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Cheapest Stairlifts UK 2026: What £1,500 to £2,500 Actually Buys

Last Updated on June 12, 2026

Last reviewed: 12 June 2026.

Key takeaways

  • The cheapest route to a working stairlift in the UK is a reconditioned straight model from around £1,000 installed, with a warranty.
  • New budget straight stairlifts from brands like Brooks and Handicare start at around £1,500 to £1,800 supplied and fitted.
  • There is no such thing as a cheap new curved stairlift: custom rails mean realistic pricing starts around £3,500.
  • VAT exemption (a 20% saving) and getting three quotes will do more for your final price than any discount banner.
  • Very cheap private second-hand lifts usually cost more once you add survey, new rail, installation and battery work.

“Cheap” and “stairlift” can go together, but only on certain staircases and only if you know where the real savings are. This guide covers what £1,500 to £2,500 genuinely buys in 2026, when a reconditioned lift is the smarter play, and the false economies that catch people out.

What the budget end of the market looks like

OptionTypical 2026 priceBest for
Reconditioned straight stairliftFrom £1,000 installedStraight stairs, tighter budgets
New budget straight stairlift£1,500 – £2,500Straight stairs, long-term use
Stairlift rentalInstall fee + monthly chargeShort-term needs
Reconditioned curved stairliftRare, from ~£2,500 when availableCurved stairs, flexible timing
New curved stairliftFrom £3,500Curved stairs (no cheap shortcut)

New straight stairlifts from £1,500

At the budget end of the new market, brands such as Brooks (from around £1,500) and dealer-fitted Handicare models (from around £1,800) deliver the same core safety features as premium lifts: seatbelt, obstruction sensors, swivel seat and battery operation. The price climbs with rail length, hinged-rail options for doorways at the bottom of stairs, and powered swivels or footrests. Our straight stairlift price guide breaks down what each feature adds, and our best straight models guide compares the current line-ups.

Reconditioned: the genuine bargain

A professionally reconditioned straight stairlift from an established supplier starts at around £1,000 installed, usually with a 12-month warranty. The carriage is refurbished and the rail cut to your staircase. Availability is the constraint, not quality. Read what reconditioned actually means and current reconditioned prices before assuming new is the only option. Curved reconditioned lifts are much rarer because the rail is custom: reconditioned vs new explains when it works.

Renting: cheap if the need is short

If the stairlift is needed for under a year or two, renting is usually the cheapest total outlay: an installation fee plus a monthly charge, with servicing included. The crossover point where buying wins is worked through in rental vs buying.

Where cheap goes wrong

  • Private second-hand bargains: a £400 lift on an online marketplace has no rail for your stairs, no installation, no warranty and often tired batteries. Budget £350 to £700 for survey and refit before it is usable, where an installer will even agree to fit it. See the buyer checklist.
  • Curved stairs and “cheap” quotes: a suspiciously low curved quote usually means a straight lift plus walking a landing, or a rail that does not reach the top. Get the full survey in writing. Start with curved stairlift prices.
  • Skipping the annual service: £75 to £150 a year protects the warranty and avoids £75 to £150 callouts. See running costs.
  • Pressure-sold “today only” discounts: the discount usually reappears tomorrow. Our guide to avoiding pushy sales tactics covers the script.

How to actually pay less

  • Get at least three quotes: prices for identical staircases vary by hundreds of pounds between installers. Start with our free quote service.
  • Claim VAT exemption: 0% VAT applies if the user has a long-term condition or disability, an instant 20% saving.
  • Check grant eligibility before spending anything: a Disabled Facilities Grant can cover the full cost.
  • Ask every installer about reconditioned stock: it is rarely advertised on the front page.
  • If cash is the constraint rather than total cost, see finance and payment plans for the questions to ask first.

Prices are approximate, based on publicly available data and our own research as of June 2026. Actual costs vary by supplier, region, staircase type and individual circumstances. This article was written in accordance with our editorial policy.

Price disclaimer: All prices on this page are approximate, based on publicly available data and our own research as of June 2026. Actual costs vary by supplier, region, staircase type and individual circumstances. Get personalised quotes from at least three installers before committing.
author avatar
Claire Ashworth Managing Editor
Claire Ashworth is the Managing Editor of Stairlift Costs, an independent UK guide to stairlift pricing, grants, and installation. She has spent over four years researching and writing about mobility equipment, interviewing installers, and analysing stairlift quotes to help homeowners make informed decisions. Claire oversees all editorial content and ensures pricing data is verified against real installer quotes each quarter.