I built a luxury garden sauna for £4,097. The pre-built equivalent? £42,000. Here's exactly what I spent, where you can save, and the hidden costs nobody tells you about.
A DIY garden sauna costs between £3,500 and £6,000 for materials in the UK, depending on size and finishes. Add another £200-400 in tools if you don't already own them. Labour would add £8,000-15,000 if you hired tradespeople.
| Item | Quantity | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Treated timber frame (4x2" studs) | ~50 lengths | £340 |
| OSB/Plywood sheathing (18mm) | 8 sheets | £192 |
| Roofing joists & supports | Various | £185 |
| Concrete/foundation materials | - | £265 |
| Subtotal | £982 | |
| Item | Details | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Mineral wool insulation (100mm) | Walls & roof | £245 |
| Foil vapour barrier | Full coverage + tape | £87 |
| Floor insulation (rigid foam) | 50mm PIR boards | £55 |
| Subtotal | £387 | |
| Material | Details | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Thermowood cladding (21x95mm) | ~45m², charcoal pre-treated | £1,089 |
| Battens & fixings | Stainless steel nails | £98 |
| Corner trims & finishing | Aluminium | £60 |
| Subtotal | £1,247 | |
| Item | Details | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Cedar tongue & groove (12mm) | Walls & ceiling, ~28m² | £485 |
| Cedar bench timber (45x70mm) | Two-tier benching | £178 |
| Interior fixings (stainless) | Screws, brackets | £80 |
| Subtotal | £743 | |
| Item | Specification | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Sauna door (glass) | 700x1900mm, tempered glass | £312 |
| Window (double-glazed) | 600x800mm | £144 |
| Subtotal | £456 | |
| Item | Details | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| EPDM rubber roofing | Single ply membrane | £165 |
| Fascia & soffit | Treated timber | £87 |
| Guttering | PVC system | £60 |
| Subtotal | £312 | |
| Item | Details | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Electric sauna heater (6kW) | Harvia or similar, with stones | £425 |
| Electrical wiring & consumer unit | Armoured cable, MCB | £187 |
| Interior lighting | LED sauna lights | £75 |
| Subtotal | £687 | |
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Air vents (intake & exhaust) | £45 |
| Thermometer/hygrometer | £32 |
| Bucket, ladle, accessories | £58 |
| Door handle (heat-resistant) | £48 |
| Subtotal: £183 | |
This was for a 2.4m x 2.1m sauna with premium finishes. You could reduce this to £3,200-3,500 by using standard cladding instead of thermowood, or increase it to £5,500-6,000 for a larger build.
If you already have basic DIY tools, you're fine. If not:
I already owned most tools, so my additional tool cost was £0. Budget £200-400 if starting from scratch.
Timber merchants charge for delivery. I paid:
Total delivery: £160
You will make cuts wrong, order slightly too little, or change your mind. I went through:
Total waste: £165
Most garden saunas under 15m² don't need building regs approval if following permitted development. I didn't need this, but if you do: £350-500.
I have electrical experience and did this myself. If you hire a qualified electrician for the final connection and certification: £300-500.
My true total including hidden costs: £4,422
| Option | Size | Quality | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY (My Build) | 2.4m x 2.1m | Premium | £4,097 |
| Pre-built Kit (Basic) | 2.0m x 2.0m | Standard | £8,500-12,000 |
| Pre-built Kit (Premium) | 2.5m x 2.5m | Good | £18,000-25,000 |
| Bespoke Professional Build | 2.4m x 2.1m | Premium | £35,000-45,000 |
Savings vs pre-built equivalent: £37,903 (90% less)
Instead of thermowood (£24/m²), use:
Learn more in our complete guide to choosing wood for UK saunas.
A 1.8m x 1.8m sauna uses ~35% less materials:
Total material cost for small sauna: £3,100
Some cuts will cost you later:
Cheap out here and your heater will run constantly. I used 100mm mineral wool everywhere. Don't use less than 75mm.
A £50 barrier protects £2,000 of interior timber from moisture damage. Don't skip this.
A wonky base = wonky everything else. I spent £265 on proper concrete and drainage. Money well spent.
If you're not qualified, hire an electrician. £400 now vs £10,000+ house fire later.
