The home sauna market in 2026 is crowded, and most "best sauna brands" articles are either thinly veiled ads for a single manufacturer or lists of random Amazon products with affiliate links. This guide is different. We carry saunas from over a dozen manufacturers across every category — traditional, infrared, and hybrid — and we talk to buyers every day about what actually matters once the sauna is assembled and heating up in their home.
Below is an honest, brand-by-brand comparison covering the names you'll encounter most often, organized by what each brand does best. We cover build quality, wood sourcing, heater technology, warranty terms, price positioning, and the things that don't show up in spec sheets — like how thick the walls actually are, how long the heater lasts, and whether customer support answers the phone when something goes wrong.

What Actually Separates a Good Sauna Brand from a Bad One
Before diving into individual brands, it helps to know what to evaluate. Marketing copy from every manufacturer sounds roughly the same: "premium wood," "superior craftsmanship," "unmatched wellness benefits." The actual differences come down to a handful of concrete factors that determine whether you'll still be happy with your purchase five years from now.
Wood species, sourcing, and thickness are the foundation of any sauna's longevity. The best brands use sustainably sourced cedar, thermally modified aspen or spruce, or basswood — and they're transparent about where the lumber comes from. Wall thickness matters enormously for heat retention: budget saunas often use panels under an inch thick, while serious builders use 1.5″ to 2″ solid timber. Thicker walls hold heat longer, reduce energy costs, and feel more substantial when you're inside.
Heater quality is arguably the single most important factor in a traditional sauna. The heater determines how hot the room gets, how quickly it recovers when you pour water on the stones, and how consistent the temperature stays across a session. For infrared saunas, heater panel coverage, spectrum type (far vs. full spectrum), and EMF output are the equivalent differentiators.
Certifications — specifically ETL, CETL, CE, and UL listings — tell you whether the electrical components have been independently tested for safety. Any reputable brand will have these. If a manufacturer can't produce certification documents for their heaters and wiring, walk away.
Warranty and support reveal how much confidence a manufacturer has in their own product. The best brands back their saunas with five-year to lifetime warranties and have responsive customer service teams based in the same country they sell to. A bargain sauna with a 90-day warranty and an overseas email-only support line is not actually a bargain.
Best Traditional Sauna Brands
Traditional saunas heat the air using an electric heater or wood-burning stove loaded with sauna stones. You pour water over the stones to create löyly — the burst of steam that is the hallmark of Finnish sauna culture. These saunas typically operate between 150°F and 200°F and offer the most authentic experience. If you're shopping for a traditional sauna, these are the brands worth your attention.
Auroom (Estonia)
Auroom is a premium Estonian manufacturer that builds some of the most architecturally refined saunas available in North America. Every Auroom sauna is handcrafted in Estonia — a country where sauna culture is part of daily life, not a marketing angle — using Thermory's thermally modified timber. Thermory is actually Auroom's parent company, which means Auroom has direct access to some of the highest-grade thermally treated wood in the world without middlemen.
What sets Auroom saunas apart is the design language. Models like the Mira (with its full glass front wall), the Vulcana (angular modern lines), and the Libera Glass (exterior glass wall for maximum light) look like they belong in an architecture magazine. But the design isn't just cosmetic — thermally modified aspen and spruce are inherently more dimensionally stable and moisture-resistant than raw softwoods, so the clean lines actually hold up better over time in a high-heat, high-humidity environment.
Auroom saunas are available as indoor and outdoor models ranging from single-person units (like the compact Cala Mini) up to 5–6 person rooms (the Familia and Lumina lines). They pair with your choice of heater — most buyers pair them with a Harvia or HUUM heater for the complete setup.
Best for: Buyers who want a premium, design-forward traditional sauna with European craftsmanship and thermally modified wood construction. Indoor or outdoor.
Price range: $9,000–$24,000+ depending on model and size
Warranty: Manufacturer's warranty varies by model; backed by Thermory's timber quality

