Wisconsin
Sauna culture is expanding in Wisconsin. Here are locations to try.
Saunas aren’t new to Wisconsin, especially the northern parts of the state where Finnish immigrants first brought the tradition generations ago.
Nowadays, Wisconsin saunas are no longer just enjoyed Up North, at the gym, and in spas.
Sauna fanatics and newbies around the state are spending time in community saunas at local parks, on Great Lakes shorelines and by rivers, in parking lots and neighbors’ backyards.
The growing number of public sauna businesses is proof Wisconsin has hopped on the bus that neighboring Minnesota, known as the nation’s unofficial sauna capital, has been driving for years.
Here’s a list in alphabetical order of where to find sauna businesses around the state.
Heat Haven Sauna Park – Wauwatosa
Located in Wauwatosa’s Hart Park, Heat Haven Sauna Park offers daily, 75-minute sessions in barrel saunas. Select sessions are accompanied by fitness classes taught by local instructors. The sauna park plans events throughout the season and private sauna sessions are also available.
Heat Haven is open daily Nov. 21, 2025 through April 12, 2026.
Where: 7300 W. Chestnut Street, Wauwatosa, WI
Cost: $31.77 gets visitors a 75-minute public session in barrel saunas. Prices vary for sauna events accompanied by fitness classes.
For more information: https://heathaven.co/
Heat Retreat – Eau Claire
Heat Retreat offers sauna rentals nearby Eau Claure as well as community sauna sessions in their wood-fired saunas.
Where: Currently offers community sauna sessions at River Prairie Park, Altoona, WI near 44 North and the Helix. Saunas available for rental.
Cost: An hour-long community session costs $23. Check the website for varying costs on private bookings and rentals.
For more information: www.homesteadsaunas.com/
Homestead Saunas – Sharon
Homestead Sauna runs wood-fired sauna sessions at its homebase “The Homestead” as well mobile sauna sessions elsewhere. Saunas are available for rent for public and private events. The business also advertises the Sauna Synergy Festival, a collaborative sauna gathering, planned for April 10 and 11 at Kettle Moraine Ranch, according to Instagram.
Where: The Homestead, 133 Martin St. Sharon, WI 53585
Cost: A general, 90-minute-long community session costs $22, according to the website. Costs vary for women’s and men’s sauna sessions, private sessions, and other events.
For more information: www.homesteadsaunas.com
Hot Island Sauna – Madeline Island
Hot Island Sauna rents saunas out to folks on Madeline Island any time of year. The business also offers custom sauna builds for both in-home and mobile units.
Where: Madeline Island
For more information: www.hotislandsauna.com
Hot Spell Sauna – McKinley Marina
From sunup to sundown all winter, employees of Hot Spell Sauna keep a pair of boxy wood-fired saunas warm at McKinley Marina as visitors trickle in to spend 75 minutes moving from time in the sauna to the chilly air, and the cold plunge in the marina if they’re bold.
Where: 1750 N. Lincoln Memorial Dr. Milwaukee, WI
Cost: A 75-minute session costs $39.92 including tax. Memberships and other services vary in price, check the website.
For more information: www.hotspellsauna.com/
Kiln (Chicago for the winter, Baileys Harbor for the summer)
Floating in Navy Pier Marina this winter, Kiln is owned and operated by Wisconsin-born Zoë Lake. The business is among the few floating saunas in the United States.
Where: Through the winter, Kiln is located at Navy Pier Marina in Chicago, IL at 797 E. Grand Ave. In the summer, Kiln is located at Gordon Lodge, 1420 Pine Dr., Baileys Harbor
Cost: Prices may vary, check on the business website. At the Chicago location, a 75-minute public session costs $90, and a 45-minute public session costs $50 for the winter 2025 to 2026 season.
For more information: www.kilnfloatingsauna.com
Kindled Community Sauna – Spring Green and Madison
Kindled Community Sauna is a mobile, wood-fired sauna and cold plunge experience in southwest of Madison, Wisconsin. The business offers community sauna sessions, private sessions, and sauna rentals around the area, often partnering with local businesses.
Where: Sessions occur around Southwestern Wisconsin.
Cost: Costs may vary, check the website for specific event costs. For example, a public session scheduled Feb. 20 through 22 at Working Draft Beer in Madison costs $30.
For more information: www.kindledcommunitysauna.com/
Nordic Night Community Sauna – Stevens Point
Nordic Night offers public and private community sauna sessions in Stevens Point.
Nicole Terrill and Abbey Laufenberg co-own the sauna business, which operates year-round and opened in June 2023.
“The purpose is deeper than it appears, it’s not a gym and it’s not a spa,” Terrill said. “The heat and the atmosphere provide for a grounding and attunement that people aren’t used to meeting each other at, they’re connecting at a different level.”
