Woman leaving outdoor timber sauna with steam on backyard deck

How Long Should You Stay in a Sauna? The Complete Guide to the Perfect Session

Posted by Luxo Living on

There is a moment — usually around minute twelve — when the sauna stops feeling like something you're enduring and starts feeling like something you're inhabiting. The heat stops being loud. Your shoulders drop. Your mind, finally, goes quiet. That moment is what sauna culture has always been about. And it only arrives when you get the timing right. 

So, how long should you stay in a sauna? The short answer: 15 to 20 minutes per round for most people, with cooling breaks in between. But the full answer — the one that will genuinely transform your sauna experience — is a little more layered than that. 

Whether you've just brought home a new home sauna, you're a curious first-timer, or you're a seasoned bather looking to deepen your practice, this guide walks you through everything you need to know about sauna session length: by experience level, by sauna type, by health goal, and by the science that backs it all up. 

Sauna timer with towel and water bottle on timber bench

Why Sauna Duration Actually Matters 

It might be tempting to assume that more time in the heat equals more benefit. In reality, sauna therapy follows a Goldilocks principle — too little, and you miss the deeper physiological rewards; too much, and you risk overheating, dehydration, or simply an unpleasant experience that puts you off going back. 

The right duration allows your core body temperature to rise by approximately 1–2°C — the threshold at which the body's most impressive heat-adaptive mechanisms kick in. Below that, you're getting relaxation and light cardiovascular stimulation. At that sweet spot and beyond, you're activating heat shock proteins (the cellular repair crew), boosting growth hormone production, stimulating the immune system, and — according to landmark Finnish research — potentially adding years to your life. 

Getting the timing right isn't just about safety. It's about extracting the full, extraordinary value that a sauna has to offer. 

The Quick-Reference Guide: How Long to Stay in a Sauna 

Experience Level 

Recommended Duration 

Sessions Per Visit 

First-timer 

5–10 minutes 

1 round 

Beginner (1–5 sessions) 

8–12 minutes 

1–2 rounds 

Intermediate (regular weekly user) 

12–20 minutes 

2–3 rounds 

Experienced (daily or near-daily user) 

15–25 minutes 

2–3 rounds 

Maximum (any level) 

30 minutes absolute maximum 

Never exceed 3 rounds 

The golden rule: Listen to your body before you listen to the clock. If you feel dizzy, nauseous, or your heart is racing uncomfortably, leave immediately regardless of how long you've been inside. 

How Long to Stay in a Sauna: By Sauna Type 

The type of sauna you're using matters enormously, because each operates at very different temperatures and works with your body in different ways. 

Traditional Finnish Sauna 

The Finnish sauna — whether wood-fired, electric-heated, or gas — is the original. Operating at 70°C to 100°C (160°F to 212°F), it delivers an intense, enveloping dry heat. The Finns, who have been perfecting this ritual for over 2,000 years, traditionally use a method of multiple short rounds rather than one long session. 

Recommended session length: 10–20 minutes per round 

At these temperatures, your sweat glands are working hard from the moment you step in. The traditional Finnish protocol involves 2–3 rounds of 10–15 minutes, separated by cooling breaks — a cold shower, a plunge into a lake, or simply sitting outside in fresh air. This contrast therapy (alternating heat and cold) is widely considered the most effective way to use a sauna, amplifying the cardiovascular and circulatory benefits considerably. 

If you're new to traditional saunas, start low — literally. The lower benches are significantly cooler than the upper benches. Begin on the lower level for 5–8 minutes before working your way up as your body acclimatises. 

Infrared Sauna 

Infrared saunas have become enormously popular in recent years, and for good reason. Rather than heating the air around you (as a traditional sauna does), infrared panels emit radiant heat that penetrates 2–3 centimetres into muscle and tissue directly. This means your core heats up more efficiently at a lower ambient temperature. 

Operating at 45°C–65°C (110°F–150°F), an infrared sauna is significantly more accessible for beginners and those sensitive to the intensity of traditional heat. 

Recommended session length: 20–45 minutes 

The lower temperature means you can safely stay inside for longer while still achieving similar or greater therapeutic depth. Many wellness practitioners and longevity researchers — including Dr Rhonda Patrick, whose work on heat therapy has gained worldwide attention — prefer infrared saunas precisely for this reason. You can access the heat shock protein response and cardiovascular benefits without the extreme intensity of 90°C+ heat. 

For a home infrared sauna, a 30–40 minute session three to four times per week is considered an optimal rhythm for experienced users. 

