After researching extensively and building my own garden sauna, here's what I learned about choosing wood for UK conditions. I'll cover what works for exteriors and interiors, what I actually used, and what I'd recommend based on a year of real-world use.
Quick Answer: For UK climate, use treated softwood or Thermowood for exterior cladding (with proper paint/stain protection), and Thermo-aspen, Thermo-alder, or Western Red Cedar for interior (£17-28/m²). The interior wood is where quality really matters - don't cheap out on it.
Before diving into options, here's what I used on my build and how it's held up after a year:
| Location | Material | Supplier | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exterior cladding | 6x1 softwood planks, painted + stained | Local timber merchant | Wanted natural look, not dark thermowood |
| Interior walls & ceiling | Thermo-aspen (Thermory brand) | SaunaShop.co.uk | Dark, beautiful, easy to fix |
| Benches | Thermo-alder (Thermory brand) | SaunaShop.co.uk | Couldn't get aspen in right profile |
| Floor | Porcelain tiles | - | Matched external patio |
One year on: Everything looks great. No issues with the exterior despite British weather. Interior has darkened slightly (normal for thermo-treated wood) and still smells wonderful.
Faces British weather: rain 150+ days/year, temperature swings, UV. Needs durability and rot resistance - or proper protection.
Faces heat (80-100°C), humidity swings, skin contact. Needs low heat conductivity, won't splinter, pleasant smell. This is where you really feel the quality.
These require DIFFERENT woods with different properties. Let's break down each.
What is it? Standard softwood planks (pine, spruce) with proper paint and stain protection.
| Property | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Durability (UK climate) | ★★★★☆ | 15-20+ years with maintenance |
| Rot resistance | ★★★☆☆ | Depends entirely on finish quality |
| Appearance | ★★★★★ | You choose the colour/finish |
| Cost | ★★★★★ | £8-12/m² + paint/stain |
✓ Pros:
✗ Cons:
Paint (2 coats, sprayed): Cuprinol Ducksback - protects sheds and fences for up to 5 years. Works brilliantly, easy to apply with a sprayer.
Clear stain (exterior faces): V33 750ml Clear Satin Solvent-Based Exterior Wood Stain (Screwfix, ~£15). Excellent product. Light sanding before application.
Tip: Coat ALL faces of the wood before installation - including the back that faces the wall. This prevents moisture getting in from behind.
One year on: Looks fantastic. Exactly the natural look I wanted, matching existing garden structures.
What is it? Softwood (usually pine or spruce) heat-treated at 180-230°C. Changes wood structure to resist rot and moisture.
| Property | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Durability (UK climate) | ★★★★★ | 25-30 year lifespan |
| Rot resistance | ★★★★★ | Excellent - Class 1 |
| Moisture stability | ★★★★★ | 50% less movement than untreated |
| Appearance | ★★★★☆ | Rich brown, darkens with age |
| Cost | ★★★☆☆ | £24/m² (21x95mm profile) |
✓ Pros:
✗ Cons:
Why I didn't use it: I wanted my sauna to match existing garden structures which have a natural wood finish. Thermowood's dark brown colour didn't fit my aesthetic. But if you want low-maintenance and don't mind the colour, it's probably the best exterior option.
UK Suppliers:
What is it? Naturally rot-resistant softwood from North America. The "traditional" sauna wood.
| Property | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Durability (UK climate) | ★★★★☆ | 20-25 years with maintenance |
| Rot resistance | ★★★★☆ | Good - natural oils protect |
| Moisture stability | ★★★☆☆ | Better than pine, still moves |
| Appearance | ★★★★★ | Beautiful red-brown, weathers to silver |
| Cost | ★★★☆☆ | £18-22/m² |
✓ Pros:
✗ Cons:
Best for: People who love traditional sauna aesthetic, willing to oil annually, drier regions of UK.
UK Suppliers:
What is it? Dense European softwood with high natural resin content.
| Property | Rating |
|---|---|
| Durability | ★★★★☆ (15-20 years) |
| Cost | ★★★★☆ (£14/m²) |
| UK Climate | ★★★☆☆ (okay, not great) |
✓ Pros: Cheaper than cedar, harder/denser than pine, naturally rot-resistant
✗ Cons: Still needs treatment in UK climate, prone to splitting, can twist
Best for: Budget builds in drier UK regions. Needs annual oil/stain.
Don't use for saunas. The chemicals can off-gas when heated. Only use for frame/base that won't be heated.
Interior wood needs completely different properties: low thermal mass (won't burn you), won't splinter, handles moisture swings, pleasant when heated.