The business also offers special events and gender-specific sauna sessions. The “Iceberg Sessions” are facilitated for men, the “Queer Sauna” session is open to LGBTQ+ folks and allies, and the Sweaty Betty Sauna Sessions for women, trans women and non-binary or genderqueer people. All sessions are 18+.
Where: 1027 Union Street, Stevens Point, WI
Cost: One hour-long community sessions cost $23 Monday through Thursday, and $30 Friday through Sunday. Discount packages are available. Check online for the private session costs.
For more information: www.nordicnightsauna.com or call (715) 489 5361
Northern Lights Sauna – Wausau
Northern Lights Sauna is located outside at Newfound Power Gym in Wausau. The business announced it will close at the end of its season March 15, 2026, but there’s still time to try out a session until then.
“What began as a shared vision grew into a space rooted in wellness, restoration, and community,” according to the website. “We invite you to join us before we say goodbye.”
Where: 227307 Rib Mountain Drive, Wausau, WI 54401
Cost: For an hour-long public session, weekday rates cost $25 per person, weekends cost $30 per person. Check online for private session pricing.
For more information: www.northernlightswausau.com
Saunaday – Madison
Saunaday owners drew inspiration from the many cultures that have relied on bathhouses and saunas for thousands of years to bring Madison its own brick-and-mortar bathhouse. Among many offerings, Saunaday features cedar salt scrub showers, a Finnish sauna and a drop-in cold plunge pool.
Where: 315 S. Blount St. Madison, WI 53703
Cost: $55 for the 2-hour communal bathhouse experience. Check online for a cost break down per service, as prices vary.
For more information: www.sauna.day
Smokin’ Barrel – Madison
This mobile sauna business in Madison offers wood-fired saunas for rent. Public pop-up sauna sessions are also advertised online.
“We built this barrel to keep the Madison sauna community growing, whether it’s for backyard hangs, winter plunges, or milestone celebrations,” according to the website. Every booking includes delivery, setup, and a walkthrough of the service.
For more information: www.smokinbarrelsauna.com
The Hive Wellness & Social – Milwaukee area
The Hive Wellness & Social organizes guided communal sauna and cold plunge sessions around Milwaukee. The group joins contrast therapy, yoga, breathwork and personalized coaching to help people reach their full potential with the support of a group.
Where: Event locations vary, mostly around Milwaukee.
Cost: Costs vary, check the website
For more information: www.hivemke.com/
Tuli Sauna and Plunge – Paoli
Located on the banks of the Sugar River at Seven Acre Dairy Co., Tuli Sauna and Plunge is operational year-round. Riverside social sauna sessions are rooted in Nordic sauna traditions.
Where: 6858 Paoli Rd. Belleville, WI
Cost: A 1 hour and 20 minute-long social sauna session costs $39.00. Check online for membership packs and the costs of other offerings.
For more information: www.tulisaunaandplunge.com/
Are we missing a public sauna in Wisconsin that would be a good fit for this list? Email Bridget Fogarty at bfogarty@usatodayco.com.
Wisconsin
President of Wisconsin’s largest mosque released from ICE custody
A federal judge has ordered the release of the president of Wisconsin’s largest mosque, after finding that immigration officials probably detained him in retaliation against his public advocacy for Palestinian rights, suppressing his first amendment rights in the process.
The US district judge James Patrick Hanlon’s order on Thursday marked a sharp rebuke against Trump officials, including the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who had tried to paint Salah Sarsour as a national security threat.
“Salah Sarsour, who has lived in this country for more than three decades and served as a core pillar in his community without any issues, should never have been detained in the first place,” his legal team wrote in a statement. “While we continue to fight these baseless claims in court, today is about celebrating a family being reunited. It is also a sober reminder that, if the government can target Mr Sarsour, everyone’s free speech rights are at risk.”
Sarsour describes himself as a stateless Palestinian, according to the order. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) says that he is a Jordanian citizen. He has lived in the United States for more than three decades, becoming a legal permanent resident in 1998. Immigration officials approved Sarsour’s citizenship application decades ago, though he did not naturalize.
Sarsour has garnered public attention as a champion for Palestinian rights, and serves as a board member of an advocacy group called American Muslims for Palestine.
But Rubio personally signed off on a memo to the DHS last year describing Sarsour as deportable despite his green card, because “his actions undermine US foreign policy to combat antisemitism around the world”. The memo, cited in Hanlon’s order, accuses Sarsour’s group of being “found to have been involved in activities providing funds to Hamas”.
A group of plainclothes ICE officers from at least 10 unmarked vehicles swarmed Sarsour on 30 March of this year, arresting him and putting him in deportation proceedings. ICE ultimately detained him in Clay county jail in Indiana.
Sarsour lost 30lb while detained, the order says. His lawyers told the court that he was “at constant risk of developing serious complications from diabetes given that the medical staff only checks his blood-sugar levels once a month”. Tightly controlling diabetes typically requires multiple glucose checks daily.
