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Stairlifts for Arthritis: Which Features Actually Help

Last Updated on June 12, 2026

Last reviewed: 12 June 2026.

Key takeaways

  • Arthritis affects grip, hips and knees differently, so the right features matter more than the brand.
  • Joystick or paddle controls beat small buttons for arthritic hands; test them before buying.
  • A powered swivel seat removes the twisting that hurts most at the top of the stairs.
  • Seat height and width are adjustable on most models: insist the installer sets them for the user, not the showroom.

Arthritis is one of the most common reasons people buy a stairlift, and also one of the most common reasons they end up unhappy with the wrong one. The lift moves fine; the controls, seat or swivel do not suit arthritic joints. Here is what to look for, joint by joint.

Hands and wrists: the controls

Standard stairlift controls are a small toggle or button held continuously during travel. With rheumatoid or osteoarthritic hands, that sustained pressure is exactly what hurts. Look for large paddle or joystick controls operable with a palm or forearm rather than a pinch grip, and remotes with big buttons (carers can also drive the lift entirely by remote). At a test ride, spend more time on the controls than the ride.

Hips and knees: getting on and off

  • Seat height: a higher perch means less knee bend when sitting and standing; installers can set this, so have the user present at the survey.
  • Powered swivel: turns the seat to face the landing at the push of a control instead of a painful twist; the single most-praised upgrade among arthritic users.
  • Armrest design: wide, sturdy armrests take real weight when pushing up to stand.
  • Standing or perch lifts: for those who find sitting-then-standing harder than standing still, a standing stairlift can suit, where headroom allows: see standing vs perch.

Flares, progression and future-proofing

Arthritis fluctuates. Buy for the bad weeks, not the good ones: powered options that seem unnecessary today become essential during flares. If hand function is declining, mention it at the OT assessment; it affects which controls the OT recommends and supports the grant case. VAT exemption applies to arthritis as a chronic condition: who qualifies for 0% VAT.

Costs and getting it right

The features above add £200-£800 to a base lift; current ranges are in our pricing index. Insist on a home demo with the actual user, get the seat set up for them in writing on the quote, and compare at least three installers (free quotes). For the wider context of signs it is time, see 7 signs it might be time for a stairlift.

Prices are approximate, based on our own research as of June 2026. This article is general information, not financial or medical advice, and 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.
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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.