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Stairlift Rental vs Second-Hand: Which Saves You More?

Last Updated on June 12, 2026

Last reviewed: 12 June 2026.

Key takeaways

  • For needs under about a year, renting usually wins: no capital outlay, servicing included, removal handled.
  • For longer needs, a reconditioned lift from about £1,000 installed usually beats renting on total cost.
  • Private second-hand bargains are the riskiest route: no rail for your stairs, no warranty, and refitting costs that erase the saving.
  • The honest answer depends on one number: how long the lift will realistically be needed.

Both renting and buying second-hand exist for the same reason: a new stairlift is a four-figure purchase that some households only need temporarily. Here is how the two budget routes actually compare in 2026.

The costs side by side

Renting: a one-off installation fee plus a monthly charge, with servicing included; total cost grows every month the lift stays. Reconditioned from a dealer: from around £1,000 installed for a straight lift with a 6-12 month warranty; cost is fixed on day one, and the lift retains some resale value. Private second-hand: the lift itself may cost a few hundred pounds, but you still need a survey, a rail that fits your staircase, professional installation and usually new batteries, commonly £350-£700 before it moves, if an installer will fit it at all.

Break-even: the only calculation that matters

Add the rental install fee to the monthly price times your expected months. When that total passes the price of a reconditioned lift (minus what you would recoup selling it on), buying wins. For most straight staircases that crossover lands around 9 to 18 months. The full worked examples are in rental vs buying.

Which route for which situation

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.

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.