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Stairlifts for Spiral and Helical Staircases: What Works

Last Updated on June 12, 2026

Last reviewed: 12 June 2026.

Key takeaways

  • Helical (sweeping, no central pole) staircases can usually take a curved stairlift.
  • True spirals around a central column are harder: tread width and headroom, not the bend, are what rule lifts out.
  • Where a spiral cannot take a lift, a through-floor lift is usually the practical alternative.
  • Expect custom-rail pricing: roughly £5,000-£10,000+ where feasible.

“Spiral staircase” covers two quite different things, and the difference decides whether a stairlift is realistic. Here is how installers look at yours, and what to expect if you get a yes.

Helical vs true spiral

A helical staircase sweeps in a curve, often around an open well, with reasonably wide treads along the outer edge: from a rail-bending point of view this is just an elegant curved staircase, and modern custom rails follow it happily along the outside of the curve where treads are widest. A true spiral winds tightly around a central column with wedge-shaped treads. The geometry problem is not the bend, today’s rails can be formed to continuous curves, it is that the usable tread width and the headroom envelope shrink toward the column, and the chair plus passenger must clear both for the full rotation.

What the surveyor checks on a spiral

  • Outer tread width: the chair needs roughly 700mm+ of usable width along its path: compare minimum stair width.
  • Headroom through the rotation, including for the seated passenger’s head and knees.
  • A parking spot at top and bottom clear of the door swing and walkway.
  • Structure: rails fix to treads, and some ornamental metal spirals need additional fixing solutions.
  • Whether the rail can run on the outside of the curve for the entire flight without fouling the well or balustrade.

Costs, and the alternative when it is a no

Feasible spiral and helical installs are bespoke jobs at the top of curved pricing, typically £5,000-£10,000+ in 2026 (curved prices), with manufacture lead times of several weeks (timeline). When the survey says no, usually on tight ornamental spirals, the realistic options are a through-floor lift, relocating the bedroom downstairs, or in listed-building cases a sensitive conversation with the conservation officer before anything else. Get two independent surveys before accepting a no: feasibility judgements on spirals genuinely vary between manufacturers, and surveys are free (get quotes).

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.

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.
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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.