SaunaLife (Scandinavia)
SaunaLife is a Scandinavian manufacturer that builds both barrel saunas and cabin-style saunas using FSC-certified Nordic spruce from managed forests in Northern Europe. Their product line is broad — from the compact Ergo-Series barrel saunas (the E6 and E7 are among the most popular barrel models in North America) to the full-size Cube-Series cabin saunas and the flagship G4 outdoor pod sauna.
The Ergo-Series barrels stand out for their ergonomic bench design — the benches are contoured rather than flat, which makes a real difference in comfort during longer sessions. The Cube-Series saunas are modular, fully insulated cabin-style saunas that use precision-milled tongue-and-groove joinery for assembly without exposed fasteners. SaunaLife saunas also include the option for wood-burning stoves or electric heaters, giving you flexibility in how you want to heat the room.
Best for: Buyers who want a well-built Scandinavian traditional sauna, especially barrel or pod styles, at a competitive price point. Strong outdoor options.
Price range: $5,500–$13,000+ depending on model and configuration
Warranty: Manufacturer's warranty; FSC-certified wood sourcing

Dundalk LeisureCraft (Canada)
Dundalk LeisureCraft builds saunas from Canadian Western Red Cedar in Ontario, Canada. They are one of the most established names in the North American barrel sauna market, and their Canadian Timber series is a perennial bestseller. Red cedar is naturally rot-resistant and aromatic — that signature "cedar sauna smell" largely comes from this wood species — and Dundalk sources their timber from sustainably managed Canadian forests.
Their lineup includes barrel saunas (the Harmony, Tranquility, and Serenity lines), pod saunas (the MiniPod and Pod), and cabin-style saunas (the Granby). The Georgian Cabin and Luna models offer two-tier seating in compact footprints, which is hard to find in this price range. Dundalk saunas arrive as kits with pre-cut, pre-drilled components and detailed instructions, and most owners report assembly times of a few hours with a helper.
Outdoor sauna buyers particularly gravitate toward Dundalk because red cedar handles weather exposure exceptionally well without chemical treatment, and the barrel shape naturally sheds rain and snow.
Best for: Buyers who want an authentic cedar barrel or cabin sauna built in North America with natural rot-resistant wood. Excellent outdoor performance.
Price range: $6,500–$15,000+ depending on model and configuration
Warranty: Manufacturer's warranty; Canadian-made

Golden Designs — Traditional Line (USA-based)
Golden Designs is a California-based company that has been in the sauna industry for over a decade. While they are perhaps best known for their infrared and hybrid saunas (covered below), their traditional sauna line has expanded significantly and offers some of the best value in the category. Models like the Osla (6-person), Copenhagen (3-person), and Bergen (outdoor 6-person cedar cabin) use Canadian Red Cedar interiors with Pacific Premium Clear Cedar exteriors.
All Golden Designs traditional saunas ship with your choice of a Harvia The Wall or Harvia KIP heater with WiFi — meaning you're getting a genuine Finnish heater, not a no-name unit. The saunas hold ETL/CETL certifications and come with a 5-year warranty. Their outdoor cabin models in particular offer a lot of sauna for the money, with thick cedar construction, tempered glass doors, and included accessories (bucket, ladle, thermometer, hourglass).
Best for: Value-oriented buyers who want a solid traditional sauna with a genuine Harvia heater at a competitive price. Good selection of both indoor and outdoor cabin models.
Price range: $5,000–$12,000 depending on size and model
Warranty: 5-year warranty; ETL/CETL certified; U.S.-based customer service

Best Infrared Sauna Brands
Infrared saunas use radiant heater panels to warm your body directly rather than heating the air. They operate at lower ambient temperatures (typically 120°F–170°F), heat up faster, use less electricity, and often plug into a standard 120V household outlet — making them significantly easier to install than traditional saunas. If you're new to home saunas or limited on space and electrical capacity, an infrared sauna is often the most practical starting point.
Finnmark Designs (USA)
Finnmark Designs sits at the top of the infrared sauna market in terms of technology, materials, and certifications. Their Spectrum Plus™ short-wave infrared heaters are UL-listed (not just ETL — UL listing is a higher bar for safety testing) and engineered for deep, penetrating heat that reaches 170°F in under an hour. When combined with their Spectrum Carbon 360° long-wave panels, you get full 360-degree infrared coverage that is measurably more effective than the flat carbon panel arrays used by most competitors.
The wood quality is also a tier above. Finnmark Designs saunas use FSC-certified Western Canadian Cedar for interiors (naturally antimicrobial) and Thermal Plus™ Aspen for exteriors (hypoallergenic, heat-and-steam treated for durability). Every unit includes medical-grade red light therapy panels — not as an aftermarket add-on, but integrated into the cabin design from the factory.
Finnmark also manufactures the only true 3-in-1 combination saunas in the U.S. — the Trinity™ line — which combine infrared heaters, a Harvia traditional steam heater, and red light therapy in a single unit. The Trinity 2-Person and Trinity 4-Person are ideal if you want to switch between infrared and traditional sessions without buying two separate saunas. You can explore these in our hybrid saunas collection.
Best for: Buyers who want the highest-grade infrared sauna available with UL-listed heaters, integrated red light therapy, and premium certified wood. Also the top pick for hybrid sauna buyers.
Price range: $4,900–$9,000+ depending on size and model
Warranty: Industry-leading; UL and ETL certified; U.S.-based

