Last reviewed: 12 June 2026.
Key takeaways
- Both routes are legitimate: manufacturers know their models best; independents are typically £20-£50 cheaper per visit.
- Using an independent does NOT automatically void a warranty, but some warranties require manufacturer servicing: read yours before switching.
- Parts access is the practical difference: some brands (notably Acorn) restrict parts, which limits independent options.
- Whoever you choose, the service itself should cover the same checklist.
Once the first year’s warranty service is done, every stairlift owner faces the same choice: stay with the manufacturer’s service arm or switch to a local independent engineer. Here is the honest comparison for 2026.
Manufacturer servicing
- For: engineers trained on your exact model with van stock of the right parts; service history that keeps extended warranties intact; clear accountability.
- Against: typically £100-£150 per service against an independent’s £75-£120; busier diaries in some regions; stronger upsell of cover plans.
- Brand service arms are compared in our Stannah, Acorn and Handicare reviews.
Independent servicing
- For: cheaper, often faster to attend, and frequently the same engineers who used to work for the manufacturers; excellent on common straight models.
- Against: parts access varies by brand: Handicare and most dealer-sold brands are well supported, while Acorn’s restricted parts and diagnostics make some independents decline the work; quality varies more, so recommendations matter.
- Check first: that they can source parts for your model, that they provide a written report (what a service includes), and that your warranty, if still running, permits third-party servicing.
The warranty question, precisely
A manufacturer cannot void a warranty merely because someone competent serviced the lift, but they CAN decline a claim if the warranty terms required their own servicing schedule and it was not followed, or if a third party caused the fault. Translation: while a meaningful warranty or extended plan is running, use the servicing it specifies; once you are out of warranty, the independent saving is real and recurring. The wider aftercare picture, including what happens when national firms get slow in your region, is in national vs independent aftercare.
Bottom line
In warranty: follow the warranty. Out of warranty, common brand, good local independent available: independent, and bank the £20-£50 a year. Acorn lifts and complex curved systems: lean manufacturer or a specialist who names your model confidently on the phone. Annual costs for both routes are in service costs, and either way, watch for the patterns in servicing scams.
Prices are approximate, based on our own research as of June 2026, and vary by supplier, region and staircase. Written in accordance with our editorial policy.
