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Best Commercial Halogenerators for Studio Owners

By Jennifer Coleman · Wellness Journalist & Editor, Salt Cave Finder

Updated May 2026

April 12, 2026 · 7 min read

Quick Answer

  • Top commercial picks: Halotherapy Solutions, SALT FX Pro, IIRIS, and Halomed.
  • Budget for $3,000-$15,000 per unit depending on room size and features.
  • Particle size (1-5 microns) and concentration control matter most.
  • FDA has not approved halotherapy for any medical condition — market accordingly.

If you're opening a salt cave or salt room, the halogenerator is the only piece of equipment that delivers actual halotherapy. Everything else is atmosphere.

Picking the right unit shapes your facility's reputation, maintenance burden, and per-session economics. Wrong pick and you'll fight humidity issues, dose inconsistency, or constant repairs.

This guide breaks down what to evaluate, the leading commercial options, and the honest regulatory landscape you're operating in.

What Actually Matters in a Commercial Halogenerator

Particle Size Output

A halogenerator's job is to grind pharmaceutical-grade NaCl into 1-5 micron particles. That size range reaches the bronchi when inhaled (Chervinskaya, 2017, Pulmonary Therapy).

Bigger particles get filtered out in the upper airway. Smaller particles get exhaled before depositing.

Reputable manufacturers publish particle distribution data. If a vendor won't share it, walk away.

Concentration Range and Control

Commercial units should hit 0.5-10 mg per cubic meter with adjustable steps. The Salt Therapy Association's standard target sits at 1-10 mg per cubic meter depending on session goals (Salt Therapy Association standards, 2023).

Look for programmable session profiles with both uniform and dynamic concentration options. Staff need to set it and forget it during busy periods.

Room Coverage

Match unit capacity to your actual cubic footage with margin. A unit rated for 2,000 cubic feet in a 1,800-cubic-foot room runs comfortably. The same unit in a 2,500-cubic-foot room struggles to hold concentration.

Most commercial spaces need units rated for 1,500-3,000 cubic feet.

Durability in Salt-Rich Air

Salt corrodes standard metals. Quality halogenerators use stainless steel where strength matters and high-grade polymer for non-load components (Halotherapy Solutions equipment guide, 2024).

Check the warranty terms. Two to five years on parts is reasonable for commercial-grade equipment.

Maintenance Access

Modular designs with magnetic attachments beat units that require screws and clamps. You'll be cleaning the grinding chamber every 50-100 sessions.

Ease of access translates to actual maintenance happening. Hard-to-clean units get neglected, and neglected units underperform.

Leading Commercial Halogenerators

Halotherapy Solutions (US)

Halotherapy Solutions is the largest commercial supplier in North America. Their SALT FX Pro line equips thousands of wellness facilities (Halotherapy Solutions corporate, 2024).

The SALT FX Pro uses corrosive-free stainless steel and high-grade polymer construction. Modular magnetic attachments make cleaning fast.

Dimensions: 18.9 inches tall, 10.2 inches deep, 10.6 inches wide. Weight: 30 pounds. Power: 120V, 25-35W consumption.

Operating range: 68-104°F at 15-40% relative humidity.

Pricing typically runs $6,000-$10,000 for the Pro line. Service and parts network is mature in the US.

IIRIS (Estonia)

IIRIS is the dominant European brand and ships globally. Their halogenerators are used in clinical settings across Eastern Europe where halotherapy carries medical recognition in some national systems (Allied Market Research, 2024).

Particle distribution data is published per model. Concentration control sits at 0.5-7 mg per cubic meter with fine adjustment.

Pricing runs $5,000-$12,000 depending on capacity. US support is via distributors rather than direct.

Halomed (Estonia)

Halomed has equipped over 8,000 salt rooms globally across 30+ years of operation (Halomed corporate, 2024). The HaloPrima-03 Mini covers rooms up to 60 square meters or 2,000 cubic feet.

The HaloPrima series offers 8 pre-installed programs covering both uniform and dynamic concentration profiles. Two additional slots accept user-created programs.

Concentration range: 1-20 mg per cubic meter in 1 mg per cubic meter steps. The wide range supports both wellness and more intensive therapeutic protocols.

Pricing for the HaloPrima-03 Mini runs roughly $7,000-$9,000. Like IIRIS, US support is through distributors.

Salt Chamber Inc. (US)

Salt Chamber is a US-based manufacturer and distributor focused on commercial and home installations (Salt Chamber Inc., 2024). Their commercial units serve smaller facilities and individual treatment rooms well.

Build quality is solid with stainless construction. Service network is concentrated on the East Coast.

Pricing runs $3,500-$8,000 for commercial units.

How These Compare

BrandOriginConcentration RangeTypical PriceBest For
Halotherapy Solutions (SALT FX Pro)US0.5-10 mg/m³$6K-$10KLarge US facilities
IIRISEstonia0.5-7 mg/m³$5K-$12KClinical-leaning operations
Halomed HaloPrima-03Estonia1-20 mg/m³$7K-$9KWide protocol flexibility
Salt Chamber Inc.US0.5-8 mg/m³$3.5K-$8KSmaller facilities, single rooms

Sizing for Your Space

Match the halogenerator's rated capacity to your room volume with about 20% margin.

