7 Best Community Saunas in Bristol (2026): Prices + Reviews

Seven Bristol community and wild saunas reviewed for 2026 - prices, cold plunges and booking tips, from Brislington to Westbury-on-Trym.

Warm wood-panelled community sauna interior
Updated How we review →
By Rob Griffiths2 July 2026 · 7 min read

Bristol has quietly become one of the best cities in the UK for community sauna. More than 40 sauna operators now run across the city and its fringes, most of them small, locally-run spaces built around contrast therapy (alternating hot sauna sessions with cold plunges) rather than spa luxury.

Why has Bristol's sauna scene grown so fast?

Two things drove it: the wider UK boom in cold-water and contrast therapy, and Bristol's strong culture of community-led projects. Many of these saunas are run by charities, cooperatives or families rather than wellness chains, which keeps prices low and the atmosphere social.

The result is a mix of permanent electric saunas, mobile wood-fired (heated by a wood-burning stove rather than electric elements) trailers, and pop-ups attached to wildlife parks and bathing ponds. The cold-exposure side has genuine evidence behind it for mood and recovery, though many specific health claims remain unproven - the background on sauna bathing sets out what is and is not established.

Bristol's community saunas by neighbourhood

BRISLINGTON · ELECTRIC

Bristol Community Sauna Editor's pick

The most accessible and affordable community sauna in the city

  • First-timers
  • Step-free access
  • Tight budgets
4.8 / 5
  • Where St Anne's House, Brislington BS4
  • Sauna Two electric Finnish (one step-free)
  • Cold 3 plunges (10°C & 5°C) + 3 showers
  • Price £10, or £5 for members
Run as a community project in the garden of St Anne's House, this is the easiest place in Bristol to try sauna properly. Two all-electric Finnish saunas seat up to 20 between them, one with step-free access, and the three cold plunges sit at a manageable 10°C and a bracing 5°C. Seventy-five-minute sessions cost £10, or £5 if you become a member, which is about as affordable as community sauna gets.

What we liked

  • Step-free access option
  • Very low session price
  • Booking is transferable up to 6 hours before

Watch out for

  • Electric rather than wood-fired
  • Books up fast at peak times

The best first sauna in Bristol: cheap, welcoming and genuinely accessible.

REDFIELD · WOOD-FIRED

Bristol Sauna Yard

Family-run wood-fired trailers and a horsebox sauna

  • Wood-fired heat
  • Private group hire
  • East Bristol locals
4.6 / 5
  • Where Church Rd, Redfield BS5
  • Sauna Multiple wood-fired (trailer + horsebox)
  • Cold Cold plunge on site
  • Ages 16+ community; 12-15 private only
A community-minded, family-run yard on Church Road with several wood-fired saunas, including a converted horsebox you can book exclusively for a group. The format is classic contrast therapy: five to fifteen minutes in the heat, then into the cold plunge, repeated. It is cashless and walk-ins are accepted when there is space, though booking ahead is safer.

What we liked

  • Authentic wood-fired heat
  • Private horsebox hire available
  • Walk-ins when space allows

Watch out for

  • Cashless only
  • Capacity not published

Redfield's wood-fired yard is the social heart of east Bristol's sauna scene.

WESTBURY-ON-TRYM · WILD

Fire & Ice Wellness

Wood-fired and infrared saunas beside a wild swimming pond

  • Wild swimming
  • Nature settings
  • Combining sauna with a swim
4.5 / 5
  • Where Westbury Wildlife Park (+ Old Down)
  • Sauna Wood-fired + infrared
  • Water Ice baths + spring-fed bathing pond
Set inside Westbury-on-Trym's wildlife park, Fire & Ice pairs a traditional wood-fired sauna with a newer infrared cabin and ice baths, plus an organic spring-fed swimming pond for warmer months. A second site at Old Down Country Park gives a more rural option. It is the pick if you want sauna and wild swimming in one trip rather than a plunge tub.

What we liked

  • Sauna plus genuine wild swimming
  • Two locations to choose from
  • Infrared option alongside wood-fired

Watch out for

  • Out of the city centre
  • Pond swimming is seasonal

The closest thing Bristol has to a Nordic lakeside sauna day.

