Sauna therapy is widely used for recovery, relaxation, and long-term health. In recent years, infrared saunas have emerged as an alternative to traditional saunas, promising similar benefits at lower temperatures. But do they work the same way? And which one is better for recovery and performance?
This article explains the key differences between infrared and traditional saunas, how each affects the body, and how to choose the right option for your recovery goals.
What Is a Traditional Sauna?
Traditional saunas heat the air around you using electric heaters, wood stoves, or steam systems. Air temperatures typically range from 70–100°C (158–212°F).
Characteristics:
- Hot air heats the skin first
- High ambient temperature
- Intense sweating
- Rapid increase in heart rate
- Deep relaxation after exposure
Traditional saunas have centuries of historical use and strong scientific support for cardiovascular and recovery benefits.
What Is an Infrared Sauna?
Infrared saunas use infrared light waves to heat the body directly rather than heating the surrounding air. Temperatures usually range from 45–65°C (113–149°F).
Characteristics:
- Radiant heat penetrates skin tissue
- Lower air temperature
- More tolerable for longer sessions
- Gradual warming
- Less intense breathing stress
Infrared saunas are often marketed as more comfortable and accessible for frequent use.
How Each Sauna Heats the Body
Traditional Sauna
- Heats the air
- Skin warms from external environment
- Core temperature rises through sustained exposure
- Strong cardiovascular activation
Infrared Sauna
- Heats body tissue directly
- Air remains relatively cool
- Core temperature rises more slowly
- Milder cardiovascular strain
Both raise body temperature — but through different heating mechanisms.
Circulation and Cardiovascular Effects
Traditional Sauna
- Strong vasodilation
- Significant heart rate increase
- Proven improvements in blood vessel function
- Strong evidence for cardiovascular protection
Infrared Sauna
- Moderate vasodilation
- Lower heart rate response
- Promising but less extensive research
- Gentler cardiovascular load
Traditional saunas produce a stronger circulatory stimulus. Infrared saunas provide a milder version.
Muscle and Recovery Effects
Traditional Sauna
- Deep muscle relaxation
- Strong post-heat parasympathetic rebound
- Enhanced recovery signaling
- Useful after intense training
Infrared Sauna
- Comfortable extended sessions
- Mild muscle relaxation
- Good for daily low-intensity recovery
- Lower overall stress load
Both support recovery — intensity is the main difference.
Heat Shock Protein Response
Heat shock proteins are critical for cellular repair and adaptation.
- Traditional sauna: Strong heat shock protein activation
- Infrared sauna: Moderate activation
For performance adaptation and resilience, higher heat typically produces a stronger response.
Comfort and Accessibility
| Factor | Traditional Sauna | Infrared Sauna |
|---|---|---|
| Air temperature | Very hot | Warm |
| Breathing comfort | More intense | Easier |
| Session duration | Shorter | Longer |
| Sweating onset | Rapid | Gradual |
| Installation cost | Higher | Lower |
| Home usability | Moderate | Easy |
Infrared saunas are often chosen for convenience. Traditional saunas for maximal physiological stimulus.
Which Sauna Is Better for Recovery?
Choose traditional sauna if:
- You want strong cardiovascular and recovery effects
- You tolerate high heat well
- You aim for performance adaptation
Choose infrared sauna if:
- You prefer gentler heat
- You want frequent daily sessions
- You are sensitive to high temperatures
Both can be effective when used consistently.
Common Mistakes
- Staying too long in either sauna
- Skipping hydration
- Using sauna instead of proper sleep
- Overusing heat when already fatigued
Sauna therapy is a recovery amplifier, not a replacement.
Final Thoughts
Traditional saunas deliver a powerful whole-body heat stimulus with strong recovery and cardiovascular benefits. Infrared saunas provide a gentler, more accessible alternative with moderate recovery effects. The best choice depends on heat tolerance, recovery needs, and lifestyle. Consistency matters more than sauna type — when heat exposure is applied wisely, both can support long-term health and performance.