If you hired tradespeople instead of DIY:
| Trade | Days | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Carpenter (frame & structure) | 4-5 days | £1,200-1,800 |
| Electrician | 1 day | £350-500 |
| General builder (groundwork, cladding) | 3-4 days | £900-1,400 |
| Sauna specialist (interior finish) | 2-3 days | £700-1,200 |
| Total Labour | £3,150-4,900 | |
Full build (materials + labour): £7,247-9,000
Still £30,000+ cheaper than a bespoke pre-built.
These are the exact suppliers I used, with prices I actually paid:
| Supplier | What I Bought | Price Paid |
|---|---|---|
| SaunaShop.co.uk | Thermo Aspen interior panelling (2400mm) | ~£18-21/m² |
| Sauna-Timber.co.uk | Alternative supplier - similar prices, good range | ~£17-22/m² |
Both are UK-based specialists with proper sauna-grade timber. Avoid generic DIY store panelling - it won't survive sauna temperatures.
| Item | Where From | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Harvia Cilindro 9kW heater | SaunaShop.co.uk | ~£650-750 |
| Harvia Xenio WiFi controller | SaunaShop.co.uk | ~£280-350 |
| Heat-resistant cable (6mm²) | Screwfix | ~£85 |
Tip: The 9kW is right for 8-14m³ saunas. Mine is ~10m³ and heats to 80°C in 35 minutes.
Budget £25-35/m² for quality thermowood. Cheaper options exist but check the grade carefully.
I did this over weekends and evenings. Here's the realistic time breakdown:
| Stage | Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Foundation & base | 2-3 days | Includes curing time for concrete. Don't rush this. |
| Floor frame & insulation | 1 day | Straightforward if foundation is level |
| Wall framing | 1-2 days | Take time to get it square |
| Roof structure | 1 day | Easier with a helper |
| Insulation + vapour barrier | 1 day | Fiddly but important. Don't rush. |
| Exterior cladding | 2-3 days | Corners take the longest |
| Interior panelling | 2 days | Satisfying - you can see the finish |
| Benches | 1 day | Design first, then cut |
| Door & finishing | 1 day | Includes vents, thermometer, etc. |
| Electrics | Half day | With qualified electrician for final connection |
| Total | 12-15 days | |
Spread over weekends, this took me about 8 weeks from first dig to first sauna session.
Every build has problems. Here's what went wrong with mine:
I bought standard 500mu polythene instead of proper sauna-grade foil barrier. It tore on the first install when I was stapling it. Had to order Kingspan Sauna Satu (the proper stuff) and start again.
Cost me: £40 extra + half a day wasted
Lesson: Use proper aluminium-faced sauna vapour barrier. It's more expensive but much easier to work with and reflects heat better.
Ordered a handle based on photos without checking the spindle size. Didn't fit my door. Had to reorder.
Cost me: £48 + one week delay
Lesson: Measure the door spindle hole before ordering hardware.
I did 1:100 fall on the concrete base. Should have done 1:80. Noticed water pooling after first rain. Had to add extra drainage channel before it caused problems.
Cost me: £35 in drainage materials + 3 hours
Lesson: Slope away from the sauna more aggressively. Water finds every weakness.
Measured walls and ceiling, added 10% for waste. Should have added 20%. The tongue-and-groove overlap and corner cuts eat more than you expect.
Cost me: £82 for emergency extra boards + delivery
Lesson: Add 20% to all interior panelling calculations.
The Harvia Xenio WiFi controller needs 6 wires between controller and heater, not 3. Manual wasn't clear. Spent two evenings confused before calling Harvia support.
Cost me: Time and frustration
Lesson: Read the full wiring diagram before buying cable. Or just hire an electrician who's done saunas before.
Budget for this. Everyone makes mistakes on their first build. I've documented all of mine in the plans so you can avoid them.
I had: drill, circular saw, jigsaw, basic hand tools. I bought: impact driver (£65), long spirit level (£35), heavy-duty staple gun (£28).
My additional tool cost: £128
Building my own sauna for £4,097 vs paying £42,000 for a pre-built was one of the best decisions I've made. Yes, it took weekends over 6 weeks. Yes, I made mistakes. But the money saved, the skills learned, and the pride of using something I built myself? Absolutely worth it.
The real question isn't "can I afford to build it?" — it's "can I afford NOT to build it when the alternative costs 10x more?"
Get complete CAD plans, materials lists, and step-by-step instructions at saunaplans.co
Complete CAD drawings, detailed materials lists, and step-by-step instructions to build your own £4,000 sauna
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