Dynamic Saunas (USA)
Dynamic Saunas is North America's best-selling infrared sauna line, and that sales volume is driven by a combination of competitive pricing, wide model selection, and reliable build quality. Dynamic is actually a sub-brand of Golden Designs, Inc., operating out of a 100,000-square-foot facility in Ontario, California with over 4,000 saunas in stock — which translates to fast fulfillment and readily available replacement parts.
Every Dynamic sauna is built from Canadian Reforested Hemlock and uses pre-assembled panels that clasp together in under an hour with no tools. Their lineup covers three EMF tiers: standard low-EMF (6–10 mG), ultra-low EMF (under 3 mG), and their newest near-zero EMF full-spectrum models. The Barcelona (1–2 person) and the Bellagio (3-person) are the volume leaders and represent some of the best value in the infrared category, particularly for first-time buyers.
Where Dynamic gives up ground to Finnmark is in heater technology (standard carbon panels vs. Finnmark's UL-listed Spectrum Plus system), wood grade (hemlock vs. cedar/aspen), and the absence of integrated red light therapy on most models. But for the price, the build quality and reliability are hard to beat.
Best for: Budget-conscious buyers who want a reliable, well-supported infrared sauna with fast delivery. Widest selection of sizes and EMF tiers in the value segment.
Price range: $1,900–$5,000 depending on size and model
Warranty: 5-year warranty; ETL/CETL certified; backed by Golden Designs' U.S.-based support

Maxxus Saunas (USA)
Maxxus is another sub-brand under the Golden Designs umbrella, positioned as the step-up from Dynamic with upgraded heater coverage and additional features. Maxxus saunas use similar Canadian Hemlock construction but offer enhanced carbon panel layouts for more even heat distribution, plus extras like chromotherapy lighting and Bluetooth audio on many models. If you like Dynamic's value proposition but want a slight upgrade in fit and finish, Maxxus fills that gap.
Best for: Buyers who want a mid-range infrared sauna with more features than Dynamic but don't need the premium tier of Finnmark.
Price range: $3,000–$5,500 depending on size and model
Warranty: 5-year warranty; ETL/CETL certified

Best Hybrid Sauna Brands
Hybrid saunas combine a traditional electric heater (for convective heat and steam) with infrared heater panels (for radiant body heat) in one cabin. This means you can run a traditional Finnish sauna session one day, an infrared session the next, or both simultaneously. It's the most versatile category and has grown rapidly as buyers realize they don't have to choose between the two experiences. Browse the full selection in our hybrid saunas collection.
Finnmark Designs — Trinity™ Line
As mentioned above, Finnmark's Trinity is the only true 3-in-1 sauna on the U.S. market — combining infrared, traditional steam (via a Harvia heater), and medical-grade red light therapy in one unit. The 2-person and 4-person models use FSC-certified cedar interiors and are the go-to recommendation if you want hybrid functionality with no compromises on build quality or heater certifications.

