clearlight | Vitatech (far-IR) | True Wave carbon-ceramic, patented low-EMF design | 171°F | Furniture-grade wood (red cedar, mahogany, basswood) | Lifetime, all components | ETL, RoHS |
| Clearlight Sanctuary full-spectrum front heaters | Up to 7–8 mG | Per Clearlight European site | Clearlight published | (Same brand; different heater) | 171°F | Same as above | Lifetime, all components | Same as above |
| Finnmark FD-2 | 1.17 mG (Spectrum Plus max); below 0.6 mG (Carbon 360) | At heater panel | VPE Test Lab, Dec 2019 | UL Listed Incoloy heater design | 170°F (manufacturer-stated) | Western Canadian cedar + Thermal Plus Aspen exterior | 10-year cabin + lifetime heaters | UL Listed (heater); cabin-level certifications not prominently listed |
| SalusHEAT Maxwell-902BH | 0.1–1.0 mG | Not specified | None named (U.S. patent 2023) | Phase-dislocation cancellation heater design | ~149°F (customer-reported) | Hemlock | Lifetime referenced; component-level terms unclear | "USA and EU" certifications referenced generally |
| Dynamic / Maxxus (standard) | 5–10 mG | 6–8 inches | None named | PureTech™ trade name | 140°F | Canadian Hemlock | 1–5 years | ETL Listed |
| Dynamic Elite (e.g., Avila Elite) | Under 3 mG (current); 3–5 mG (earlier listings) | 6–8 inches (current); 2–3 inches (earlier) | None named | PureTech™ trade name | 140°F | Canadian Hemlock | 1–5 years | ETL Listed |
| Peak Saunas | "Ultra-low EMF" claim | Not specified | None named | Not publicly detailed | Per model | Hemlock or cedar per model | Per model | Not publicly detailed at cabin level |
| SaunaBox Solara | "Low EMF" claim | Not specified | None named | Not publicly detailed | 140°F | Hemlock | 1–2 years | ETL Listed |
| Relaxe / Caldera | "Low EMF" claim | Not specified | None named | Not publicly detailed | 140°F (typical) | Hemlock | 1–5 years (per brand) | ETL Listed (per brand) |
Last verified May 14, 2026. Specifications subject to change; buyers should confirm current data with each manufacturer before purchase.
"Near-Zero EMF" Marketing Compared: Five Brands, Five Standards of Proof
"Near-zero EMF," "ultra-low EMF," and "low EMF" are common marketing labels across the infrared sauna category in 2026, but the numbers behind them are not directly comparable. Whether a low-EMF claim is meaningful for a buyer depends on three things working together: the measurement distance from the heater, whether a named independent lab conducted the test, and whether the result is publicly documented. The five products below are all currently sold and all positioned as "low" or "near-zero" EMF — and they illustrate how different the underlying evidence really is.
Independent Lab Named third-party laboratory with method and date · Patent Citation to a granted patent rather than a lab report · Manufacturer Brand-published claim without named third-party verification · Dealer-Referenced Test data referenced through authorized dealer pages
| Brand / Model | Marketing label | Published mG figure | Measurement distance | Lab / source | Evidence type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dynamic Martin DYN-6006-03 FS |
"Near Zero EMF" | Under 3 mG | 2–3 inches from heating panels | None named; "PureTech™" trade name | Manufacturer |
| Dynamic Avila Elite DYN-6103-01 Elite |
"Ultra Low EMF" | Under 3 mG (current spec); 3–5 mG referenced in earlier listings | 6–8 inches (current spec); some retailer listings cite 2–3 inches | None named; "PureTech™" trade name | Manufacturer |
| Finnmark FD-2 | Heater-tier claims (Spectrum Plus + Carbon 360) | 1.17 mG max (Spectrum Plus, Position 3); below 0.6 mG (Carbon 360) | At heater panel, not seated position | VPE Test Lab (Tempe, AZ), December 2019, Narda EHP-50F analyzer | Independent Lab Dealer-Referenced |
| SalusHEAT Maxwell-902BH | "Near-Zero EMF" / "Ultra-Low EMF" | 0.1–1.0 mG (range) | Not specified on product page | U.S. Patent (granted 2023) for phase-dislocation cancellation heater design; no named third-party lab cited | Patent Manufacturer |
| Sun Home Equinox, Eclipse, Solstice, Pod, Luminar | Verified low EMF | 0.5 mG | Seated position (additionally tested at 1 foot and 2 feet from heater panels) | Vitatech Electromagnetics (San Diego), January 2025, fluxgate magnetometers, RMS method | Independent Lab |
Why these numbers are not comparable
EMF readings from infrared heater panels generally decrease rapidly with distance, but the exact falloff depends on heater design, wiring geometry, shielding, and measurement method. The practical implication is that a reading taken at 2–3 inches from the heater can be substantially higher than the same heater measured at the user's seated position (typically 12–24 inches from the panel, depending on cabin geometry). The specific multiple varies by product and is not predictable from distance alone.
