small room or building designed as a place to experience dry or wet heat sessions

A sauna is a bathing facility where sweating in a hot room is an essential part of the cleaning procedure. The word is Finnish and the Finnish sauna is famous. There are "Finnish" saunas all around the word, some true to their name, some indeed not. There are also similar traditions in other parts of the world, such as bathing tents in many cultures, the Korean Jjimjilbang and the Roman and Turkish baths.

Sauna is used for getting clean, but very much also to relax and socialize.

Though sauna-bathing is traditionally done nude in groups, e.g. the Finnish do not associate saunas with sex. However, in some countries with no domestic sauna tradition, the term "sauna" may also be used for certain venues for sexual encounters; the term gay sauna is always used in that way, for men looking for same-sex encounters.

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Finnish sauna

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Traditional sauna bathing (Pekka Halonen 1925)

The sauna is perhaps Finland's most significant contribution to the world's vocabulary. The sauna is essentially a room heated to 70–120 °C (mostly 70–90 °C, 160–190 °F).

The most wholesome Finnish bathing experience might be the rantasauna ("beach sauna") which is typically a free-standing building at a lake, river or sheltered sea shore. Here, bathers can take turns sweating indoors, and cooling down in the water (which rarely gets warmer than 20 °C in Finland), or even ice swimming during winter.

In a snowy winter, sauna bathers can also roll around naked in the snow to wear off the heat from the sauna.

Saunas also have some tradition in Norway and Sweden, partly owing to Finns (from days of yore or later immigrants). The word used by Swedes (and Swedish-speaking Finns; see Finland#Talk) is bastu, making Swedish and Norwegian the only European languages without the word sauna.

Sauna is not a contest. Competing to endure the highest temperature possible is unhealthy.

How to bathe

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In winter, sauna can be combined with rolling in the snow or ice swimming.

Enter the sauna after taking a shower. In Finland and Germany you should generally enter nude or, if you feel shy, using a towel. In Sweden it is common to use swimwear, which most Finns see as a faux pas (and if you swam in chlorinated water, it is not healthy).

The temperature is regulated by throwing water onto the stove (kiuas): the resulting rush of heat, known as löyly, is considered the key to the sauna experience. Some sauna-goers also like to flagellate themselves with leafy branches of birch (vihta in western Finland, vasta in eastern Finland), which creates an enjoyable aroma and improves blood circulation. (If you bring vihtas yourself, make sure you clean up any leaves from the benches and the floor afterwards.)

The lower benches are cooler, the corner farthest away from the stove is usually the hottest place. If the heat is too much, cup your hands in front of your mouth and bow down, or move down to a lower level to catch your breath.

The person sitting by the stove and water bucket is responsible for throwing water at an amount and frequency keeping suitable heat. Do not take that seat by accident, as others will hesitate to question your judgement and only when the sauna is cooling down try to diplomatically ask whether it might be time to throw some more. When throwing water, beware of the hot steam, which will cause severe burns if you leave your hand or face in its way.

Keep a distance from the stove and be careful if people are entering and leaving at the same time. The water to be thrown on the stones should be hot but, as a precaution, it should not be burning hot.

After you've had your fill, you can cool off by heading outside, just to sit at the veranda, for a roll in the snow (in winter) or for a dip in the lake (any time of the year, beach sandals or the like can be practical in winter) — and then head back in for another round. Repeat this a few times, then cork open a cold beer, roast a sausage over a fire, and enjoy total relaxation Finnish style.

In Finland

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Ducking for the löyly, with vihta

According to an oft-quoted statistic, this nation of 5 million has no less than 2 million saunas, in apartments, offices, summer cottages and even Parliament; many agreements in business and politics are reached informally after a sauna bath.

In ancient times, saunas (being the cleanest places around) were the place to give birth and heal the sick, and the first building constructed when setting up a new household — and today Finnish peace-keeping forces build a sauna wherever they are sent. The old Finnish saying; "If it is not cured by sauna, tar and liquor, then it is for life" maybe crystallises the Finnish honour for the holy room.

The sauna is a place for relaxation and maybe quiet conversation. They are not associated with romance or sex. Outside the family, men and women usually bathe separately. In some companies (such as university students) men and women bathing together is common, but this should be regarded as if the family were extended – and a relaxed view on nudity – not as related to promiscuity.

Small lakeside sauna with veranda and swimming jetty. Morning mist.

In places with a single sauna, there are usually separate shifts for men and women, and possibly a mixed-gender shift, sometimes shifts for each family. Children under the age of 7 can usually participate in any shift. In private saunas the host usually organises the bathing turns along similar lines.

Often there is an adjacent room with a fireplace, where participants gather after the sauna, especially in places where there are separate women's and men's saunas – a common way to end the evening of a company getaway, a business visit or the like. This is where you drink the sauna beer and roast and eat your sausages.

While titles and formalities are not important in the Finnish society, in the sauna they play no role whatsoever. In the sauna all are equals: students and teachers, employer and employees, boss and subordinates.

The best way to experience a sauna, unless you are invited to one, is to find one of the few dedicated public saunas or to join a shared shift at a beach, campsite, marina or similar, or perhaps at a gym.