Golden Designs — Hybrid Line
Golden Designs has invested heavily in hybrid saunas and now offers the widest selection in the category. Models like the Carinthia (3-person), Gargellen (5-person), and Kaskinen (6-person) combine full-spectrum infrared panels with a Harvia traditional electric heater. Their newest models add integrated red light therapy panels, making them direct competitors to Finnmark's Trinity at a lower price point.
The Golden Designs hybrid lineup also includes outdoor models — the Karlstad, Visby, and Nora — that pair infrared and traditional heat with weather-resistant construction for year-round backyard use. For buyers who want hybrid versatility at a value price, Golden Designs is hard to beat.
Best for: Buyers who want the flexibility of both traditional and infrared heat in one unit, with a wide range of sizes and price points.
Price range: $6,500–$8,000 depending on size, indoor vs. outdoor, and features

Best Sauna Heater Brands (For Custom Builds and Upgrades)
If you're building a custom sauna room, converting an existing space, or upgrading the heater in a sauna you already own, the heater brand matters more than anything else. The heater is the heart of a traditional sauna — it determines heat-up time, steam quality, temperature consistency, and energy efficiency. Here are the three heater brands that dominate the market for good reason. You can compare them all in our electric sauna heaters collection.
Harvia (Finland)
Harvia is the world's largest sauna heater manufacturer, headquartered in Finland with over 70 years of production history. When you see a heater in a Finnish public sauna, a hotel spa in Scandinavia, or a gym sauna anywhere in the world, there's a strong chance it's a Harvia. They are the industry standard — the heater that most sauna kit manufacturers (including Golden Designs and Dundalk LeisureCraft) include as their default option.
The Harvia lineup covers everything from the compact 1.7 kW Vega (one of the only traditional heaters that runs on a standard 120V outlet) to commercial-grade floor-standing units. The KIP is their best-selling residential heater and the most popular wall-mounted model we carry — it's available with built-in knob controls for the simplest possible installation, or with the Xenio digital controller and WiFi for app-controlled pre-heating. The Spirit is the step-up for buyers who prioritize steam quality, with a larger stone bed that produces thicker, more sustained löyly.
Best for: Most residential sauna builds. Broadest product range, proven reliability, Finnish build quality, WiFi ecosystem.
Price range: $1,000–$3,500+ depending on model and kW rating

HUUM (Estonia)
HUUM is an Estonian manufacturer known for award-winning minimalist design and exceptionally large stone capacities. The DROP — their signature heater, shaped like a water droplet — is one of the most visually distinctive sauna heaters on the market. Despite its compact wall-mounted form factor, the DROP holds up to 122 lbs of stones, significantly more than most wall-mounted competitors, which translates to richer, longer-lasting steam.
The HIVE series takes stone capacity to another level entirely, with the full-size HIVE holding up to 529 lbs of stones — more than almost any residential heater available. The stacked-stone aesthetic makes the HIVE look more like a sculptural art installation than a heater. All HUUM electric heaters use the UKU control system, available in WiFi (app control) and Local (in-room panel) versions.
Best for: Design-conscious buyers who want a statement heater with superior steam performance. Best stone-to-size ratio in the market.
Price range: $2,000–$5,000+ depending on model and kW rating

Saunum (Estonia)
Saunum's differentiation is their patented Airflow technology, which solves one of the oldest problems in sauna design: the temperature gradient between the ceiling and floor. In a conventional sauna, the air near the ceiling can be 40–60°F hotter than the air at floor level. Saunum's system actively circulates heated air to create a more uniform temperature from bench to floor, which means your feet aren't cold while your head is roasting. It's a subtle but meaningful improvement to the in-sauna experience, especially in larger rooms.
Best for: Buyers who are sensitive to uneven heat or who want the most scientifically engineered temperature distribution available.
Price range: $3,000–$5,500+ depending on model

