I guess it depends on what you mean by "cabin".
My grandparents owned a camp. My in laws own a camp and now my BIL and SIL also bought a camp in the same area that the inlaws camp is.
The camp is kind of like a cabin. They can be really nice or really rustic. Theirs were pretty rustic and have been improved upon. There's running water. One small bedroom and an attic with 4-5 open beds. The camps that my inlaws have are seasonal, meaning the road is closed in the winter and so it's only open 9 months of the year. The cost of these camps are now around $100k for a low-end one. I'm sure my FIL and MIL paid closer to 10k 40 years ago. The taxes and fees are lower because you don't own the land, the association owns the land.
In any event, the camp was about 20 minutes from home, on a man-made lake. The family would go up almost every weekend, and would spend several straight weeks there in the summer. Weather at the camp was usually a good 5-10 degrees cooler than at home, and with no AC, that was helpful.
So, it's not a "cabin" where you have to drive several hours to spend a week here and there.
I think it falls into the category of an RV or 5th wheel, and how much you use it.
We do not have the kind of jobs where we can take that much vacation (my FIL and MIL were self-employed, my SIL gets summers off).
For us, a cabin would have to be close enough to go every weekend. Oh, but I live in So Cal, so there's nothing within 1.5 hours that's cheap. Plus, kids activities on the weekend.
My grandparents' camp was also very rustic, on a big piece of wooded land, and 15 minutes from their house. It was a big extended family gathering place, and we got together every weekend in the summer.