If invited to visit a Finnish home or cottage, you may be invited to bathe in the sauna as well — this is an honour and should be treated as such, although Finns do understand that foreigners may not be keen about the idea. Enter the sauna nude after taking a shower, as wearing a bathing suit or any other clothing is considered a bit of a faux pas, although if you are feeling shy, you can wrap yourself in a bath towel.

Earlier there used to be public saunas in cities, but as private saunas have become common also in apartments, there are only a few left to be found. On the other hand, there will be one at any swimming hall and at many other facilities. The experience is not the same though, as many will use the sauna more or less just for cleaning and warmth, not for the whole ritual. If you rent a cottage, it will probably have a sauna, and many wilderness huts and similar also have one.

Most marinas, campsites and hotels have a sauna, which may be heated each night or weekly, with shifts for men and women and a possibility to book it at other times. The shared shifts may have a fee of perhaps €5–10/person, the cost of booking a separate shift may be €50, but prices vary widely. Sometimes, especially at cottages with their own saunas, the sauna is available for heating when you like to, just ask for instructions.

In many "public" saunas (hotels, gyms and the like), it is customary to sit on a paper towel (don't forget to take it out when leaving). Some people use a towel of their own for this purpose e.g. at swimming halls. The environment is rather hostile towards germs, so there is no need to really worry about catching a disease from the sweaty wooden bench.

In Sweden, some people wear a swimsuit in the sauna. This is frowned upon by many of the more orthodox Finnish sauna bathers, and is usually forbidden in saunas of swimming halls where the water is treated with chlorine.

Technology

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Inside a modern Finnish sauna

Traditional saunas may have only one room, but nowadays it is common to have three: one for undressing (sometimes also for socialising, with a fireplace, sometimes also for lodging), one for washing oneself, and the sauna proper.

These days the most common type of sauna features an electrically heated stove, which is easy to control and maintain. In the countryside wood-fired saunas are still common, but purists prefer the (now very rare) traditional chimneyless smoke saunas (savusauna), where a large pile of stones is heated and the sauna then ventilated well before entering. In those, and in older types of other wood fired saunas, the temperature may start quite hot and gradually cool down over the hours.

Where there are electrically heated stoves, there are usually showers also. Otherwise water is typically carried from the well or lake while heating the sauna. Sometimes rainwater is collected for the purpose. Sea water should not be used on the stove (salt water will destroy it by corrosion). There is either a container for hot water at the stove or a separately heated hot water container. The latter will not require much firewood to get hot. When you want to wash, mix hot and cold water in a washbowl. Mix a new set or two for rinsing. The used bowls should be rinsed afterwards.

At cottages and wilderness huts, which may not have electricity (and where chopping firewood may anyway be part of the vacation experience), wood heated saunas are common. People using the cottage are supposed to know how to heat it, what water to use and how to get it dry afterwards. If you intend to use such saunas, you might want to get some advice. The usual modern type will get hot in 20–60 minutes and will require adding firewood every now and then (older ones may – like the smoke sauna – be heated before only, for a longer time). Leaving the sauna for the other sex or other party with a stove without a fire, or after having used all firewood or water, is rude. Tell them to wait a moment instead, for you to get more cold water. Hopefully you did leave enough hot water, an issue especially with showers with an electric warm water container, where the scarcity is less obvious.

The sauna should be dried afterwards, often by leaving the window and door open (be careful if it will get windy), but better with only moderate ventilation, to keep the heat inside until everything is dry. Close the door and window properly in the morning at latest. If there is still warm water, it can be used for laundry if you have such needs (wash any used washbowls well afterwards). If nobody else will come soon, you should usually empty all water containers before you leave, especially if there may be freezing temperatures.

Sauna in other countries

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An old sauna of Listening Point on the shores of Burntside Lake in Morse Township, Minnesota – which had many Finnish immigrants in the early 20th century.

The sauna culture in parts of Russia is similar to the Finnish, with their sauna called banya (баня). Other variations on the theme are the Native North American sweat lodge, the Turkish hamam, the Roman thermae, the Korean Jjimjilbang, the Japanese sentō and the Mayan temescal. Saunas are also rather popular in Germany and the liberal attitudes towards naturism (especially in the former GDR East) are similar to those in Finland, perhaps even more liberal. Former German chancellor Angela Merkel famously was in the sauna when the Berlin Wall came down.

Stay safe

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Anyone who's elderly or has a medical condition (especially high blood pressure) should consult their physician before using a sauna. Although sauna bathing as a habit is good for the heart, you should bathe more gently, and e.g. dehydration and timing of medications can be important issues.

Consuming alcohol makes dehydration and blood pressure issues even for otherwise healthy persons. Although taking a beer is part of the Finnish sauna culture, that should be one beer or two, not getting yourself drunk – and usually taken after the sauna bath. Having bad balance or bad coordination is a serious risk in a small place with several people, stairs, a hot stove and hot water.

If you mix water in a bowl, start with some cold water as a precaution in case it ends up on somebody. The water in the hot water container is often burning hot, much hotter than the water in warm water pipes. Be very careful with any metallic grips, often a piece of firewood is used for handling them. Also make sure you don't bump one into another while getting in or out, or mixing or carrying hot water. Move gently.

No hurry is allowed in a sauna – treat that as a taboo.

See also

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