Barrel Saunas: Brand Comparison
Barrel saunas are the most popular outdoor sauna shape in North America, and for good reason. The curved geometry reduces total air volume (so the sauna heats faster and uses less energy), naturally circulates heated air in a convection loop, and sheds rain and snow without pooling. Three brands dominate this segment:
SaunaLife builds barrels from thermally modified spruce with ergonomic contoured benches and stainless steel band hardware. Their Ergo series (E6, E7, E8) covers 2–6+ person capacities and is known for the most comfortable barrel bench design on the market.
Dundalk LeisureCraft uses Canadian Western Red Cedar — the classic barrel sauna wood — with traditional stave-and-band construction. Their Harmony and Tranquility models are longtime North American bestsellers.
Golden Designs offers cedar barrel saunas (like the Klosters and St. Moritz) that ship with a Harvia heater included, providing a complete package at a competitive price.
The choice between these three often comes down to wood preference (thermally treated spruce vs. natural red cedar), bench design (contoured vs. flat), and whether you want the heater included or purchased separately.
Infrared vs. Traditional vs. Hybrid: Which Type Is Right for You?
This is the most common question we hear, and there's no single right answer. Here's a practical framework:
Choose a traditional sauna if you want the authentic Finnish experience with steam (löyly), prefer higher temperatures (170–200°F+), plan to use it as a social activity with family or friends, and are willing to run a 240V electrical circuit (most traditional heaters require it).
Choose an infrared sauna if you want faster heat-up times (10–20 minutes vs. 30–45 for traditional), lower operating temperatures that are easier to tolerate for longer sessions, the simplest possible installation (many models plug into a standard 120V outlet), and you're primarily focused on the therapeutic benefits of radiant heat.
Choose a hybrid sauna if you want maximum flexibility, don't want to choose between the two experiences, and are willing to invest in a higher-end unit that delivers both. Hybrids are ideal for households where one person prefers traditional heat and another prefers infrared.
For a deep dive into infrared options specifically, read our complete infrared sauna buyer's guide.
How EMF Levels Differ Across Brands
EMF (electromagnetic field) exposure is a legitimate consideration for infrared sauna buyers, though it's worth noting that the measured levels in reputable saunas are well below the thresholds that international safety bodies consider concerning. That said, there is significant variation between brands, and if minimizing EMF exposure is a priority for you, the differences matter.
Finnmark Designs and the Dynamic/Maxxus near-zero EMF lines test below 3 mG at 6–8 inches from the heater panels. Standard Dynamic low-EMF models test between 6–10 mG at the same distance. Budget saunas from unbranded or lesser-known manufacturers have been independently tested as high as 60+ mG in some cases.
The key is to look for brands that publish their EMF testing methodology and actual numbers on product pages — not just a vague "low EMF" claim in marketing copy. Brands that engineer their wiring and power delivery systems specifically to reduce EMF near the bench and primary seating positions (where you actually sit during a session) are making a meaningful investment that cheaper competitors skip.
Traditional saunas, by contrast, produce negligible EMF because the heater uses resistive heating elements to warm stones and air rather than infrared emitter panels positioned inches from your body. If EMF is your top concern, a traditional sauna eliminates it as a variable entirely.
Wood Types and Why They Matter
The wood used in your sauna affects everything from durability and heat retention to aroma, aesthetics, and potential allergic reactions. Here are the species you'll encounter most often:
Western Red Cedar is the traditional premium choice. It's naturally rot-resistant, insect-resistant, and aromatic, with a warm reddish tone that ages beautifully. Cedar contains natural oils (thujaplicins) that give it antimicrobial properties — it resists mold and mildew without chemical treatment. This is the wood used by Dundalk LeisureCraft, Finnmark Designs (interiors), and Golden Designs' cedar lines.
Thermally Modified Aspen and Spruce undergo a high-heat treatment process that permanently alters the wood's cell structure, dramatically improving dimensional stability and moisture resistance without chemicals. Auroom (via their parent company Thermory) is the leading proponent of thermally modified timber. It's an excellent choice for both indoor and outdoor saunas and has a clean, modern appearance.
Canadian Hemlock is the workhorse wood of the mid-range sauna market. It's durable, affordable, and has a neutral appearance that takes well to sauna environments. Dynamic Saunas, Maxxus, and much of the Golden Designs infrared lineup use reforested Canadian Hemlock. It doesn't have cedar's natural rot resistance, making it better suited for indoor applications unless properly maintained outdoors.
Nordic Spruce is the traditional Scandinavian sauna wood, used by SaunaLife in their FSC-certified barrel and cabin models. It's lightweight, has good insulating properties, and carries a subtle, clean scent. SaunaLife sources from managed forests in Northern Europe. Explore our eco-friendly saunas collection to see models built with sustainably sourced wood.
