2 verified studios

Infrared sauna in Kansas City

Where to try infrared sauna in Kansas City, MO — 2 verified studios on the Praxium directory, with what to expect and how it fits a goal-based recovery plan.

Infrared saunaChronic pain & fibromyalgiacongestive heart failure (Waon, supervised)blood pressure (CVD subgroup)

Infrared sauna studios in Kansas City

New to infrared sauna? Read the full guide →

Sweatheory KC — recovery studio in Kansas City, MO

Sweatheory KC

2 modalities

Kansas City, MO

4.9· 129 reviews

Crossroads infrared sauna studio in Kansas City with private cedar sauna suites, a Himalayan salt wall, plus IV drips, vitamin injections, and wellness classes.

Infrared saunaIV & hydration
Restore Hyper Wellness - Kansas City (Zona Rosa) — recovery studio in Kansas City, MO

Kansas City, MO

5.0· 1047 reviews

Full-service hyper-wellness studio in Kansas City's Zona Rosa offering cryotherapy, infrared sauna, IV drips, red light, compression, and mild hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

CryotherapyLocalized cryotherapyInfrared saunaRed light therapy+3

Frequently asked questions

How much does infrared sauna cost in Kansas City?

Infrared sauna sessions typically run $30–$70. Pricing in Kansas City varies by studio, session length and membership — check each studio's site for current rates.

Where can I try infrared sauna in Kansas City?

Praxium lists 2 verified studios offering infrared sauna in Kansas City: Sweatheory KC, Restore Hyper Wellness - Kansas City (Zona Rosa).

What should I expect from infrared sauna?

Sessions typically run 30–45 minutes at 120–150°F. You'll sweat noticeably within the first 10–15 minutes; studios provide towels and water is strongly recommended before, during, and after. Many people feel deeply relaxed immediately afterward, with energy and mood often improving over the following hour.

What is infrared sauna good for?

Infrared sauna uses infrared light to heat the body directly rather than warming surrounding air first, as a traditional Finnish sauna does. The infrared spectrum includes near-, mid-, and far-infrared wavelengths; far-infrared (FIR) — the most common in wellness studios — is absorbed by the skin and upper tissue layers, raising core temperature and inducing a deep sweat at lower ambient temperatures (120–150°F) than traditional saunas (170–200°F).

Not sure if infrared sauna is right for your goal?

Take the 60-second Protocol Match and get a goal-based recovery plan — which modality, in what order, how often.