ADA Considerations for Commercial Saunas (Compliance Guide)
Skip to content
Winter Wellness Sale! FREE Shipping On All Orders Until 12/18 | Easy 0% APR Financing for 6 Months | 24/7 US Support Team (360) 233-2867
Winter Wellness Sale! FREE Shipping On All Orders Until 12/18 | Easy 0% APR Financing for 6 Months | 24/7 US Support Team 🇺🇸 (360) 233-2867
ADA Considerations for Commercial Saunas (Compliance Guide)

ADA Considerations for Commercial Saunas (Compliance Guide)

If you’re installing a sauna in a commercial or public setting, accessibility is not optional—it’s a legal and operational requirement.

Hotels, gyms, spas, medical facilities, wellness centers, and multifamily properties frequently ask:

  • Do saunas have to be ADA compliant?

  • What does ADA compliance actually require for saunas?

  • Can a sauna be ADA accessible without being fully ADA compliant?

  • What design choices reduce liability and inspection risk?

The answer is nuanced.

This guide explains:

  • When ADA applies to saunas

  • What the ADA does (and does not) explicitly require

  • Key design considerations for accessible commercial saunas

  • Common compliance mistakes

  • How to design saunas that are both functional and defensible

Important: This article is educational, not legal advice. Always consult an ADA specialist, architect, or local authority for final compliance decisions.


Does the ADA Apply to Commercial Saunas?

The Short Answer

Yes—if the sauna is in a place of public accommodation or commercial facility.

ADA applies to:

  • Hotels and resorts

  • Gyms and fitness centers

  • Spas and wellness centers

  • Medical and physical therapy facilities

  • Multifamily housing common areas

  • Commercial recovery centers

If the sauna is:

  • Open to the public

  • Available to members, guests, or tenants

…it is generally subject to ADA requirements.


Important Clarification: The ADA Does Not Provide Sauna-Specific Dimensions

The ADA Standards for Accessible Design do not include a sauna-specific section with exact bench heights or heater placements.

Instead, saunas fall under broader ADA categories:

  • Accessible routes

  • Doors and clearances

  • Turning space

  • Controls and operability

  • Transfer accessibility

This means compliance is achieved through design intent and accommodation, not by following a single checklist.


What ADA Compliance for Saunas Typically Focuses On

ADA compliance for commercial saunas usually addresses access, not performance.

Inspectors and consultants focus on:

  • Can someone with a disability reach the sauna?

  • Can they enter and exit safely?

  • Can they use controls independently?

  • Are barriers reasonably minimized?

The ADA does not require:

  • Equal heat tolerance

  • Equal bench height usage

  • Identical experience for all users


Key ADA Considerations for Commercial Saunas

1. Accessible Route to the Sauna

An ADA-compliant sauna must be reachable via an accessible route:

  • No steps without ramps or lifts

  • Proper hallway width

  • Clear path from entry points

This applies to:

  • Locker rooms

  • Spa areas

  • Pool decks

  • Wellness suites


2. Doorway Width & Thresholds

Typical requirements include:

  • Minimum clear door width (usually 32 inches)

  • Minimal or no threshold height

  • Easy-to-operate door hardware

Heavy sauna doors are a common compliance issue if not designed carefully.


3. Entry Clearance & Turning Space

Inside or immediately outside the sauna, there must be sufficient space for:

  • Wheelchair maneuvering

  • Safe entry and exit

  • Transfer positioning

This often means:

  • Additional clear floor space

  • No obstructions near the door

  • Thoughtful bench layout


4. Bench Design & Transfer Accessibility

ADA does not require that all benches be wheelchair-height.

However, best practices include:

  • At least one lower bench suitable for transfer

  • Stable, non-slip bench surfaces

  • Clear floor space adjacent to the bench

Many commercial saunas include multi-level benches, which allows accessibility without compromising traditional sauna design.

You can see examples of commercial-grade layouts with the Golden Designs Catalonia 8-person Infrared Sauna and the Golden Designs Toledo 6-Person Hybrid Indoor Sauna 


5. Controls & Operability

Controls must be:

  • Reachable from an accessible position

  • Usable with one hand

  • Operable without tight grasping, pinching, or twisting

This often means:

  • External digital control panels

  • Clearly labeled controls

  • Logical placement near entry points

For heater systems, explore compatible options in our Commercial Sauna Heaters collection.