Steam Room (Wet Sauna) 

Steam rooms operate at a lower temperature (38°C–46°C / 100°F–115°F) but at 100% humidity. The saturated air prevents your sweat from evaporating, which means your body cannot cool itself as effectively — making the experience feel considerably hotter than the thermometer suggests. 

Recommended session length: 10–20 minutes 

Steam rooms are exceptional for respiratory health, skin hydration, and sinus relief. However, because of the humidity effect, it is especially important not to overstay. The risk of overheating escalates more quickly in a steam environment than in a dry sauna at a similar temperature. 

Outdoor sauna benefits diagram showing relaxation, sweating and detox

Health Benefits of Sauna: What Different Session Lengths Unlock 

One of the most compelling reasons to fine-tune your sauna time is understanding what your body is actually doing at different points in the session. 

Minutes 1–5: Arrival 

Your skin surface temperature rises rapidly. Sweat glands activate. Your heart rate increases — mimicking the cardiovascular effect of moderate exercise. The nervous system begins to shift from sympathetic (fight-or-flight) to parasympathetic (rest-and-digest). This alone explains why even a five-minute sauna session feels noticeably different to a hot shower. 

Minutes 5–10: Relaxation 

Endorphins enter the bloodstream. Muscle tension releases as blood vessels dilate and circulation increases to peripheral tissue. Cortisol (your primary stress hormone) begins to decline. For many people, this is the window where the mind genuinely quietens. If you're a first-timer, stepping out now is completely valid — you've still received real physiological benefit. 

Minutes 10–15: The Therapeutic Window Opens 

Core body temperature has now risen by approximately 1–2°C. This is the threshold at which the most scientifically documented benefits begin: 

  • Growth hormone production increases significantly (research by Dr Patrick found a 140% increase after ~19 minutes at 73°C) 

  • Heat shock proteins begin to activate — these are molecular "chaperones" that repair damaged proteins, reduce cellular stress, and are associated with longevity markers 

  • Immune response is stimulated, with increased production of white blood cells 

  • Deep muscle recovery accelerates — particularly relevant for athletes and active people 

This is where regular sauna users live. 

Minutes 15–20: Optimum Zone for Most People 

Full cardiovascular stimulation. Maximum endorphin release. Sustained activation of heat shock proteins. Continued detoxification through deep sweating. For most healthy adults using a traditional sauna, this is the ideal duration for a single round — the point where reward is highest and risk remains low. 

Minutes 20–30: Experienced Users Only 

Finnish population studies, including the landmark Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease (KIHD) study, found that people who used a sauna 4–7 times per week had a 40% lower risk of cardiovascular disease mortality than those who used it once per week. These same individuals typically conducted sessions of 20 minutes or more. However, these were experienced sauna users with highly adapted bodies. If you're not yet in that category, this range offers diminishing returns relative to its risks. 

Sauna wellness routine with hydration, heat therapy and cooling down

The Optimal Sauna Protocol: Before, During, and After 

Getting the most from your sauna isn't just about the minutes inside. The ritual around the session matters just as much. 

Before Your Session 

Hydrate generously — drink at least 500ml of water in the hour before entering. Remove all jewellery and metal accessories (they heat quickly and can cause burns). Have a quick warm rinse or shower to open pores and prepare your skin. Never enter a sauna after drinking alcohol. 

During Your Session 

Bring water inside with you if your session extends beyond 15 minutes. Start low on the benches and move up gradually. Use a sauna towel to sit on — it's more comfortable and more hygienic. If you're using a traditional sauna, ladle small amounts of water onto the stones to create a gentle burst of steam (löyly in Finnish), which briefly intensifies the heat experience without raising the ambient temperature significantly. 

Keep your breathing slow and deliberate. Many experienced sauna users find that focusing on the breath transforms the session from endurance into meditation. 

Cooling Breaks (5–10 minutes between rounds) 

The cooling break is not the intermission — it is a core part of the therapy. Step outside into cool air, take a cold shower, or if you have access to one, submerge in a cold plunge pool. This contrast between extreme heat and cold creates what researchers call a "vascular workout," rapidly contracting and expanding blood vessels in a way that has remarkable benefits for circulation, immune function, and mood. 

Rest quietly. Drink water or an electrolyte drink. Allow your heart rate to normalise before re-entering. 

After Your Final Round 

Take a cool (not cold) shower to close the pores and rinse away sweat. Rehydrate with 500ml–1L of water or a natural electrolyte drink. Apply a nourishing moisturiser — your skin is beautifully receptive to skincare immediately after a sauna. Rest for 20–30 minutes before any physical activity. 

