Last reviewed: 12 June 2026.
Key takeaways
- Most stairlift warning signs are battery or sensor related and inexpensive to fix if caught early.
- A lift that stops mid-rail or smells of burning should not be used until an engineer has seen it.
- Persistent beeping is usually the lift telling you about charging, not a fault with the motor.
- Catching problems at the annual service is cheaper than an emergency callout.
Stairlifts rarely fail without warning. They beep, slow down, judder or flash error codes first, often for weeks. Here is what each sign usually means, roughly what the fix costs in 2026, and which symptoms mean you should stop using the lift today.
Sign by sign: what your stairlift is telling you
- Continuous or repeated beeping: usually a charging problem, either the lift is parked off its charge point, a charge point has failed, or the batteries are dying. Re-park it first; if beeping continues, book an engineer. Battery replacement is typically £50-£150 fitted.
- Slowing down mid-rail or struggling uphill: classic end-of-life batteries, occasionally a motor brush issue. Inexpensive if dealt with promptly; harder on the motor if ignored.
- Juddering or a rough ride: worn rollers or a rail that needs cleaning and lubrication, exactly what an annual service prevents.
- Grinding or clicking noises: drive gear or rack wear. Stop using the lift if the noise is loud or getting worse and book promptly.
- Stops part-way and reverses, or will not pass a point on the rail: an obstruction sensor is triggering, sometimes by a genuine obstruction, sometimes a faulty sensor. Check the footrest area first.
- Error codes or flashing display: note the code and tell the engineer when booking; it often saves a diagnostic visit.
- Burning smell or a hot motor housing: switch the lift off and call an engineer the same day. Do not keep using it.
- Swivel seat or seatbelt not locking: a safety-critical fault; treat as urgent because the swivel lock is what stops falls at the top step.
Urgent vs can-wait
Burning smells, loud grinding, a failed swivel lock or a lift that strands its user are same-day callout territory (£75-£150 plus parts). Beeping, mild slowdown and the occasional sensor grumble can usually wait for a booked visit, but do not wait months: small faults compound, and a lift that fails completely leaves someone without their stairs. What a proper visit involves is covered in what a stairlift service includes.
Prevention beats callouts
Keep the lift parked on its charge point, keep the rail clear and dry, and book the annual service. If your lift is over a decade old and faults are becoming frequent, weigh repair costs against replacement using how long stairlifts last and current prices.
Prices are approximate, based on our own research as of June 2026, and vary by supplier, region and stairlift model. This article was written in accordance with our editorial policy.
