The sauna requires a dedicated 240V/40A circuit. This is the same electrical project that also serves the Softub (120V/12-13A). Both circuits must be run from the main panel to the back patio zone by a licensed electrician before the sauna can operate. That project is currently Phase 1 / Queued. The electrical run also unlocks the hot tub, so scoping it first makes the most of the electrician visit.
Suggested sequencing: scope the electrical project via Pro Research before ordering the sauna kit.
This one is clear-cut. Three factors all point the same direction.
Both are true cedars in the Thuja genus. Both are excellent sauna woods. The comparison below focuses on where they actually differ; rows where they are identical (thermal feel, maintenance protocol) are omitted. Neither species gets dangerously hot to the touch at sauna temps. Both need annual UV oil on the exterior.
EWC is a sound choice for a roofed cabin on a stone pad. It will last 15-20 years. It is not a compromise; it is the standard material on the best-selling cabin saunas in North America.
WRC is the better wood on every durability and sensory metric. Richer color, stronger scent, longer lifespan, cleaner grain. It aligns more naturally with the Manor aesthetic and your BIFL instincts. The question is whether that is worth $3-5K more on a kit build, where the wood is pre-milled and you will not be choosing each board by hand the way you would with custom millwork.
The landscape of approaches, and why this guide focuses where it does.
Dundalk LeisureCraft surfaced as the lead recommendation because they are the only manufacturer offering both EWC and WRC cabin saunas with a porch option in the 6-person range, handcrafted in Canada with a strong cold-climate reputation. But they are not the only game. The broader market for your requirements (outdoor cedar cabin, 6+ person, electric, porch or covered cool-down area):
Why the guide leads with Dundalk: porch integration is the differentiator. You want a covered cool-down bench built into the structure. At the 6-person cabin size, Dundalk is the only manufacturer offering that in both EWC and WRC. Almost Heaven, SaunaLife, and Redwood Outdoors either do not offer a porch option on their cabins or use a modern aesthetic that does not match the property. True North is the closest competitor and worth getting a quote from if lead times or pricing shift by 2027.
The CTC88PW is the strongest value play in the 6-person cabin sauna market. It is the only pre-engineered kit at this price point that includes a proper porch under the roofline. The EWC has a lighter, cottage-rustic character with visible knots. Multiple retailers (Sun Valley Saunas, Select Saunas, Haven of Heat) stock this model with free shipping and no sales tax.
The Dundalk Collection line uses clear Western Red Cedar throughout. No knots. Richer color. Stronger aroma. Thicker 2x6 log construction provides better insulation than the 1.5 in Canadian Timber walls, which matters for Zone 6a winter sessions. The porch is a custom add-on rather than a standard feature. The heater is included in the base price, which narrows the effective cost gap. Divine Saunas is the primary US dealer for the fully configurable Dundalk outdoor cabin line and offers phone-based configuration support.
| Line item | Option A (EWC) | Option B (WRC) |
|---|---|---|
| Sauna kit | $7,800 - $8,000 | $12,000 - $14,500 |
| Heater (Harvia KIP 8kW + controls) | $800 - $1,200 | Included |
| Foundation (crushed stone pad, ~10x12 ft) | $300 - $600 | $300 - $600 |
| Electrical (240V/40A dedicated circuit) | $1,500 - $3,000 | $1,500 - $3,000 |
| Accessories (bucket, ladle, thermometer, light, backrests) | $200 - $400 | $100 - $200 |
| Delivery offload (forklift rental if needed) | $200 - $400 | $200 - $400 |
| DIY Total (you assemble, electrician wires) | $10,800 - $13,600 | $14,100 - $18,700 |
Electrical cost is shared with the hot tub project. If both circuits are run during the same electrician visit, you will save $400-800 on the combined cost vs two separate visits. Professional full turnkey install runs $18,000-25,000 (EWC) or $22,000-30,000 (WRC).
Option A fits your $8-15K budget comfortably. Option B lands at the top of the range or slightly above, depending on how you configure the porch and heater upgrades. The effective premium for WRC is roughly $3,000-$5,000 after accounting for the included heater and thicker wall construction. If the budget has flex to $16-18K, the WRC option is the better long-term investment. If it does not, the EWC option is genuinely good and will serve you well for 15-20 years.