Basswood is hypoallergenic and virtually scentless, making it the best option for buyers with wood sensitivities or allergies. Some premium infrared models from brands like Sunlighten offer basswood as an interior option.
Price Tiers: What You Get at Each Budget Level
Sauna pricing varies enormously, and it's helpful to have realistic expectations for what each price tier delivers.
Under $2,000: This is the entry point for infrared saunas. You'll find 1–2 person models from Dynamic Saunas and similar brands. Expect Canadian Hemlock construction, standard carbon panel heaters, basic controls, and a serviceable but no-frills experience. These are legitimate wellness tools — not luxury items. At this price, you can also find portable sauna tents and sauna blankets, which are a completely different experience from a cabin-style unit.
$2,000–$5,000: The sweet spot for most home infrared sauna buyers and the entry point for traditional saunas. Here you get larger capacity (2–4 person), better heater coverage, improved EMF performance, extras like Bluetooth audio and chromotherapy lighting, and stronger warranties. Dynamic's premium models, most Maxxus saunas, and the entry-level Finnmark models land in this range. Traditional sauna kits from SaunaLife and Golden Designs start here as well.
$5,000–$10,000: This is where traditional outdoor saunas, premium infrared saunas, hybrid saunas, and larger-capacity models live. Finnmark's full infrared and Trinity hybrid lines, Auroom's indoor saunas, Dundalk's larger barrel and cabin models, and Golden Designs' hybrid and outdoor lines all fall in this range. Build quality, wood grade, heater technology, and overall longevity take a noticeable step up.
$10,000+: Premium outdoor cabin saunas, large-capacity Auroom models, and fully custom builds. At this level, you're getting the thickest wood, the best heaters, the most refined design, and a product that will last decades with minimal maintenance. Browse our full sauna collection to see options across every price tier.
Assembly and Installation: What to Expect by Brand
Assembly difficulty varies significantly between brands and sauna types, and it's an overlooked part of the buying decision.
Dynamic Saunas and Maxxus offer the easiest assembly in the market — pre-assembled panels with clasp hardware that two people can put together in 30–60 minutes with no tools. This is one of the main reasons they dominate the infrared category.
Golden Designs traditional and hybrid models ship as kits that require two people and typically 2–4 hours. The components are pre-cut and pre-drilled, so you're assembling, not building from scratch. Heaters come pre-wired in many models.
Auroom saunas arrive as modular kits with precision-milled components. Assembly is more involved than a clasp-together infrared sauna but well within DIY capability for two people with basic tools. Expect 4–8 hours depending on the model size.
SaunaLife barrel saunas use stave-and-band construction that is more complex than panel assembly but thoroughly documented. Most owners report half a day to a full day for a barrel sauna build.
Dundalk LeisureCraft is similar to SaunaLife for barrel models, with pre-cut, pre-drilled staves and detailed instructions. Their cabin models (like the Granby) are straightforward panel assembly.
For all traditional and hybrid saunas that use 240V heaters, you'll need a licensed electrician to run the dedicated circuit. This typically costs $200–$600 depending on the distance from your electrical panel to the sauna location. Many infrared saunas that run on 120V skip this step entirely — just plug in and go.
Accessories Worth Investing In
Once your sauna is installed, a few accessories make a meaningful difference in the day-to-day experience. A quality bucket and ladle set is essential for traditional saunas (pouring water over the stones is the whole point). A reliable thermometer and hygrometer let you dial in your preferred conditions. Backrests and headrests improve comfort dramatically during longer sessions. And sauna-specific essential oil diffusers can transform the aromatherapy dimension of your sessions without damaging the wood.
For buyers interested in expanding their wellness routine beyond heat therapy, pairing a sauna with a cold plunge creates the contrast therapy protocol that has become one of the most popular recovery strategies in both athletic and general wellness communities.
Final Recommendations by Use Case
Best overall traditional sauna brand: Auroom for premium; Golden Designs for value
Best overall infrared sauna brand: Finnmark Designs for premium; Dynamic Saunas for value
Best hybrid sauna brand: Finnmark Designs (Trinity) for premium; Golden Designs for value
Best barrel sauna brand: SaunaLife for thermally treated wood; Dundalk LeisureCraft for cedar
Best outdoor sauna brand: Dundalk LeisureCraft and SaunaLife (both purpose-built for exterior use)
Best sauna heater brand: Harvia for broadest range and proven reliability; HUUM for design and steam quality
Best sauna brand for small spaces: Dynamic Saunas (Barcelona 1-2 person) or Auroom (Cala Mini)
Best sauna brand for beginners: Dynamic Saunas — lowest barrier to entry on price, assembly, and electrical requirements
Every brand covered in this guide is available at Haven of Heat with free shipping and flexible financing. If you're still not sure which brand or model is right for your space, browse our full sauna collection or reach out to our team — we talk to sauna buyers every day and are happy to help you narrow it down.
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