The gold standard for sauna interiors.
| Property | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Heat conductivity | ★★★★★ | Low - won't burn skin |
| Moisture resistance | ★★★★★ | Handles humidity perfectly |
| Aroma | ★★★★★ | Pleasant cedar smell |
| Splinter resistance | ★★★★☆ | Generally smooth |
| Cost | ★★☆☆☆ | £28/m² tongue & groove |
Grades:
✓ Pros: Perfect thermal properties, smells amazing, looks beautiful, lasts forever, traditional
✗ Cons: Expensive, can darken over time, some people find smell too strong
My top recommendation. Thermory brand thermo-aspen is what I used for walls and ceiling.
| Property | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Heat conductivity | ★★★★★ | Excellent - stays cool to touch |
| Appearance | ★★★★★ | Beautiful dark brown, very uniform |
| Durability | ★★★★★ | Heat treatment = rot-proof |
| Ease of installation | ★★★★★ | Tongue & groove, very easy |
| Cost | ★★★☆☆ | £22-28/m² |
I wanted a dark, modern interior rather than the traditional light Scandinavian look. Thermory's thermo-aspen is genuinely excellent quality - the boards arrived perfectly straight, uniform colour, and fitted together beautifully.
Supplier: SaunaShop.co.uk - same product from Thermory, well-packaged, no damage. There are other UK suppliers but they all stock the same Thermory product.
Waste: I ordered 10% extra to allow for cuts and mistakes - this was plenty.
✓ Pros:
✗ Cons:
Excellent for bench construction - what I used for my benches.
I couldn't source thermo-aspen in the right profile for bench slats, so I used thermo-alder instead. Honestly, it looks almost identical - slightly different grain pattern but same dark colour. Both are Thermory products, both excellent quality.
Tip: Check what profiles are available in each wood before committing. SaunaShop.co.uk have a good range, but some sizes are only available in certain species.
The budget alternative to cedar.
| Property | Rating |
|---|---|
| Heat conductivity | ★★★★☆ |
| Moisture resistance | ★★★★☆ |
| Cost | ★★★★☆ (£20/m²) |
✓ Pros: Cheaper than cedar, light colour, minimal odour, good thermal properties
✗ Cons: Less character than cedar, can discolour near heater
Key tip: Paint/stain ALL faces before installation, including the back face. This prevents moisture getting in from behind.
Total wood cost: ~£1,280
Would I change anything? Honestly, no. The combination works perfectly - natural look outside, dark modern interior. The thermo-treated interior wood is genuinely excellent quality.
Let interior wood acclimatise in a dry shed for about a week before fitting. Don't leave it outside or in a damp garage.
Thermory recommend hidden fixings for their interior panels, but I used a nail gun with fine nails - much, much faster and less fiddly. You really can't see the nail heads once the wood swells slightly. Don't stress about hidden fixings unless you're obsessive about it.
Snap a chalk line along each board to mark where the framing is behind. Then nail along this line - you get perfectly aligned nail heads and guaranteed fixing into the studs. Looks much neater than eyeballing it.
I ordered 10% extra for cuts and mistakes - this was plenty. The Thermory product arrived with no damaged boards, so I actually had some left over. Better to have spares than run short mid-project.
| Wood Type | Use | Cost/m² | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Painted softwood | Exterior | £12-18 (inc. paint) | 15-20+ years with maintenance |
| Thermowood | Exterior | £24 | 25-30 years |
| Thermo-Aspen/Alder | Interior | £22-28 | Lifetime |
| Western Red Cedar | Both | £18-28 | 20-25 years |
| Siberian Larch | Exterior | £14 | 15-20 years |
| Hemlock | Interior | £20 | 20+ years |
Our weather is uniquely challenging:
No. They're pressure-treated softwood that will off-gas chemicals when heated. Also too thin and won't last.
Yes! Many people use thermowood exterior + cedar interior (like I did). Just don't mix within same surface.
Exterior cedar benefits from annual oil. Thermowood and interior cedar need no treatment.
Risky. You don't know if it's been treated with chemicals. Only use if 100% certain it's untreated cedar/similar.
Measure your sauna's surface area and add 10%. For a 2.4m x 2.1m sauna:
For UK climate, don't compromise on exterior durability. Thermowood or Western Red Cedar are your best options - anything else will need constant maintenance or won't last.
For interior, cedar is worth the premium for the smell and feel, but hemlock or aspen work fine if budget is tight.
The extra £400-600 for quality wood vs cheap alternatives will save you thousands in repairs and replacement within 5-10 years.
← Back to Home