Materials needed beyond the sauna kit itself. Heater is Option A only; the WRC kit includes it.
| Tool | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Impact driver | Owned | Kit assembly |
| Drill | Owned | Pre-drilling, pilot holes |
| Level | Owned | Foundation prep |
| Tape measure | Owned | Layout |
| Wheelbarrow | Owned | Moving stone |
| Soil tamper | Owned | Compacting stone pad |
| Step ladder | Owned | Roof panel install |
| Rubber mallet | Owned | Seating T&G boards |
| Licensed electrician | Pro hire $1,500-3,000 | 240V/40A circuit, panel to patio |
| Forklift or 4 strong helpers | Rent/arrange $200-400 | Delivery offload. Kit ships 1,700-2,000 lbs. |
Most Connecticut towns treat pre-fabricated saunas on crushed stone pads as moveable structures (similar to hot tubs) that do not require building permits. However, the 240V electrical circuit always requires an electrical permit. Confirm with Litchfield's building department before ordering. This call takes 5 minutes and could save weeks of hassle.
The sauna builder optimizes for the hot room experience. The landscape architect optimizes for the patio zone flow. The potential conflict: the porch-facing direction. If the sauna door faces the house, the porch is a cool-down zone with a view of the back door. If it faces the yard, the porch becomes a meditation seat overlooking the treeline. Site the sauna with the door facing the yard so the porch is the most pleasant spot on the property, not a hallway to the house.
The stick-frame path deserves a second look in 2027. If the shed build goes well and you are comfortable framing walls, a custom 2x4 structure with R-13 insulation and WRC interior paneling would cost $5-8K in materials, give you the WRC sensory experience at an EWC price, and outperform any kit on insulation (R-13 vs R-5). The verdict for now is clear: kit first, custom later if your skills justify it.
Electrical panel capacity. Your 1830 house may have a 100A or 150A main panel. A 40A sauna circuit plus a 15A hot tub circuit plus existing house load could exceed capacity. If the electrician finds the panel is maxed, you will need a panel upgrade ($2,000-$4,000) or a sub-panel at the patio zone. Scope this during the electrical project, not after the sauna arrives.
Delivery access and offload. The kit ships on a pallet at 1,700-2,000 lbs. LTL trucks are large. If your driveway or access road cannot accommodate a Class 6 truck, delivery gets complicated. The kit will not fit on a liftgate. You need either a rented forklift, a tractor with forks, or 4 people willing to hand-unload individual pieces. Plan this before the delivery date.
Patio zone sequencing conflict. The sauna, hot tub, fire pit, and eventually cold plunge all compete for space in the back patio zone. If you place the sauna without a patio master plan, you may block the optimal location for one of the other elements. Sketch a rough patio layout with all four elements positioned before committing the sauna foundation pad.
Winter first-heat shock. If you assemble in late fall and fire it up in winter for the first time, the rapid temperature swing (from sub-zero to 180F) stresses wood joints. Cure the sauna gradually: first session at 120F for 30 minutes, second at 150F, then full temp. Both EWC and WRC benefit from this break-in protocol.
If staying in budget ($8-15K): Go with Option A, the Dundalk Georgian with Porch (CTC88PW) in Eastern White Cedar. It is a proven kit, well-reviewed, includes the porch you want, and lands at $11-13K all-in. The wood is lighter and less aromatic than WRC, but for a roofed cabin on a stone pad it will perform well for 15-20 years.
If the budget has flex to $16-18K: Go with Option B, the Dundalk Custom Outdoor Cabin in clear Western Red Cedar. The thicker 2x6 walls, included heater, deeper color, stronger aroma, and longer lifespan make it the better long-term investment. It also aligns more naturally with your BIFL philosophy and the Manor aesthetic. Twenty years from now, that WRC porch will have silvered to a beautiful grey, and you will still be sitting on it after sessions.
Either way: Scope the electrical project first. That is the critical path dependency. Without that 240V/40A circuit, neither sauna operates.