What Option Is Best For You?
Founding Membership — $199/month
The Best Rate We Will Ever Offer. Locked in for Life. No contracts.
This is for the people who believe in something before it exists. The ones who understand that being early means being rewarded — and who want the satisfaction of knowing they helped build something real in their city.
What's included:
✓ Exclusive founding member preview access before public opening
✓ Unlimited visits — come every day, twice a day, whenever you want
✓ $199/month rate locked in permanently, regardless of future price increases
✓ 2 monthly guest passes — bring anyone you want, on us
✓ Month-to-month — no contracts, cancel anytime with 30 days’ notice
Founding memberships limited to 150.
Punch Card - $400
Not ready for a membership? No problem. The Punch Card gives you 20 visits at $20 each — use them however you like. Spread them across a year, burn through them in a month, or bring a friend and split the card between you. They never expire, and there's no pressure to show up on anyone's schedule but your own.
This is the right option if you're new to sauna and cold plunge and want to explore the practice before committing to a routine. Take your time. Figure out what you like. Build the habit at your own pace.
And if you burn through your card in a month because you can't stay away, Connor and Taylor will happily talk about upgrading you to a membership and crediting what you've already spent.
Good things are worth sharing. Bring someone.
Single Day Pass - $40
A single visit, no strings attached. Day passes are $40 and available to anyone who wants to experience Gainesville Sauna House without a membership or punch card.
Day passes will be available 1-2 months after we open to founding members & punch card holders — because we believe the people who showed up early deserve the floor first.
For thousands of years, sweating together has been as ordinary as eating together. The Japanese have their onsen. Russians have the banya. Turks have the hammam. Finns have the sauna. Native Americans have the sweat lodge. Across nearly every culture on earth, people have built a hot room, gathered inside it, and called it essential — not a luxury, not a spa day, not a reward for something. Just Tuesday.
Somehow, North America missed the memo.
It's not that we don't want it. It's that we never made it easy. Public saunas got tucked into gym locker rooms or buried behind reservation systems, and a daily practice became a logistical obstacle. Something you had to plan for. Something you had to deserve.
We thought that was backwards.

