
We used the Sauna Blanket several times a week for two months — testing heat intensity, sweat, the recovery-and-relaxation payoff, cleanup, and how it stores.
A full infrared sauna costs thousands and needs a dedicated room. The HigherDose Sauna Blanket gives you most of the experience — a deep, detoxifying, deeply relaxing infrared sweat — in a zip-up blanket you heat on the floor or a bed and roll up afterward. It reaches 175°F, uses low-EMF far-infrared heating, and turns a half-hour into a proper sweat that eases sore muscles and melts stress. For sauna benefits without the cabin, it is the best-known and best-executed option.
| Type | Far-infrared sauna blanket |
| Max temp | Up to 175°F, levels 1–9 |
| Power | 350–420 W |
| EMF | Low-EMF heating |
| Size | 72.5 × 32 in |
| Materials | Non-toxic waterproof PU; charcoal, clay, magnets, crystals |
| Session | 30–40 minutes |
| Extras | Free carrying bag; insert sold separately |
| Warranty | 1 year |
The Sauna Blanket is a body-length, zip-up heating blanket that uses far-infrared elements to warm you directly rather than heating the air around you, the way a traditional sauna does. You lie inside it, set a temperature, and it induces a deep sweat over a 30–40-minute session. The pitch is the benefits of an infrared sauna — sweat, relaxation, muscle recovery — without the space, installation or four-figure cost of a cabin.
The blanket is made from a non-toxic, waterproof polyurethane that wipes clean and exceeds VOC safety standards, and the heating layer combines far-infrared elements with charcoal, clay, magnets and crystals that HigherDose says optimise heat and keep EMF low. Practically, it is well-built and easy to wipe down, folds flat, and comes with a carrying bag. An optional insert (sold separately) sits between you and the blanket to catch sweat and simplify cleanup.
Setup is nothing: unroll it on the floor or a bed, plug in the controller, set a level from 1 to 9 (up to 175°F), and let it preheat for 10–15 minutes. You climb in wearing long sleeves and socks (recommended, since the heat is intense), zip up to the chest, and relax. In our testing it heated evenly and reached a genuinely sauna-like intensity at the higher levels — this is a real sweat, not a warm blanket.
The experience is the point. In our testing a 30–40-minute session at a high level produced a full-body sweat comparable to a light workout, followed by the flushed, relaxed, slightly euphoric feeling infrared sauna users chase. Far-infrared warms you from within, so it feels penetrating rather than stifling, and lying still makes it genuinely meditative. It is an easy ritual to build into an evening, and the relaxation payoff is immediate and reliable.
The claimed benefits — detox through sweat, eased sore muscles, improved circulation, stress relief — track with what infrared heat does and with how a session feels. HigherDose recommends starting at 30–40 minutes and adjusting temperature to comfort, a few times a week. In our testing the most consistent, real payoff was recovery and relaxation: muscles felt looser and stress lifted afterward. Treat the wellness-material claims (crystals, magnets) as marketing; the infrared heat is what does the work.
Cleanup is simple: the waterproof interior wipes down with a damp cloth after each sweaty session, and the optional insert keeps the blanket itself cleaner. It folds flat and stores in a closet or under a bed, which is the whole advantage over a cabin — no dedicated space. That storability, plus the quick setup, is what makes it a ritual you actually keep up rather than an appliance that dominates a room.
Against a full infrared sauna cabin, the blanket gives most of the sweat-and-relaxation benefit for a fraction of the price and none of the footprint — you trade the upright, whole-room experience for a lie-down one. Against cheaper sauna blankets, HigherDose’s build quality, low-EMF construction and finish are a clear step up, which is why it is the category’s best-known name. Against a cold plunge, it is the opposite therapy — heat rather than cold — and many people alternate the two.
At $699 the blanket is expensive for what is, mechanically, a heated mat — but cheap next to a $3,000-plus sauna cabin, and that is the right comparison. The value is in getting a genuine infrared-sauna ritual at home, in any space, for years. HigherDose backs it with a one-year warranty. If you want the benefits and the convenience and will actually use it a few times a week, it earns its price; if you would use it twice and forget it, it will not.
Buy it if you want infrared-sauna sweat, recovery and relaxation at home without the space or cost of a cabin, and you will use it regularly. Skip it if you want an upright, whole-room sauna experience, if you are sceptical you will keep the habit, or if the price feels steep for a heated blanket. For an easy, storable home sauna ritual, though, it is the best-executed option.
Check the current price and availability before you buy — it moves.
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