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How to Buy a Sauna With HSA/FSA Funds in 2026

How to Buy a Sauna With HSA/FSA Funds in 2026

Short Answer

Yes, you can buy a sauna with HSA or FSA funds — but you need a Letter of Medical Necessity (LMN) first. At Sauna Republic, select "Truemed" at checkout to get your LMN and pay with pre-tax dollars. Qualified customers save ~30% on average by paying with pre-tax dollars.

We carry 90+ HSA/FSA-eligible saunas starting from $4,695, plus FDA-cleared red light therapy devices — all available through Truemed at checkout.

Why Saunas Aren't Automatically HSA/FSA Eligible

HSAs and FSAs let you pay for qualified medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. The IRS defines those expenses in Publication 502 as costs related to "the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease." Prescription medications, hearing aids, CPAP machines, and physical therapy all make the list. Saunas do not.

By default, the IRS treats saunas as general wellness products — the same category as gym memberships, massage chairs, and exercise equipment. If something is merely "beneficial to general health," it doesn't qualify.

However, Publication 502 is not an exhaustive list. The IRS allows expenses not specifically named as long as they meet the core test: the purchase must be "primarily for the prevention or alleviation of a physical or mental defect or illness," and a licensed healthcare provider must recommend it for that purpose. That's where the Letter of Medical Necessity comes in.

What Is a Letter of Medical Necessity?

A Letter of Medical Necessity (LMN) is a formal document from a licensed healthcare provider — a physician, nurse practitioner, or other qualified clinician — establishing why a specific product is medically necessary for you as an individual. It's not a traditional prescription, but it functions the same way for HSA/FSA purposes.

For a sauna purchase to qualify, an effective LMN should include:

  • Your diagnosed medical condition — the specific condition sauna therapy will address
  • Clinical rationale — how regular sauna use will treat, mitigate, or prevent that condition
  • Treatment recommendation — frequency and duration of sessions as part of your care plan
  • Proper medical coding — ICD-10 codes that HSA/FSA administrators use to process claims
  • Provider credentials and signature

A vague letter saying "sauna use is recommended for general health" won't work. The letter needs to connect the sauna directly to a diagnosed condition with specific clinical reasoning.

Medical Conditions That Commonly Qualify

The IRS doesn't publish a list of conditions that make sauna therapy eligible. The standard is whether a licensed provider can establish medical necessity for your individual situation. That said, the following conditions are among the most commonly cited in Letters of Medical Necessity:

Cardiovascular conditions — hypertension, congestive heart failure risk factors, and poor circulation. A landmark Finnish study published in JAMA Internal Medicine found that frequent sauna use was associated with significantly reduced risk of fatal cardiovascular events.

Chronic pain and musculoskeletal disorders — fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, and chronic lower back pain all respond to heat therapy. Infrared saunas deliver deep-penetrating heat at lower ambient temperatures, which can be more comfortable for pain conditions.

Mental health conditions — depression, anxiety disorders, chronic stress, and PTSD. Research has shown that whole-body hyperthermia can produce antidepressant effects, and regular sauna use can help regulate the nervous system.

Metabolic conditions — Type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance, and metabolic syndrome. Some studies suggest regular sauna use may improve insulin sensitivity.

Respiratory conditions — COPD, asthma, and chronic bronchitis may benefit from warm, humidified air in a traditional sauna.

Post-injury and post-surgical recovery — when recommended by a treating physician as part of a rehabilitation protocol.

Autoimmune conditions — lupus, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and other conditions where inflammation management is central to treatment.

This list is not exhaustive. If your healthcare provider believes your condition would benefit from regular heat therapy, a sauna purchase may qualify regardless of whether it appears above.

HSA vs. FSA — Key Differences for Sauna Buyers

Both accounts let you pay with pre-tax dollars, but they work differently in ways that matter for a large purchase like a home sauna.

Feature HSA FSA
2026 Contribution Limit $4,400 individual / $8,750 family $3,400 per year
Catch-Up (Age 55+) +$1,000 None
Rollover Unlimited — funds roll over every year $680 max carryover (2026)
Ownership You own it — stays with you if you change jobs Employer owns it — lose it if you leave
Use-It-or-Lose-It No — accumulates indefinitely Yes — most funds expire Dec 31
Eligibility Must have a High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) Offered through employer benefits
Can You Invest It? Yes — grows tax-free No

For sauna buyers, the key difference is rollover. If you've been contributing to an HSA for several years, you may have accumulated enough to cover a significant portion — or all — of a home sauna. FSA funds expire, so timing your purchase matters more.