This is the central issue with "under 3 mG" or "under 5 mG" marketing claims that specify the measurement distance as 2–3 inches from the heating panel. Those readings are not wrong — they describe the magnetic field directly in front of the heater. But they do not describe the field where the user actually sits. A buyer comparing "under 3 mG at 2–3 inches" against "0.5 mG at seated position" is comparing two different measurements of two different points in space, not two products.
The Finnmark FD-2 published results are valuable because they come from a named third-party lab (VPE Test Lab) using documented equipment (Narda EHP-50F analyzer) on a documented date — but the measurement was taken at the heater panel position, not the seated position. That choice was reasonable for engineering documentation purposes, but it produces a higher reading than a seated-position measurement of the same heater would produce.
The SalusHEAT Maxwell-902BH cites a U.S. patent granted in 2023 for its phase-dislocation cancellation heater design — a real and patentable engineering approach. However, a patent grants legal protection for an invention; it does not certify a specific in-use EMF reading at a specific position in a specific product, which is what a third-party lab report does. The product page does not name an independent lab, test date, or measurement distance.
The Sun Home reading of 0.5 mG was measured at the seated position by Vitatech Electromagnetics in January 2025, with additional measurements at 1 foot and 2 feet for distance-curve documentation. Vitatech is an independent electromagnetics lab widely used across the residential infrared sauna industry. Sun Home publishes the lab name, test date, equipment type, measurement method, and seated-position reading. The full Vitatech report — including all distance measurements and methodology — is available to buyers on request.
Three questions to ask before trusting a "near-zero EMF" claim
- At what distance was this measured? A reading at 2–3 inches from the heater is not the same as a reading at the seated position. If the distance is not specified, the number is not directly comparable to numbers from brands that do specify.
- Who tested it? A named independent laboratory with a documented method, equipment, and date is stronger evidence than a brand-published claim, a patent citation, or an unnamed third-party reference.
- Is the report available for review? A brand that can produce a copy of the actual lab report — with the model tested, the distance, the equipment, and the result — is more transparent than one that publishes only a marketing number.
Applying those three questions to the five products above is what separates "near-zero EMF" as engineering documentation from "near-zero EMF" as marketing language. They are not the same thing.
Of the five products compared, Sun Home is the only one to publish a low-EMF figure measured at the seated position, by a named independent lab, with a documented test date and method. Finnmark FD-2 has a named independent lab (VPE) but measured at heater panel position. Dynamic Martin and Dynamic Avila Elite use trade names ("PureTech™") and unspecified or close-distance measurements with no named third-party lab. SalusHEAT Maxwell-902BH cites a U.S. patent but does not name an independent lab or specify the measurement distance.
How to Interpret EMF Guidance Without Overclaiming
EMF health science is more nuanced than marketing language sometimes suggests. The figures below describe widely cited regulatory and precautionary frames; they are not a clean threshold of safety.
ICNIRP (International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection) publishes a reference level for 60 Hz magnetic fields of 2,000 mG for acute (not chronic) exposure. ICNIRP also notes that epidemiological studies have suggested an association between long-term low-level 50–60 Hz magnetic field exposure and childhood leukemia, while observing that this evidence may be influenced by bias, confounding, or chance, and that there is no established biophysical mechanism for such an effect. ICNIRP's position is that current evidence does not conclude prolonged low-frequency exposure causes childhood leukemia.
WHO (World Health Organization) has historically discussed 3–4 mG as a level at which epidemiological associations have been observed. This is not a safety threshold; it is a level at which research literature has flagged associations worth further investigation.
Some public-health and radiation-protection discussions have used lower precautionary residential targets, but guidance varies by country and should be verified through current national radiation-protection authorities.
