Lounger Hot Tub vs. Non-Lounger Hot Tub - Which One Should You Choose?
- Dale Slater
- 2 days ago
- 3 min read

If you’re shopping for a hot tub, one of the biggest layout decisions you’ll face is whether to buy a lounger hot tub or a non-lounger hot tub.
At first glance, loungers look luxurious. Full-body relaxation, reclined seating, and spa-like comfort. But in real-world ownership, the decision isn’t nearly that simple.
After years of helping customers choose, install, and live with their hot tubs, one thing is clear: people either love loungers or hate them, there’s almost no middle ground.
This guide will help you decide which option actually fits your body, your family, and how you’ll really use your hot tub.
What Is a Lounger Hot Tub?
A lounger hot tub includes at least one fully reclined seat that allows you to stretch out with jets running from your neck to your feet.
A non-lounger hot tub replaces that reclined seat with upright seating, usually offering:
More seating capacity
More open footwell space
A wider variety of seat depths
Both layouts can provide excellent hydrotherapy, but they deliver very different ownership experiences.
The Biggest Difference: Space
One of the most overlooked realities of a lounger hot tub is how much space it consumes.
A lounger can take up one-third or more of the interior of a hot tub. In practical terms, that means:
Less seating for others
A tighter footwell
A more cramped feel overall
This matters even more for families or anyone who entertains regularly. In many cases, customers are surprised by how much more open and spacious a similarly sized non-lounger hot tub feels, despite having the exact same exterior footprint.
Family Use vs. Entertaining
If your hot tub will be used by:
A family of 4 or 5
Friends and guests
Mixed heights and body types
A lounger often becomes a limitation rather than a benefit.
When one person doesn’t enjoy the lounger (which is common), that space often goes unused while everyone else competes for the remaining seats.
Non-lounger hot tubs tend to work better for shared use because:
Everyone gets a usable seat
There’s more room to move
No single seat dominates the layout

Body Type Matters More Than Most People Think
One of the strongest predictors of whether someone will like a lounger is height.
Shorter users often dislike loungers
Taller users tend to enjoy them more
Why? Floating.
Many people, especially shorter users, naturally float in water, making it difficult to stay comfortably positioned in a lounger. Taller users can sometimes brace their feet and stabilize themselves more easily, making the experience more enjoyable.
This is one reason why loungers are often a “love it or hate it” feature.
First-Time Buyers vs. Long-Term Owners
Over long-term ownership, many people find they value:
Space
Flexibility
Comfort for multiple users more than a single reclined seat.
That doesn’t mean loungers are wrong, just that expectations don’t always match reality.
The Importance of Sitting in the Hot Tub
One of the best ways to decide is simply to sit in both styles.
When comparing a lounger hot tub to a non-lounger model of similar size, many buyers immediately notice:
How much footwell space there is
Whether the lounger is actually comfortable
Whether the remaining seats feel cramped
It’s common for people to say a non-lounger feels “dramatically bigger” inside even though the shell dimensions are the same.
Common Myth: “Everyone Will Fight Over the Lounger”
In practice, this almost never happens.
Most people either:
Love the lounger and use it every time, or
Avoid it entirely
There’s rarely competition for it, which is another reason buyers should carefully consider whether dedicating that much space makes sense for their household.
So… Which Should You Buy?
Here’s a simple rule of thumb:
Choose a lounger hot tub if:
You’re taller
You mostly soak alone or as a couple
You’ve tried a lounger and know you love it
Choose a non-lounger hot tub if:
You have a family
You entertain often
You want maximum flexibility and space
You’re unsure how a lounger will feel long-term
Above all else, focus on what feels comfortable for you, not what looks impressive in a brochure.
A hot tub should fit you, your body, your lifestyle, and how you’ll actually use it, not a hypothetical version of ownership. Browse our Beachcomber Hot Tubs online or in-store. We’d love to help you find your perfect soak.

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