New for 2026: The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 4, 2025) expanded HSA eligibility. All Bronze and Catastrophic ACA marketplace plans are now HSA-compatible, even if they don't meet the traditional HDHP requirements. This means millions more Americans can open and contribute to an HSA starting in 2026.

Can you use both? Generally, you can't have a standard healthcare FSA and an HSA at the same time. But you can pair an HSA with a Limited-Purpose FSA (LPFSA), which covers only dental and vision expenses. If your sauna costs more than one account's balance, you can apply a partial payment and cover the rest with a credit card.

How Much Can You Actually Save?

When you pay with HSA or FSA funds, you're spending money that was never taxed — no federal income tax, no state income tax, and no FICA taxes (Social Security and Medicare). The actual savings depend on your combined tax bracket.

Here's what that looks like on real Sauna Republic products:

Sauna Price Save at 30% Bracket Save at 40% Bracket
Finnmark FD-1 (1-Person Infrared) $4,695 ~$1,409 ~$1,878
SaunaLife CL3G (2-Person Cube) $4,940 ~$1,482 ~$1,976
Dundalk Harmony (4-Person Barrel) $5,640 ~$1,692 ~$2,256
SaunaLife E7 (4-Person Barrel) $6,140 ~$1,842 ~$2,456
Auroom Cala Mini (1-Person Indoor) $8,190 ~$2,457 ~$3,276
Auroom Familia (3-Person Indoor) $13,990 ~$4,197 ~$5,596
Kohler C1 (5-Person Indoor) $15,187 ~$4,556 ~$6,075
Auroom Mira L (5-Person Outdoor) $24,240 ~$7,272 ~$9,696

On a $13,990 Auroom Familia indoor sauna, a buyer in the 35% combined bracket saves roughly $4,897 by paying with pre-tax HSA dollars. That's almost the cost of a second sauna.

For a full breakdown of sauna pricing by type, brand, and size, see our complete 2026 sauna cost guide.

Which Sauna Republic Products Are HSA/FSA Eligible?

Every sauna and red light therapy device we sell is eligible for HSA/FSA purchase through Truemed, provided you receive a Letter of Medical Necessity. Here's what qualifies — and what doesn't.

Saunas

Brand Models Price Range Types
Auroom 32 $8,190–$60,890 Indoor kits, outdoor cabins
Dundalk LeisureCraft 23 $5,640–$13,379 Barrel, cabin, pod, cube
SaunaLife 20 $4,940–$26,890 Barrel, cube, cabin, luxury
Iglucraft 8 $35,890–$101,890 Handcrafted Estonian iglus
Finnmark 5 $4,695–$8,995 Infrared, hybrid infra-steam
Kohler 4 $15,187–$40,800 Indoor and outdoor premium kits
Haljas Houses 1 $14,940 Mirror glass outdoor cabin

Whether you're looking for a barrel sauna for your backyard, an indoor sauna kit for a spare room, or a full-spectrum infrared sauna, every model is HSA/FSA eligible with a valid LMN.

Red Light Therapy Devices

Our red light therapy devices are FDA-cleared Class II medical devices, making them eligible for HSA/FSA purchases through Truemed using the same checkout process as saunas. We currently carry Lumaflex panels:

Device Price Key Feature
Lumaflex Essential $399 FDA-cleared portable panel
Lumaflex Essential Pro $599 6 wavelengths, full-spectrum
Lumaflex Body Pro Kit $689 Waterproof, full-body coverage

What's NOT HSA/FSA Eligible

HSA/FSA eligibility applies to the therapeutic equipment itself. The following product categories are not eligible:

  • Sauna heaters (sold separately)
  • Sauna accessories — buckets, ladles, thermometers, essential oils
  • Cold plunges
  • Steam shower generators
  • Controllers, stones, and replacement parts

How to Check Out With HSA/FSA at Sauna Republic

We've partnered with Truemed to handle the entire LMN process at checkout. You don't need to visit your doctor separately or submit paperwork in advance — Truemed's network of licensed healthcare providers evaluates your eligibility and issues your LMN as part of the purchase flow.

Step 1: Checkout

1. Checkout

Select "Truemed – Pay with HSA/FSA" at checkout.