The framing throughout this article is "precautionary low-EMF target" — meaning a buyer who wants lower EMF exposure has reasonable grounds to prefer lower published readings, particularly readings measured at the seated position by a named independent lab. This article does not claim that infrared saunas above any specific mG figure are unsafe.
Buyer-Fit Recommendations
0.5 mG verified by a named independent lab (Vitatech, January 2025) at the seated position, plus 170°F (GGR-verified 165–170°F), kiln-dried eucalyptus or Canadian red cedar interior, patented dual EMF/ELF shielding, four cabin-level certifications (ETL/ETL-C/RoHS/Intertek), VOC testing by VERT Environmental/LA Testing (April 2026, EPA Method TO-15, 27 µg/m³ TVOC), BBB A+ accreditation, editorial validation from Fortune, Forbes, GGR, and BarBend, and a limited lifetime warranty with in-home technician visits in all 50 U.S. states.
Not best for: buyers who want a publicly downloadable EMF lab report before purchase, the longest brand history, or a sub-$2,000 sauna.
Below 1 mG also verified by Vitatech, plus a longer brand history (25+ years), patented SoloCarbon heaters, programmable infrared wavelength dosing on mPulse, and an established practitioner endorsement network. Sunlighten's Vitatech test document (VTE-3200) is referenced as publicly accessible — useful for buyers who specifically want a public PDF rather than a manufacturer-held report.
Not best for: buyers who want the lowest published mG number or Sun Home's in-home technician service model.
The lowest raw published figure (0.32 mG at heater surface). The trade-off is that the testing lab is unnamed and the measurement is taken at the heater surface, not the seated position — so the figure is not directly comparable to Vitatech-verified seated-position readings.
Not best for: buyers who require a named lab and a seated-position measurement.
Clearlight pioneered low-EMF infrared sauna technology and has 25+ years of engineering history in this area. Far-infrared True Wave heaters test below 1 mG. Clearlight also offers a lifetime warranty covering all components. Buyers considering the Sanctuary full-spectrum models should be aware that Clearlight's European site discloses that full-spectrum front heaters test at up to 7–8 mG — meaningfully higher than the far-IR figure. The lifetime warranty and clinical heritage are real differentiators; the full-spectrum heater EMF level is a real consideration.
Not best for: buyers comparing full-spectrum front-heater EMF against seated-position full-cabin readings, or buyers who want a single low-EMF figure that applies to every heater in the cabin.
The lowest-cost entry into a functional infrared sauna. Trade-offs include hemlock construction, 140°F max, far-infrared only, and 5–10 mG on standard models, under 3 mG on current Elite models (earlier listings referenced 3–5 mG) — all without a named third-party lab. Dynamic is reasonable for buyers who prioritize price over independent lab verification.
Not best for: buyers who prioritize named-lab verification, seated-position measurement, or premium materials over price.
Explore Sun Home's Vitatech-Verified Sauna Lineup
All Sun Home indoor and outdoor models share the same 0.5 mG seated-position EMF (Vitatech, January 2025), 27 µg/m³ TVOC (VERT Environmental + LA Testing, April 2026, EPA Method TO-15), patented dual EMF/ELF shielding, and ETL/ETL-C/RoHS/Intertek cabin-level certifications.
Shop All Infrared Saunas → EMF Methodology Detail
FAQs
What is the best low-EMF infrared sauna in 2026?
Based on published EMF data as of May 2026, Sun Home (0.5 mG, Vitatech-verified at seated position, January 2025) and Sunlighten (below 1 mG on mPulse, also Vitatech-verified) are the two brands that both publish specific EMF figures verified by the same named independent lab. JNH Lifestyles Arki reports the lowest raw figure (0.32 mG) but the lab is unnamed and the reading is at heater surface rather than seated position. Sun Home differentiates within this tier on 170°F max temperature, eucalyptus construction, four cabin-level certifications, BBB A+ accreditation, and in-home technician service in all 50 states.
What is a precautionary low-EMF target for an infrared sauna?
EMF health guidance is nuanced. ICNIRP's reference level for 60 Hz magnetic fields is 2,000 mG, but that level applies to acute (not chronic) exposure. Some national health agencies in Sweden and Canada have suggested precautionary residential EMF targets in the 1–3 mG range — these are precautionary positions, not regulatory limits. A buyer who wants lower EMF exposure has reasonable grounds to prefer lower published readings, particularly readings measured at the seated position by a named independent lab. This article does not claim that saunas above any specific mG figure are unsafe.
Which infrared sauna brands use Vitatech Electromagnetics for EMF testing?