Hanlon’s order says that homeland security officials and Rubio probably trampled on Sarsour’s first amendment right to free speech and appeared to have arrested him in retaliation for his Palestinian rights advocacy.
The order cited a New York Times story and the website for the Heritage Foundation, the conservative thinktank that dreamed up Project 2025,
The Heritage Foundation presented the White House with the idea to present prominent foreign-born Muslims and Palestinian rights leaders as terrorists in order to sue them, deport them or pressure employers to fire them, the order says, citing reporting from the Times and Heritage’s own website. Sarsour was probably among the targets of that campaign, the order says.
The federal government, through its lawyers, contended that Sarsour should be deported based on two convictions from more than three decades ago in Israel – one for throwing a molotov cocktail and the other for attempting to store weapons and ammunition.
Sarsour denies having committed those crimes.
But Hanlon viewed those crimes as a non-issue for justifying his incarceration, noting that the federal government knew about them since the 1990s and approved his legal permanent residency and his citizenship application anyway.
Sarsour’s speech on Palestinian rights “is core political speech and squarely within the scope of the First Amendment”, the order says. “Mr Sarsour has submitted evidence allowing a reasonable inference that his protected speech was ‘at least a motivating factor’ in Respondents’ decision to detain him.”
A spokesperson for homeland security described Sarsour as a “terrorist”, citing the convictions from his youth in Israel.
Government lawyers had argued that Sarsour did not have the same first amendment rights as US citizens. If he were released, they said, he should have to pay a $25,000 bond, wear an ankle monitor, check in routinely with ICE and remain confined to his house.
Instead, Hanlon ordered his release on personal recognizance, meaning that Sarsour does not have to pay a cash bond to compel him to show up in court again. The order, however, requires him to remain in the state of Wisconsin.
Wisconsin
Couple asks Wisconsin Supreme Court to hear Brewers 50-50 raffle prize dispute
(WLUK) – A couple challenging the decision not to award them a 50-50 raffle prize at a Milwaukee Brewers game asked the Wisconsin Supreme Court to take the case, calling it one of “statewide importance.”
Matthew and Annette Flynn purchased ten raffle tickets at the July 7, 2023, game, and held the winning number which was originally selected for $13,000. According to court records, the raffle rules in effect at the time required the winning ticket holder to claim the prize at a designated 50-50 table by the end of the top of the seventh inning. Flynn said she did not see the winning number displayed or hear it announced and was directed by stadium personnel to another location before making her way to the claim table. Officials determined she did not arrive before the deadline and selected a new winning ticket.
The Flynns sued, but the circuit and appeals courts ruled the raffle’s rules gave the foundation sole discretion to determine the official winner and that the rules clearly stated a participant who failed to claim the prize within the specified time would be disqualified.
In a petition to the Wisconsin Supreme Court filed Wednesday, the Flynn’s asked the high court to take the case, saying the decision “affects not only the parties to this action but potentially every Wisconsin resident who participates in charitable raffles and similar gaming activities.”
“This case presents significant questions concerning contractual discretion, discovery, judicial review of charitable gaming decisions, and the treatment of digital evidence within Wisconsin’s appellate system. For these reasons, Petitioners respectfully request that this Court grant review of the decision of the Court of Appeals,” the petition states.
The high court does not have to take the case. At some point, it will vote on if to take it. If it does, a months-long process to review the issues will begin. If it does not, the appeals court ruling would stand.
According to the rules posted on the Milwaukee Brewers’ website, the deadline to claim the prize is no longer during the game the tickets were purchased.
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“The Participant in possession of the Raffle ticket with the potential winning number may claim the Prize at the 50/50 Table located on the Loge (2nd) level concourse behind Sections 216/217 until such time as the Ballpark officially closes to fans after the end of the game. If the Participant in possession of the Raffle ticket with the potential winning number does not claim the Prize by the time the Ballpark closes to fans after the end of the game, that Participant may still claim the Prize within thirty (30) days after the conclusion of the Raffle Period for the respective baseball game by contacting the Raffle hotline (414-902-4334). A Prize that is not claimed within thirty (30) days after the conclusion of the Raffle Period will be awarded in compliance with applicable regulations,” the site states.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin DOJ probes fatal shooting by Oneida County officer
ONEIDA COUNTY, Wis. (WFRV) — The Wisconsin DOJ is investigating an officer-involved death that occurred on the morning of June 17 in the town of Lake Tomahawk.
According to a press release, around 10:30 a.m., two Oneida officers arrived at Lumen Lake Drive to arrest a subject in a felony investigation.
Upon contact with the officers, the subject brandished and shot a firearm. One officer shot the subject in return.
EMS pronounced the subject dead on the scene. No members of law enforcement or the public were injured.
Both officers will be placed on administrative assignment, per the agency’s policy.
WFRV will update this story as needed.
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