What Is the Best Infrared Sauna for Small Spaces?
The best infrared sauna for small spaces is the Peak Saunas Aspen (36"W × 38"D — under 10 sq ft footprint, $5,150) or the Peak Saunas Shasta (42"W × 40"D, $6,450 with full-spectrum heat and red light therapy). Both are 1-person indoor models that fit in a bedroom corner, home office, or apartment spare room. The Aspen is the most compact infrared sauna with a traditional Canadian Cedar interior; the Shasta adds full-spectrum near/mid/far infrared and a medical-grade red light therapy panel. Both plug into a standard 120V household outlet — no electrician or special wiring needed.
Space is the #1 reason people hesitate on buying an infrared sauna. The good news: modern home saunas are significantly more compact than you probably think — and the smallest models can fit in spaces you'd never expect.
This guide covers everything: minimum space requirements, which Peak Saunas models work best in tight spaces, how to plan your installation, and the one question everyone forgets to ask before they buy.
How Much Space Does an Infrared Sauna Actually Need?
Here's the honest breakdown:
Minimum Footprint for a 1-Person Sauna
- Smallest available: 36"W × 38"D (Peak Saunas Aspen) — that's 3 feet wide by just over 3 feet deep
- With door clearance: Add 30–36" in front for the door to open fully
- Recommended room size: A 6ft × 8ft corner of a room works perfectly for most 1-person models
The Door Clearance Question People Forget
This trips people up every time: sauna doors swing outward. So if you're placing a sauna against a wall, you need to account for the door arc. For most 1-person Peak models, that's roughly 30 inches of clearance in front of the door. Plan your room layout with this in mind first.
Getting It Through Your Door
Here's the part that surprises most buyers: all Peak Saunas ship as flat panels — 4 wall panels, 1 floor panel, 1 ceiling panel. None of them arrive pre-assembled. Every panel fits through a standard household doorway with ease. Assembly happens inside the room. This means apartment buildings, upstairs bedrooms, and basement rooms are all fair game — no cranes, no doorway removal required.
Peak Saunas Models for Small Spaces (Ranked by Footprint)
1. Peak Saunas Aspen — Most Compact (36"W × 38"D)
Price: $5,150 | Footprint: 36" × 38" (just under 9.5 sq ft) | Wood: Canadian Red Cedar
The Aspen is the smallest infrared sauna in the Peak lineup. At 36 inches wide and 38 inches deep, it fits in a closet-sized corner with room to spare. FAR infrared only (no red light therapy), plugs into any standard 120V/15A outlet. Perfect for minimalists or buyers where space is the absolute constraint.
2. Peak Saunas Olympus — Compact Hemlock Option (40"W × 38"D)
Price: $4,950 | Footprint: 40" × 38" | Wood: Canadian Hemlock
The most affordable model in the Peak lineup, and the second-smallest by footprint. Hemlock construction (hypoallergenic, modern look). FAR infrared only. Also runs on a standard 120V/15A outlet. Great for first-time sauna buyers watching budget and space simultaneously.
3. Peak Saunas Shasta — Best Value for Small Spaces with Full Features (42"W × 40"D)
Price: $6,450 | Footprint: 42" × 40" (roughly 3.5ft × 3.3ft) | Wood: Canadian Hemlock
The Shasta adds only 6 inches of width and 2 inches of depth over the Olympus — but the upgrade is significant: full-spectrum infrared (near + mid + far), a front-facing medical-grade red light therapy panel with 216 dual-chip LEDs across 8 wavelengths, and WiFi app control. Still plugs into a standard 120V/15A outlet. This is Peak's bestselling 1-person model for good reason — it's the sweet spot of compact footprint and full feature set.
4. Peak Saunas Rainier — Same as Shasta in Cedar (42"W × 40"D)
Price: $6,950 | Footprint: 42" × 40" | Wood: Canadian Red Cedar
Identical to the Shasta in every spec — same dimensions, same full-spectrum infrared, same RLT panel. The only difference is wood: Rainier uses Canadian Red Cedar for those who prefer the classic sauna aroma and richer appearance.
Indoor vs. Outdoor: Which Is Better for Small Spaces?
Indoor Saunas
For most buyers with space constraints, indoor is the answer. Indoor models from Peak:
- Plug into standard household outlets (1-person models)
- Can sit on any floor surface — carpet, hardwood, tile, concrete — no drainage needed
- Operate year-round regardless of weather
- Fit in a spare bedroom, home office, gym corner, or even a large closet
Outdoor Saunas
If you have outdoor space but no indoor square footage to spare, Peak's outdoor lineup (Patagonia, El Capitan, Kilimanjaro) moves the footprint outside entirely. Outdoor models require a 240V dedicated circuit and a level outdoor surface, but free up your indoor living space completely.
For 2-person outdoor use in a small yard, the Patagonia (52"W × 42"D) is the most compact option at $10,250.
Space Planning Checklist Before You Buy
- Measure your floor space. Note the exact width, depth, and ceiling height of the intended spot. Ceiling must be at least 80" (6'8") — all Peak models are 75–79" tall.
- Check door clearance. Account for 30+ inches in front of the sauna door for it to swing open freely.
- Verify electrical. 1-person Peak models run on standard 120V/15A — the same outlet as a lamp. No electrician needed for Aspen, Olympus, Shasta, or Rainier.
- Confirm delivery path. Because Peak ships as flat panels, any standard doorway works. Verify there's a clear path from your front door to the installation room.
- Ventilation. Infrared saunas don't require dedicated ventilation systems (unlike steam saunas), but a room with normal air circulation is ideal.
FAQ: Infrared Saunas for Small Spaces
What is the smallest infrared sauna available?
The Peak Saunas Aspen is one of the most compact infrared saunas available, measuring just 36 inches wide by 38 inches deep — under 10 square feet of floor space. It ships as flat panels that fit through any standard doorway and assembles without tools.
Can an infrared sauna fit in an apartment?
Yes. 1-person infrared saunas like the Peak Saunas Aspen or Shasta ship as flat panels that fit through standard doorways. They require no special ventilation, no drainage, and plug into a standard 120V household outlet. Many apartment dwellers place them in a spare bedroom or home office corner.
How much clearance does an infrared sauna need?
You need the sauna's listed dimensions plus approximately 30–36 inches in front for door swing clearance, and at least 2–3 inches on sides and back for air circulation. A 6×8 foot corner is typically sufficient for most 1-person models.
Do small infrared saunas need special electrical wiring?
Not for 1-person Peak Saunas models. The Aspen, Olympus, Shasta, and Rainier all run on a standard 120V/15A household outlet — the same as a lamp or small appliance. No electrician or dedicated circuit needed. Larger 2-person and 3-person models require a dedicated 20A outlet.
The Bottom Line
Small space doesn't mean no sauna. The Peak Saunas Aspen and Shasta prove that full-featured infrared wellness can fit in a corner of your bedroom or home office — no renovation, no electrician, no problem. The Shasta is our top recommendation for buyers who want the most features in the smallest practical footprint: full-spectrum heat, medical-grade red light therapy, low EMF, and standard outlet compatibility for $6,450.