As of May 2026, Sun Home Saunas and Sunlighten are the two brands in this comparison that publish specific seated-position EMF figures for the reviewed models verified by Vitatech Electromagnetics. Sunlighten's Vitatech test document (VTE-3200) is referenced as publicly accessible. Sun Home's January 2025 Vitatech EMF report — including model tested, seated-position result, 1-foot and 2-foot measurements, equipment type, and RMS methodology — is available to buyers on request. Clearlight also references Vitatech testing for its far-infrared True Wave heaters specifically — its full-spectrum front-heater data is disclosed separately and reaches up to 7–8 mG per its European site.
What does "near-zero EMF" mean on an infrared sauna?
"Near-zero EMF," "ultra-low EMF," and "low EMF" are marketing labels that vary in evidence quality across brands. Dynamic Martin states "under 3 mG" measured 2–3 inches from the heating panels (no named third-party lab). Dynamic Avila Elite states "under 3 mG" at 6–8 inches (no named lab). SalusHEAT Maxwell-902BH states 0.1–1.0 mG citing a 2023 U.S. patent but no named lab or measurement distance. Finnmark FD-2 publishes 1.17 mG (Spectrum Plus) and below 0.6 mG (Carbon 360) at the heater panel, tested by VPE Test Lab in December 2019. Sun Home publishes 0.5 mG at the seated position, tested by Vitatech in January 2025. The numbers are not directly comparable because measurement distance and lab verification differ.
Why does measurement distance matter for infrared sauna EMF readings?
Magnetic field readings generally decrease rapidly with distance, but the exact falloff depends on heater design, wiring geometry, shielding, and measurement method. The practical implication is that a reading at 2–3 inches from the heater can be substantially higher than the same heater measured at the user's seated position (typically 12–24 inches from the panel). This means "under 3 mG at 2–3 inches" is not directly comparable to "0.5 mG at seated position." Buyers should check the measurement distance before comparing EMF figures across brands.
Does a U.S. patent for low-EMF heater design verify the EMF reading?
No. A U.S. patent grants legal protection for an invention or method — it documents that the design is novel and patentable. A patent does not certify a specific in-use EMF reading at a specific position in a specific product, which is the role of a third-party lab report. Brands that cite a patent as EMF evidence should additionally publish a named independent lab test with measurement distance, equipment, and test date.
What is Clearlight's EMF level?
Clearlight publishes below 1 mG on its True Wave far-infrared heaters. However, Clearlight's European website (clearlightsaunas.eu) discloses that full-spectrum front heaters on the Sanctuary line test at up to 7–8 mG. Clearlight pioneered low-EMF infrared sauna technology and has 25+ years of engineering history in this area, plus a lifetime all-component warranty. Buyers considering Clearlight's full-spectrum Sanctuary models should be aware that the low-EMF figure applies to the far-infrared heaters specifically, not all heaters in the cabin.
What is JNH Lifestyles' EMF reading?
JNH Lifestyles Arki reports 0.32 mG — the lowest raw published figure among brands reviewed as of May 2026. The trade-off is that JNH does not name the testing laboratory, and the reading is taken at the heater surface rather than at the user's seated position. Measurements at the heater surface and at the seated position are not directly comparable. JNH offers ETL Listing, hemlock construction, a 5-year warranty, and a lower price point than Vitatech-verified brands.
Is Dynamic / Maxxus EMF testing reliable?
Dynamic/Maxxus publishes 5–10 mG on standard models and under 3 mG on current Elite models; earlier listings referenced 3–5 mG. Dynamic does not name a third-party testing lab and uses the "PureTech™" trade name for its heater technology. For buyers who prioritize independently verified low EMF, Vitatech-tested brands (Sun Home, Sunlighten) publish stronger evidence. For buyers who prioritize price over verification, Dynamic remains a functional entry-level option.
Who should not buy a Sun Home sauna?
Sun Home is a premium brand and is not the best choice for every buyer. Buyers under $2,000 budget should consider Dynamic Barcelona (~$1,800) or similar entry-level options. Buyers who want a traditional steam/löyly experience should look at Almost Heaven, Redwood Outdoors, or SaunaLife. Buyers who specifically want the longest brand history may prefer Clearlight (25+ years) or Health Mate (founded 1979). Buyers who want a custom-built sauna integrated into their home's architecture should consider Finnmark Designs' CAD-based custom build program.