Many sauna users in Scandinavian traditions finish with a light snack, a warm herbal tea, and extended rest — treating the post-sauna period as its own distinct ritual of recovery and reflection. 

Signs You've Stayed Too Long 

Knowing when to leave is as important as knowing when to go in. Exit your sauna immediately if you experience any of the following: 

  • Dizziness or feeling lightheaded 

  • Nausea or stomach discomfort 

  • An unusually rapid or irregular heartbeat 

  • Difficulty breathing 

  • Chest tightness or pain 

  • A sudden cessation of sweating (this is a warning sign, not a good sign) 

  • Any sensation of impending fainting 

The absolute maximum for any single sauna session — regardless of experience level or sauna type — is 30 minutes. There are no additional benefits beyond this threshold that are not accessible through multiple shorter rounds. 

Outdoor timber sauna glowing at night in landscaped backyard

Special Considerations: Who Should Adjust Their Sauna Time 

Children and teenagers: Sessions should be shorter (5–10 minutes maximum) and always supervised. 

Older adults (65+): Begin conservatively at 10 minutes and increase only if sessions feel comfortable. Cool down gradually rather than with sudden cold immersion. 

Athletes using saunas for recovery: 15–20 minutes post-workout is ideal. Allow the body to cool from exercise first before entering. 

Individuals with cardiovascular conditions or high blood pressure: Always seek medical clearance before using a sauna. If approved, begin with 10-minute sessions at lower temperatures. 

Pregnant women: Avoid saunas, particularly in the first trimester. The risk of overheating poses a risk to foetal development. 

Frequently Asked Questions 

Is 30 minutes in a sauna too long? 

For most people, 30 minutes is at the very upper edge of what's recommended for a single round. It's not inherently dangerous for experienced users in good health, but it offers very little additional benefit over 20 minutes and carries greater risk of dehydration and heat exhaustion. Better to do two rounds of 15 minutes with a cooling break. 

Can you stay in a sauna too long? 

Yes. Spending more than 30 minutes in a single session without a break can lead to severe dehydration, heat exhaustion, and in extreme cases, heat stroke. The body's temperature regulation mechanisms can only cope for so long. Always cap single rounds at 20–30 minutes and take proper cooling breaks. 

Should I shower after a sauna? 

Yes, and the cold shower serves a purpose beyond cleanliness. A post-sauna cool shower closes the pores opened during heat exposure, helps remove sweat and toxins from the skin's surface, and — if you're brave enough to make it cold — triggers an invigorating vasoconstrictive response that complements the vasodilation of the sauna beautifully. 

What happens if you stay in a sauna for an hour? 

An hour without a break is genuinely dangerous, and we'd strongly advise against it. Even highly experienced users do not attempt this. Severe dehydration, overheating, and cardiovascular strain are real risks. The Finnish tradition of multiple shorter rounds exists precisely because it is safer and more effective than prolonged single sessions. 

Is it OK to go in the sauna every day? 

For most healthy adults, daily sauna use is not only safe but associated with the greatest long-term health benefits. The Finnish studies cited throughout this article found the strongest associations between sauna use and reduced cardiovascular risk among those who used a sauna 4–7 times per week. However, if you're new to saunas, build up gradually — starting with two to three sessions per week and increasing over time. 

How long in a sauna to detox? 

The body begins excreting toxins through sweat within the first few minutes of a sauna session. However, meaningful and sustained detoxification — particularly the release of fat-soluble compounds — is generally associated with sessions of 15 minutes or longer. Regular sauna use over weeks and months is far more effective than any single extended session. 

How many calories do you burn in a sauna? 

Estimates vary widely, but most research suggests approximately 2550 calories per 15 minutes for the average adult — slightly more than at rest, due to the elevated heart rate. While saunas are not a primary weight-loss tool, the cardiovascular stimulation, hormone balance, and improved metabolic function they support over time contribute meaningfully to overall body composition and wellbeing. 

Bringing the Ritual Home 

There is something profoundly rewarding about having a sauna as part of your home. The ritual becomes yours — available on your schedule, calibrated to your preferences, a private sanctuary at the end of a long day or the perfect Sunday morning reset. 

At Luxoliving, our range of home saunas — from sleek infrared cabins to authentic Finnish barrel saunas — are designed to bring this transformative practice into everyday Australian life. Whether you have a compact apartment balcony or a sprawling backyard, there is a configuration that fits, and a ritual waiting to begin.