Keep the home you love—without turning stairs into a daily obstacle
What a stair lift is (and what it isn’t)
A stair lift is different from a wheelchair platform lift (which carries a wheelchair on a platform) and different from a residential elevator (which moves vertically inside a shaft/hoistway). Stair lifts are often the fastest path to improved access when you can transfer to a seat and your staircase layout supports it.
Key factors that determine the “right” stair lift
Did you know?
Step-by-step: what to expect during stair lift installation
Step 1: In-home assessment and measurements
Step 2: Recommendation of equipment and safety options
Step 3: Scheduling and preparation
Step 4: Rail mounting and lift setup
Step 5: Testing, user training, and handoff
Quick comparison table: stair lift vs. wheelchair lift vs. home elevator
| Option | Best for | Typical constraints | Why it’s chosen |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stair lift | Seated rider who can transfer safely | Stairway geometry; landing clearances; user must sit/stand | Fast, practical access between floors with minimal construction |
| Wheelchair platform lift | Wheelchair/scooter users who stay in mobility device | Space for platform/doors/gates; site conditions; code requirements | Direct wheelchair access where an elevator isn’t feasible |
| Residential elevator | Long-term aging-in-place, multi-user households, carrying items | Requires planning/space; higher build scope | Most versatile access and convenience across floors |