It's a game-changer... but only if you pick the right heat experience for your space, your members, and your maintenance reality. Infrared saunas and traditional steam rooms both live in the "wellness amenities" bucket, yet they behave totally differently once you start mapping out square footage, utilities, airflow, and daily cleaning. If you're planning a facility build-out (or upgrading an underused corner into a recovery zone), the best choice is less about trends and more about what your building can support without drama. Let's break down the real differences so you can plan with confidence–and avoid the classic mistake of buying the vibe before you understand the infrastructure.
Quick baseline: infrared is dry heat delivered by infrared emitters that warm the body more directly, while a steam room is humid heat created by a steam generator that fills an enclosed space with hot vapor. That single detail–dry vs. wet–drives almost every planning decision you'll make.
Heat Feel and Member Experience: Dry Warmth vs. Humid Intensity
Infrared sauna: Members typically describe it as a deep, steady warmth that feels easier to tolerate at lower air temperatures. Because it is dry, people can usually stay longer without feeling like they are "breathing the room." It also tends to fit neatly into training culture: lift, cool down, sweat, recover, repeat.
Steam room: Steam is all about humidity. The heat can feel more intense because moisture reduces evaporative cooling (your sweat does not evaporate the same way), which can feel amazing for relaxation–but can also shorten session times for some users. Steam rooms are often a stronger "spa" signal, especially in multipurpose clubs or hospitality-driven facilities.
Planning takeaway: If your users are mostly lifters, athletes, and class-goers who want a predictable post-workout routine, infrared tends to integrate smoothly. If you are building a true spa circuit with lounge seating, showers, and longer dwell time, steam can become a centerpiece–as long as your operations team is ready for the upkeep.
Utilities and Build Requirements: The Hidden Decider
This is where the two options separate fast. Most planning headaches do not come from the box itself–they come from what the box demands from the building.
| Planning Category | Infrared Sauna | Traditional Steam Room |
|---|---|---|
| Moisture Load | Low (dry heat) | High (constant humidity) |
| Ventilation | Standard room ventilation is often enough | Dedicated exhaust and moisture management is critical |
| Water Supply | None required | Required for steam generator |
| Drainage | Optional/limited use cases | Typically required (condensation + cleaning) |
| Finishes | Wood interior; keep it dry and clean | Tile, waterproof membranes, vapor barriers, non-slip surfaces |
| Maintenance | Wipe-down and routine checks | Descaling, sanitation, waterproofing vigilance |
Infrared is usually simpler to place. You are primarily planning around electrical capacity, a safe location, and a clean surrounding zone. A commercial unit like the Skelcore Infrared Sauna 5-6 Person is designed for higher-traffic environments and group throughput, which matters if you want a premium amenity without building a full wet area.
Steam is a construction project. You are planning waterproofing systems, vapor-tight doors, sloped ceilings, condensation control, and often an equipment room location for the generator. The long-term risk is not "will the steam work"–it will–but whether moisture management stays perfect over years of use. If it does not, you can end up with odor, surface degradation, and ongoing downtime.
Space Planning: Footprint, Flow, and Queue Management
Most facilities underestimate how much the surrounding zone matters. A heat amenity is not just the room–it is the approach path, the "staging" area, and the cooldown space.
Infrared layout tips:
- Keep it near recovery and mobility so it feels like part of training, not a random add-on.
- Create a simple queue logic: a small bench or standing spot outside the door reduces awkward hallway waiting.
- Build a cooldown corner with hydration access so members do not wander sweaty across your main floor.
Steam layout tips:
- Pair it with showers. Steam without nearby rinsing often turns into sweaty traffic through your locker room.
- Plan for wet feet. The safest steam rooms have clear transitions and non-slip surfaces nearby.
- Expect longer dwell time. Steam users often linger, so you may need more square footage around it to avoid bottlenecks.
Operating Reality: Daily Cleaning, Downtime, and Staff Load
If you are deciding between these two, do not ignore the staff-hours question. The most beautiful amenity in the world becomes a complaint generator if it is frequently out of order or feels less-than-clean.
Infrared sauna operations: Dry heat reduces the moisture-related cleaning burden, but you still need a consistent wipe-down routine, towel expectations, and clear rules (no dripping sweat on surfaces, no lotions that soak into wood, etc.). With predictable policies, uptime can be excellent.
Steam room operations: Steam rooms ask for more vigilance: sanitizing high-touch areas, controlling odor, managing mineral scale, and monitoring surfaces for early signs of waterproofing issues. If your water has high mineral content, plan for descaling cycles and potential filtration strategies to protect the generator.
Practical takeaway: If you have a lean team (or limited maintenance bandwidth), infrared is often the safer bet. If you have a hospitality-level operations standard already in place, steam can shine.
Budget and ROI: What You Pay For (and Keep Paying For)
Upfront cost is only the first line item. Facility planning should include a simple "total operating picture" for the first 24 months: utilities, cleaning supplies, staff time, water treatment, and expected downtime.
- Infrared tends to be more predictable: electrical use, routine cleaning, and straightforward service needs.
- Steam can be more variable: water usage, generator maintenance, potential repairs tied to moisture management, and higher cleaning labor.
For many gyms and studios, the win is not just adding a wellness feature–it is creating a recovery flow that keeps members consistent. A smart approach is building a "contrast" or "recovery circuit" over time. For example, pairing heat with cold exposure can become a signature experience, and a unit like the Skelcore Acrylic Cold Plunge fits naturally into that kind of planning without turning your entire build-out into a wet-zone remodel.
Safety, Policies, and Signage: The Stuff That Prevents Problems
Both options require clear rules, but the risks differ. Steam can feel more intense due to humidity; infrared can still be dehydrating if users overstay. Either way, your best friend is simple, visible guidance.
- Set time guidelines and encourage hydration.
- Post basic contraindications (and direct members to consult a professional if unsure).
- Require towels and keep a cleaning cadence visible to staff.
- Design for privacy without hiding risk: good sightlines to the entrance and easy access to assistance matter.
A Fast Decision Checklist for Facility Planning
If you want a quick, practical way to decide, answer these honestly:
- Do you want to build a wet area? If no, lean infrared.
- Can your building support heavy moisture management long-term? If unsure, lean infrared.
- Is your brand promise more "training performance" or "spa escape"? Performance leans infrared; spa leans steam.
- Do you have staff-hours to maintain humidity-based spaces daily? If limited, lean infrared.
- Do you want group throughput without complex construction? Infrared is usually easier to scale.
Bottom line: infrared saunas and steam rooms can both be winners, but they win in different buildings and different business models. If your goal is a reliable, high-uptime wellness amenity that integrates cleanly with training culture, infrared is often the simplest path. If you are building a full wet-area experience with showers, spa flow, and strong operations support, steam can deliver a classic luxury feel. Either way, planning the surrounding space–traffic, cooldown, safety, and maintenance–is what turns a "nice idea" into a real member-loved feature.