6. Visual & Tactile Considerations

While not always required, many facilities include:

  • High-contrast controls

  • Clear signage

  • Simple instructions

  • Emergency shutoff visibility

These features reduce liability and improve usability for all guests.


Infrared Saunas vs Traditional Saunas: ADA Considerations

Infrared Saunas

  • Lower temperatures

  • No steam or water

  • Often easier to enter

  • Lower physical strain

Because of this, infrared saunas are often:

  • Easier to adapt for accessibility

  • Preferred in medical or rehab settings


Traditional Saunas

  • Higher temperatures

  • Steam and stones

  • More physical demand

Traditional saunas can still be ADA-accessible, but require:

  • More careful bench layout

  • Clear signage

  • Enhanced safety planning

For custom ADA-compliant traditional saunas click here


What ADA Does Not Require for Saunas

Common misconceptions include:

  • ADA does not require lowering sauna temperature

  • ADA does not require removing upper benches

  • ADA does not require heaters to be touch-accessible

  • ADA does not require identical experiences for all users

The standard is reasonable access, not identical use.


New Construction vs Existing Facilities

New Construction

  • Must fully comply with ADA standards

  • Higher scrutiny

  • Fewer exceptions

Existing Facilities

  • May qualify for “readily achievable” modifications

  • Often evaluated on feasibility and cost

  • Incremental improvements may be acceptable

This distinction matters greatly for retrofit projects.


Common ADA Compliance Mistakes for Saunas

  • No accessible route to the sauna

  • Door too narrow or too heavy

  • Controls mounted too high

  • No lower bench or transfer space

  • Blocking clearance with towel hooks or signage

  • Assuming “wellness” exempts compliance (it does not)

Most issues are design oversights, not intentional violations.


How to Design ADA-Conscious Commercial Saunas

Best practices include:

  • Involving ADA consultants early

  • Selecting modular or flexible sauna designs

  • Using external control panels

  • Providing multiple bench heights

  • Designing for transfer, not full wheelchair use inside

For planning guidance, review our Learning Center and Custom Sauna Design Service (many principles apply to commercial installs as well).


Liability, Risk, and Why ADA Matters Beyond Code

ADA compliance is not just about inspections—it’s about:

  • Reducing legal exposure

  • Protecting guests

  • Creating inclusive spaces

  • Avoiding costly retrofits

Well-designed saunas that consider accessibility from the start are:

  • Easier to approve

  • Easier to insure

  • Easier to defend if complaints arise


Final Thoughts: ADA Considerations for Commercial Saunas

ADA compliance for saunas is about access, safety, and reasonable accommodation—not forcing saunas to become something they’re not.

With thoughtful design:

  • Commercial saunas can remain authentic

  • Accessibility can be integrated seamlessly

  • Compliance risks can be minimized

If you’re planning a commercial sauna and need help selecting heaters, layouts, or sauna types that align with ADA considerations, Haven of Heat can help guide the process from concept to installation.

Previous article Sauna Capacity Planning for Gyms & Spas (Sizing Guide)
Next article Why Finnish Saunas Are Built a Certain Way (Design Explained)

Leave a comment

* Required fields

*Haven Of Heat and its affiliates do not provide medical, legal, electrical, building, financial, or professional advice. All content published on this website is for general informational and educational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a substitute for advice from qualified professionals.

Always consult a licensed medical provider regarding health-related questions, and consult licensed contractors, electricians, inspectors, or local authorities for installation, electrical, building code, zoning, HOA, or safety requirements. Local codes and regulations vary by jurisdiction.

Individual results from sauna use may vary. No health, performance, or financial outcomes are guaranteed. Product use, installation, and modifications are undertaken at the user’s own risk.

While we strive to keep information accurate and up to date, Haven Of Heat makes no representations or warranties regarding completeness, accuracy, or applicability of the information provided and reserves the right to modify content at any time without notice.

Other Blog Posts