Accent panels are the visual statement piece for one wall of a sauna interior - not full cladding. The four on this page are solid thermo-Abachi from DecNord, an Estonian manufacturer specialising in handcrafted decorative wood panels. Three geometric patterns (Royal, Rhombus, Hexa XL) plus a single LED-lit Hexa XL panel for an illuminated focal point. Abachi is the lowest-thermal-conductivity wood used in saunas, which means it won't get hot to touch even at full sauna temperature. PEFC-certified, ships Canada-wide.
Sauna Accent Panels
What an accent panel does, and where it belongs in a build.
An accent panel is for one wall - typically the wall opposite the upper bench, the one you actually look at during a session - not for cladding the whole sauna interior. The job is visual: a focal point with three-dimensional geometry, light and shadow play across the carved surface, and a way to break up the uniform tongue-and-groove planking that defines most sauna interiors. Done right, it's the design move that turns a standard sauna build into a finished room. Done on every wall, the geometry overwhelms the space and the cost runs unreasonably high. One wall is the standard approach.
The material is the second half of the equation. All four panels are solid thermo-Abachi - Abachi being an African hardwood (Triplochiton scleroxylon, also called Ayous) with the lowest thermal conductivity of any wood commonly used in saunas. In practical terms, that means the panel surface stays cool enough to touch even at 180°F. The thermal modification process - heat and steam at 160 to 240°C with no chemicals - dramatically reduces moisture absorption and increases dimensional stability, which is what keeps the geometric patterns holding their shape through years of humidity cycling. Each panel is solid wood, 15 to 16 mm thick, with a protective layer on the surface. The panels install on the walls of DIY sauna kits and existing builds, and the LED version ties into a sauna's lighting plan as both a panel and an ambient light source.
The four patterns, and what each one's for.
Four products on the page, three sold by the box of 6 panels, one single LED-integrated unit.
The Royal Thermo Black Accent Panel is the most distinctive of the four - an irregular cellular pattern with a deep black surface and warm Abachi-toned edges where the cell walls catch light. Each panel measures 705 by 203 mm; a box of 6 covers 9.25 square feet. The right pick for buyers who want a dramatic dark wall in a contemporary build.
The Rhombus Thermo Accent Panel carries a classic diamond geometric pattern in mid-tone Abachi. Each panel measures 675 by 292 mm; a box of 6 covers 12.70 square feet. The pattern reads as modern but understated - the right choice if you want sculpted depth without committing to a dark colour.
The Hexa XL Thermo Accent Panel uses a large-format hexagonal pattern - same Abachi tone as the Rhombus, same panel dimensions (675 by 292 mm), same 12.70 square feet per box. Hexagons are a more graphic, repeating geometry; the XL designation means each hexagon is large enough to read clearly from across the room rather than dissolving into texture.
The Hexa XL Thermo LED Light Panel is the same hexagonal design as a single illuminated unit, with low-voltage LED lighting built into the back of the panel to glow through the wood edges. It's bought individually, not by the box, and works as a focal lit feature within a larger Hexa XL installation or as a standalone backlit hexagon on a plain wall.
Frequently Asked Questions:
What's thermo-Abachi, and why is it used for sauna panels?
Abachi is an African hardwood with the lowest thermal conductivity of any wood commonly used in saunas - the surface stays cool enough to touch even at 180°F. Thermal modification is a treatment process that heats the wood at 160 to 240°C in a controlled environment with no chemicals, which dramatically reduces how much moisture the wood absorbs and increases its dimensional stability. The combined result is a wood that holds its shape through humidity cycling, doesn't warp or split, and feels comfortable against skin at sauna temperatures.
How many boxes do I need for my accent wall?
Measure your wall area in square feet, then divide by the coverage per box: 9.25 square feet for the Royal Thermo Black, 12.70 square feet for the Rhombus Thermo and Hexa XL. Buy at least one extra box on top of that number to cover cuts, fitted edges, and the inevitable few panels you'll set aside for matching the pattern alignment. For a typical 4-foot by 7-foot accent wall (28 square feet), that's three boxes of Rhombus or Hexa XL, or four boxes of Royal.
Can I install these myself, or do I need a contractor?
Installation is similar to standard tongue-and-groove wall paneling - construction adhesive plus brad nails through the panel edges into the wall framing. A handy DIY installer with a level and a brad nailer can handle the three box-of-6 products. The LED panel requires a low-voltage electrical connection routed through the wall to a transformer, which is straightforward but worth bringing in an electrician for if you're not already running other sauna wiring.
Will the panels handle sauna heat and humidity over time?
Yes - that's specifically what thermal modification is for. The treatment process reduces the wood's moisture absorption to a fraction of untreated softwood, which means the panels don't swell, shrink, or warp through repeated heat-up and cool-down cycles. DecNord adds a protective layer on the panel surface for additional moisture resistance. Buyers should still ventilate the sauna properly between sessions, the same as for any wood surface - good airflow is part of what keeps any sauna wood lasting decades.
Do I put these on every wall, or just one?
One wall, typically the wall you face when seated on the upper bench. Three-dimensional geometric panels are designed to be a focal point - using them on every wall makes the geometry compete with itself visually and the cost climbs into territory that's hard to justify. The standard approach in design-led sauna builds is to clad the other walls in plain tongue-and-groove cedar or pine and let one wall carry the visual weight.