Step 2: Health Assessment

2. Complete Health Assessment

An independent licensed practitioner reviews your answers and, if you qualify, issues a Letter of Medical Necessity (LMN).

Step 3: Make Your Purchase

3. Make Your Purchase

Pay with your HSA/FSA card, or use a regular credit card and submit for reimbursement later.

📋 Return Policy: Our standard return policy applies to HSA/FSA purchases — there is no "final sale" restriction. If you need to return a product, refunds are processed back to your original HSA/FSA card within 3–10 business days. HSA holders can report the return as a "mistaken distribution" to avoid tax penalties. FSA holders should be aware that if the plan year has ended, returned funds may be forfeited under the use-it-or-lose-it rule. Our team is available at (888) 833-2305 to help you choose the right product before you buy.

For more details on how Truemed works at our store, visit our HSA/FSA information page.

What If You Don't Have Enough HSA/FSA Funds?

You don't need to cover the entire purchase with one account. Partial payment works fine. For example, if your sauna costs $8,190 and your HSA has $3,000, apply the $3,000 in pre-tax funds and pay the remaining $5,190 with a regular payment method. You'll still save on the HSA portion.

We also offer 0% APR financing through Shop Pay, which can be combined with a partial HSA/FSA payment. Use your pre-tax dollars first, then finance the rest interest-free.

Get Your LMN Before You Buy

Timing matters. HSA and FSA expenses are only eligible from the date your Letter of Medical Necessity is issued forward. If you purchase a sauna before obtaining your LMN, your plan administrator may reject the reimbursement claim.

The safest approach: go through the Truemed process at checkout, which handles the LMN before your payment is processed. If you want to use your own doctor's LMN, get it in hand before you place your order.

If you already own a sauna and want retroactive reimbursement, it generally won't work unless your LMN was dated on or before the purchase date.

What If Your Claim Gets Denied?

Denials happen, and they're not always the end of the road. Common reasons include an incomplete LMN, missing ICD-10 codes, or the administrator not recognizing the expense category.

If you're denied:

  1. Contact your plan administrator to understand the specific reason. Ask what documentation they need.
  2. Update your LMN if the denial was due to insufficient clinical detail. Your provider (or Truemed's team) can revise the letter with stronger clinical rationale and proper coding.
  3. File a formal appeal. Most administrators have an appeals process. Include your updated LMN, supporting clinical research, and a clear explanation.

IRS Compliance — What You Need to Know

In March 2024, the IRS issued a public alert warning consumers about companies that misrepresent wellness purchases as qualified medical expenses. The alert specifically called out businesses offering "doctor's notes" based on brief self-reported questionnaires without genuine clinical evaluation.

This doesn't mean sauna purchases are under scrutiny — it means the IRS expects the LMN to reflect a real clinical determination, not a rubber stamp. Truemed uses licensed healthcare providers who review your health information and make an independent clinical judgment. That's exactly what the IRS requires.

Keep your documentation. Save your LMN, purchase receipt, and any communication with your HSA/FSA administrator. You'll need these records if your plan administrator or the IRS ever requests verification.

FSA Year-End Strategy — Don't Lose Your Funds

If you have an FSA with unused funds approaching the end of your plan year, a medically necessary sauna purchase is one of the smartest ways to use that money before it disappears.

Most FSA balances expire on December 31 (or whenever your employer's plan year ends). Some employers allow a grace period of up to 2.5 months, and others let you carry over up to $680 into the following year. Everything else is forfeited.

A $4,940 SaunaLife cube sauna or a red light therapy panel starting at $399 converts expiring pre-tax dollars into a health asset you'll use for years. That beats losing the money entirely.

Start early — don't wait until December 30. Begin evaluating options and confirming Truemed eligibility at least a few weeks before your plan year deadline so everything processes smoothly.

Can You Deduct a Sauna on Your Taxes Instead?

Potentially — but you can't double-dip. If you pay with HSA or FSA funds, you've already received the tax benefit and cannot also deduct the same expense on your return.

If you pay out of pocket (not through an HSA or FSA) and have an LMN, you may be able to include the sauna as an itemized medical deduction on Schedule A of your federal tax return. The catch: your total medical expenses must exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income before you can deduct the amount above that threshold.

For most people, using HSA/FSA funds provides a larger and more immediate tax benefit than itemizing. But circumstances vary — consult a tax professional for guidance specific to your situation.