RIVER AVON · WOODLAND

Field Trip

A quiet wood-fired sauna in woodland on the Avon

  • Quiet sessions
  • Riverside settings
  • Weekend escapes
4.4 / 5
  • Where Banks of the River Avon, ~20 min out
  • Sauna Wood-fired
  • Opening Usually weekends + private hire
About twenty minutes from the city centre, Field Trip is a calmer, scenic option: a wood-fired sauna tucked into woodland on the banks of the River Avon. It typically opens at weekends and takes private bookings, so it suits a planned trip rather than a spur-of-the-moment session. Go here for the setting as much as the heat.

What we liked

  • Peaceful riverside woodland
  • Strong for private bookings
  • Proper wood-fired heat

Watch out for

  • Mostly weekends only
  • Needs transport out of town

Bristol's most scenic sauna - worth the short trip out of the centre.

EASTON · ELECTRIC

Suvi Sauna

An eight-person sauna in the Pickle Factory gardens

  • Inner-city access
  • Small-group sessions
  • Easton locals
4.3 / 5
  • Where Pickle Factory gardens, Easton
  • Sauna Eight-person electric
  • Cold Three ice baths
Suvi runs permanent sites close to the centre, the most central being in the gardens of the Pickle Factory in Easton with an eight-person electric sauna and three ice baths. It is a good fit if you want a reliable inner-city session without travelling out to a wildlife park or riverside, and the smaller cabin keeps sessions intimate.

What we liked

  • Genuinely inner-city
  • Small, sociable cabin
  • Three ice baths for contrast work

Watch out for

  • Electric, not wood-fired
  • Smaller capacity books up

The most convenient option if you live in or near the city centre.

BRISTOL · WILD

Bristol Wild Sauna

One of the city's newest ten-seat community spaces

  • New-venue curiosity
  • Steel ice baths
  • Calm sessions
4.2 / 5
  • Sauna Ten-seat sauna
  • Cold Two steel ice baths
Among the most recent additions to Bristol's scene, Bristol Wild Sauna offers a ten-seat sauna and two steel ice baths in a deliberately calm, low-key setting. As a newer operator, check its current schedule and location directly before booking, but it is a solid extra option as the city's sauna trail keeps expanding.

What we liked

  • Newer, quieter space
  • Decent ten-seat capacity
  • Two ice baths

Watch out for

  • Newer operator, fewer reviews
  • Confirm current schedule before travelling

A welcome newcomer as Bristol's sauna trail keeps growing.

How do you choose the right Bristol sauna?

Want wood-fired heat?

Head to Bristol Sauna Yard, Fire & Ice Wellness or Field Trip.

Need step-free access or the lowest price?

Bristol Community Sauna is the clear pick at £10 a session.

Want to combine sauna with wild swimming?

Fire & Ice Wellness has a spring-fed bathing pond.

Prefer to stay in the inner city?

Suvi Sauna in Easton is the most central permanent site.

Frequently asked questions

Q01What is the best community sauna in Bristol?
Bristol Community Sauna in Brislington is the best all-round choice: two electric Finnish saunas (one step-free), three cold plunges and showers, and £10 sessions (£5 for members). For wood-fired heat, Bristol Sauna Yard in Redfield is the standout.
Q02How much does a community sauna session cost in Bristol?
Most community sessions run from around £10 to £15 per person for 60 to 75 minutes. Bristol Community Sauna charges £10, dropping to £5 for members, which is among the cheapest in the city.
Q03Do Bristol saunas have cold plunges?

Yes. Nearly all of Bristol's community saunas are built around contrast therapy, so they pair the sauna with cold plunges or ice baths. Bristol Community Sauna has three plunges at 10°C and 5°C plus cold showers.

Q04Are Bristol's community saunas wood-fired or electric?
Both. Bristol Community Sauna and Suvi Sauna use electric Finnish saunas, while Bristol Sauna Yard, Fire & Ice Wellness and Field Trip are wood-fired. Choose wood-fired for the traditional crackle and aroma, electric for convenience and consistent heat.