Poland has a growing sauna culture, especially in the Mazury and Silesia regions. A prefab indoor sauna costs PLN 8,000–20,000, while a custom-built sauna runs PLN 15,000–50,000+. Outdoor barrel saunas (popular for lake houses) cost PLN 12,000–30,000. Klafs, Harvia, and Polish manufacturer Sawo are common brands. Electric saunas need a dedicated 400V three-phase connection (typical in Polish homes), costing PLN 800–2,000 to install. Building a sauna in a new home is straightforward — adding one to an existing home requires vapor-barrier installation and potentially structural reinforcement of floors for the heater's weight (electric heaters weigh 30–80 kg; stone loads add more).
Average sauna costs by type
| Rodzaj prac | Typowy koszt (PLN) |
|---|---|
| Gotowa sauna wewnętrzna (z montażem) | 8 000–20 000 zł |
| Sauna wewnętrzna na wymiar | 15 000–50 000 zł |
| Sauna beczka zewnętrzna | 12 000–30 000 zł |
| Dedykowane przyłącze 400V (3-fazowe) | 800–2 000 zł |
| Piec elektryczny Harvia / Klafs / Sawo | 2 500–8 000 zł |
| Wzmocnienie podłogi pod piec | 1 000–3 000 zł |
Sauna installation costs in Poland
Poland has a growing sauna culture, especially in the Mazury and Silesia regions. A prefab indoor sauna costs PLN 8,000–20,000, while a custom-built sauna runs PLN 15,000–50,000+. Outdoor barrel saunas (popular for lake houses) cost PLN 12,000–30,000. Klafs, Harvia, and Polish manufacturer Sawo are common brands. Electric saunas need a dedicated 400V three-phase connection (typical in Polish homes), costing PLN 800–2,000 to install.
Building a sauna in a new home is straightforward — adding one to an existing home requires vapor-barrier installation and potentially structural reinforcement of floors for the heater's weight (electric heaters weigh 30–80 kg; stone loads add more).
What affects the cost?
- Type — infrared panels are cheapest; custom wood-fired saunas with stone heaters are most expensive
- Size — a 2-person sauna needs ~35 sq ft; a 4–6 person needs 60–80 sq ft
- Indoor vs. outdoor — outdoor requires a foundation, weatherproofing, and possibly electrical trenching
- Wood species — Western red cedar and thermally modified wood are premium; hemlock and spruce are budget-friendly
How to save on sauna installation
- Choose a prefab kit — kits cost 40–60% less than custom-built saunas
- Start with infrared — lower upfront cost, plug into standard outlets (up to 15A models), no ventilation needed
- Use an existing space — converting a closet, bathroom corner, or basement room is cheaper than building new
- Build outdoor with barrel design — barrel saunas heat faster and use less wood than cabin-style