Red Light Therapy — Also HSA/FSA Eligible

In addition to saunas, our red light therapy devices are HSA/FSA eligible. These are FDA-cleared Class II medical devices, which gives them a strong regulatory foundation for HSA/FSA qualification.

The checkout process is identical — select "Truemed – Pay with HSA/FSA" and complete the health assessment. Common qualifying conditions for red light therapy include chronic pain, joint inflammation, skin conditions, and wound healing.

Even the savings on a smaller purchase add up: a $689 red light therapy panel saves roughly $207 at a ~30% combined tax rate. And if you're approaching your FSA expiration date with a small remaining balance, a red light device is a practical way to use those funds before they expire.

Key Takeaways

  • Saunas are HSA/FSA eligible with a Letter of Medical Necessity from a licensed provider
  • Save ~30% by paying with pre-tax dollars — that's $1,400–$7,000+ depending on the sauna and your tax bracket
  • 90+ saunas and red light therapy devices at Sauna Republic qualify, starting from $399
  • Truemed handles the LMN at checkout — no separate doctor visit needed
  • New for 2026: Bronze and Catastrophic plans are now HSA-compatible, expanding eligibility
  • FSA funds expire — use them on a sauna before you lose them

Have questions about which sauna is right for your space, budget, or health goals? Our team can walk you through the options and help you navigate the HSA/FSA process.

Call or text us at (888) 833-2305 — available 7 days a week, 9 AM–5 PM EST. Or email us anytime.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a prescription to buy a sauna?

No. Anyone can purchase a sauna at any time — no prescription or LMN is required to buy one. The Letter of Medical Necessity is only needed if you want to pay with HSA/FSA funds or seek reimbursement from those accounts.

Does the sauna need to be a specific type or brand to qualify for HSA/FSA?

No. The IRS doesn't distinguish between sauna brands, types, or heating methods. Traditional Finnish saunas, infrared saunas, barrel saunas, indoor kits, and outdoor cabins all qualify equally. Eligibility is determined by your medical situation and your LMN, not the product specifications.

Can I use HSA/FSA funds for sauna heaters, controllers, or accessories?

Components required for a prescribed sauna to function — like heaters, controllers, and stones — have a legal basis for eligibility under IRS regulations covering medical equipment operation and maintenance. However, Truemed must independently approve each product before it can be purchased with HSA/FSA funds. Lifestyle accessories like buckets, ladles, thermometers, and essential oils are not eligible. Contact us to confirm which specific products are currently approved.

What if I don't have an HSA or FSA?

You can open an HSA during your next open enrollment period if you're eligible for a High-Deductible Health Plan. Starting in 2026, all Bronze and Catastrophic ACA marketplace plans also qualify. Ask your employer about FSA options as well. In the meantime, we offer 0% APR financing to make your purchase more manageable.

Is there a limit to how much I can spend from my HSA/FSA on a sauna?

There's no spending limit on individual qualified medical expenses. The limit is on annual contributions to your account ($4,400 individual HSA or $3,400 FSA for 2026). If you've accumulated funds over multiple years in an HSA, you can apply the full balance to a single purchase. Partial payment is always an option — use your HSA/FSA for part and pay the rest with a credit card.

How long does the Truemed approval process take?

Most health assessments are reviewed within 24–48 hours. Once approved, you'll receive your Letter of Medical Necessity via email and your order will be processed immediately.

Are HSA/FSA purchases returnable?

Yes. Our standard return policy applies to all HSA/FSA purchases. Refunds are processed back to your original HSA/FSA card within 3–10 business days. For HSA holders, the IRS provides a "mistaken distribution" process (Notice 2004-50) that lets you return refunded funds to your HSA without owing taxes or penalties. For FSA holders, refunds go back to your FSA plan — but if the plan year has ended, the use-it-or-lose-it rule may cause returned funds to be forfeited. See our HSA/FSA page for full details.

What happens if my LMN or claim is denied?

A claim denial does not affect your purchase — you already own the product. Contact Truemed at support@truemed.com with your denial notice. Their team will work with their Medical Group to rewrite your LMN to meet your administrator's requirements. Truemed reports overturning the majority of denied claims. If the appeal fails, Truemed may offer approximately 30% of the purchase price to offset your lost tax savings (at their discretion).

Does the Truemed evaluation cost anything?

No. The eligibility evaluation and LMN issuance through Truemed are included as part of the checkout process at Sauna Republic. There's no separate fee for the health assessment or the letter.

 

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