Let me describe one of these places honestly, because the word "sauna" carries a lot of imagined baggage. A Chinese gay sauna (桑拿, sangna, or bathhouse, 浴池) is, at its calmest, a clean and warm place to soak, sweat and switch off — showers, a steam room, sometimes a pool or hot tub, a lounge with low light and a TV, lockers, towels. It is also, in practice, a place where men meet other men, and the social and sexual side is understood without ever being announced. Both things are true at once. You can go simply to bathe; you can go for company; most people land somewhere in between. Nobody will demand you declare which.
This is a how-it-works guide for a first-timer, not a venue list — I'll never name specific places or prices here, because those shift constantly. For what's actually open, see our gay sauna directory for China, and for the standouts, the best gay saunas guide.
Getting in: entry, lockers and payment
Arrival is straightforward and rarely awkward. You pay a flat entry fee at the front desk — usually a modest amount, think roughly the price of a couple of cocktails back home, sometimes a little more at weekends or for a private room. Pay by app or cash; staff are matter-of-fact and have seen everything. In return you get a locker key or a wristband, which is also how the till tracks anything extra you order.
- You'll be shown to the lockers. Undress fully, store everything, keep the key or band on you (it's usually elasticated for your wrist or ankle).
- Shower before anything else. This isn't optional etiquette — it's the baseline expectation everywhere, and people notice if you skip it.
- Towels are provided. A towel worn or carried is the standard "dress"; how much you wear and where is up to the room and the moment.
- Keep nothing valuable in the locker that you'd be sick to lose. More on that below.
Etiquette and consent — the part that matters most
The single rule that governs everything is consent, and the good news is that it's communicated mostly without words, which suits a setting where many people don't share a language. Here's the grammar of it. Interest is shown by proximity, eye contact and an unhurried, light first touch — and it must be answered before it goes further. If someone steps back, turns away, removes a hand or simply doesn't respond, that is a complete no. You don't ask again. You move on without sulking or comment.
- A no is final and needs no reason. Equally, you're free to decline anyone, anytime, the same quiet way.
- Eyes-up in shared spaces. Showers, steam and pool areas are common ground. Staring or following people around reads as pushy everywhere.
- Private rooms mean privacy. A closed or curtained door is a closed door. Don't enter, don't hover.
- Read the room, not just the person. Pace varies hugely by venue, city and hour. Watch how regulars behave for a few minutes before assuming anything.
If you'd like a few words to smooth things along — or to say a clear no — our Mandarin phrasebook for gay travellers has the basics. Honestly, though, a friendly head-shake and a smile travel further than any phrase.
Hygiene and sexual health
Treat this as non-negotiable, because it protects you and everyone else. Shower on arrival and again after, drink water (steam dehydrates you faster than you'd think), and don't overdo time in the heat. On the sexual-health side, the principle is simple: take responsibility for your own protection rather than assuming a venue will.
- Bring your own condoms and lubricant. Some venues stock them, many don't, and quality varies. Carrying your own removes all doubt.
- Know your status and protect it. If you take PrEP, stay on schedule; if you don't, factor that in. Our guide to HIV, PrEP and sexual health in China covers testing, carrying medication and what's available locally.
- Hand sanitiser and a clean towel of your own never hurt. Don't share razors or anything that breaks skin.
- If anything feels off about a space's cleanliness, you're allowed to simply leave. Trust that instinct.
Discretion, valuables and personal safety
Discretion is the unspoken contract in these spaces, and respecting it keeps everyone comfortable. The biggest single rule: phones stay in the locker, or at the very least stay pocketed and dark. No photos, no video, ever — not of the space, not of people, not "just for me." Pointing a camera anywhere is the fastest way to be asked to leave, and rightly so. People here are protecting their privacy as much as you're protecting yours.
- Travel light. Leave your passport, spare cards and good watch at the hotel. Bring only what you'd shrug off losing.
- Mind your locker. Lockers are generally secure, but petty theft happens anywhere men leave wallets unattended. Keep the key or band physically on you.
- Guard your personal details. You don't owe anyone your real name, hotel, or travel dates. Vagueness here is normal and sensible.
- You can leave at any time, no explanation. If a place or a person feels wrong, dress and go. For the wider picture on meeting safely, our cruising safety guide is worth a read first.
- Drink moderately if at all. Clear judgement is your best safety tool in an unfamiliar place.
An honest caveat about the scene
Here's the frank bit. This part of gay life in China is real, long-standing and easy to enjoy — but it is also genuinely fluid. Venues open quietly and close just as quietly; a place that was busy last year may be shuttered or relocated now, and a beloved spot can vanish with no notice. Rules, opening hours and the vibe differ from one city and even one neighbourhood to the next, and discretion is expected throughout. None of this is cause for worry; it's just the texture of it. So don't rely on an old blog post or a friend's three-year-old tip — check what's actually trading before you set out. This is friendly guidance, not legal or medical advice; confirm the current picture locally and trust your own read on the night.