A 600-square-foot salt cave with 10-foot ceilings is 6,000 cubic feet. You need a unit rated for at least 7,000 cubic feet to hold concentration through a full 45-minute session.

Smaller individual treatment rooms (150-300 square feet) work well with units rated for 1,500-2,500 cubic feet.

If you're building multi-room facilities, separate units per room beat one large unit with ducting. Ducted systems lose concentration to the duct walls and complicate sealing.

What to Budget Beyond the Halogenerator

The unit is one line item. Total build costs include:

  • Halogenerator: $3,000-$15,000
  • Pharmaceutical-grade NaCl: $5-$15 per kilogram (ongoing)
  • HVAC modifications and sealing: $5,000-$30,000
  • Salt construction materials: $5,000-$50,000+
  • Furniture and lighting: $3,000-$20,000
  • Permits and engineering: $2,000-$15,000

Total commercial salt cave builds run $50,000-$200,000 (Wellness Creative Co. industry guide, 2024). The halogenerator is typically 5-15% of total project cost.

Don't cheap out on the unit to save on a $50,000 project. The halogenerator is the only therapeutic component.

Maintenance Realities

Plan for these recurring tasks:

  • Salt refill: Every 7-30 days depending on session volume
  • Grinding chamber cleaning: Every 50-100 sessions
  • Blade inspection and replacement: Annually or per manufacturer
  • Filter changes: Quarterly for most units
  • Concentration calibration: Annually with a salt aerosol meter
  • Humidity sensor checks: Quarterly

Skipping maintenance leads to inconsistent dosing, accelerated corrosion, and shorter unit life. A well-maintained commercial halogenerator should run 7-10 years.

Budget 5-8% of unit purchase price annually for maintenance and parts (Salt Therapy Association operations guide, 2023).

Regulatory Reality: What You Can and Cannot Say

The FDA has not approved salt therapy as a treatment for any medical condition (U.S. Food & Drug Administration, 2023). Halogenerators are wellness equipment, not medical devices.

This shapes your marketing.

You can describe halotherapy as a wellness practice. You can cite that some clients report respiratory comfort, relaxation, and skin benefits. You can reference the limited clinical literature (Cochrane Database review, 2014).

You cannot claim halotherapy treats, cures, or prevents asthma, COPD, allergies, eczema, or any other medical condition. The FDA has sent warning letters to operators who crossed that line.

The Asthma & Allergy Foundation of America explicitly cautions against substituting halotherapy for prescribed asthma treatment (AAFA, 2023). Your client intake process should screen for asthma patients and require physician sign-off where appropriate.

What to Ask Vendors Before Buying

  • What's your published particle size distribution?
  • What concentration range does the unit support?
  • What's the warranty term and what does it cover?
  • Where are the service centers and what's the typical repair turnaround?
  • What's the recommended maintenance schedule and parts cost?
  • Can I see a unit running in a working facility before purchase?

Reputable vendors answer these directly. Vague answers or evasion on particle data are red flags.

Frequently Asked Questions

What halogenerator brands do most US salt caves use?

Halotherapy Solutions (SALT FX Pro line) dominates the US commercial market, with Salt Chamber Inc. and Halomed as significant competitors (Allied Market Research, 2024). IIRIS units appear in clinical-leaning operations and facilities with European founders. Most large US chains standardize on one brand to simplify maintenance and staff training.

How much should a commercial halogenerator cost?

Plan for $3,000-$15,000 depending on room coverage and feature set. Smaller units serving single treatment rooms run $3,500-$6,000. Mid-tier commercial units serving standard salt rooms run $6,000-$10,000. Large-cave units run $10,000-$15,000 (Halotherapy Solutions equipment guide, 2024).

Can I market halotherapy as treatment for asthma or COPD?

No. The FDA has not approved halotherapy for any medical condition, and making treatment claims invites enforcement action (U.S. Food & Drug Administration, 2023). You can describe halotherapy as a wellness practice and cite limited clinical literature (Cochrane Database, 2014). The AAFA also warns against substituting halotherapy for prescribed asthma treatment, so screening intake forms are smart.

How long do commercial halogenerators last?

A well-maintained commercial unit lasts 7-10 years. Budget 5-8% of purchase price annually for maintenance, parts, and pharmaceutical-grade salt (Salt Therapy Association operations guide, 2023). Skipping maintenance shortens lifespan significantly — corroded grinding chambers and clogged blades are the top failure modes.

What's the ROI calculation for a commercial halogenerator?

At $30 per session and 8 sessions per day, a $8,000 halogenerator pays for itself in roughly 33 operating days assuming full capacity. Real-world utilization runs 30-50%, so plan for 90-180 days to recoup the halogenerator cost specifically (Wellness Creative Co. industry report, 2024). The harder ROI math is the full facility build at $50,000-$200,000.

The Bottom Line

The halogenerator is the only piece of equipment that delivers actual halotherapy. Spend appropriately, pick from reputable manufacturers, plan for maintenance, and market within FDA limits.

If you can answer particle size, concentration, and coverage questions from memory after a vendor pitch, you're picking smart. If your vendor can't, find a different vendor.


Related Reading

-- The Salt Cave Finder Team

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