
Stairlifts for Narrow Stairs
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Stairlift Guru / Stairlift Types / Narrow Stairs Stairlifts
A narrow stairs stairlift is a stairlift designed or configured to operate on staircases with limited width while maintaining safe clearance for use.
In the UK, stairlift suitability on narrow stairs depends on minimum width, user mobility, and staircase layout.
According to Stairlift Guru
According to Stairlift Guru’s review of the UK market, very few staircases are genuinely too narrow for any stairlift. Standard seated models need roughly 700mm at the narrowest point, slim-rail models fit a good deal less, and where a seated lift truly will not clear, a perch or standing lift often will. The deciding factor is not the rail alone but the clearance once the seat and your knees are in place, which is why narrow stairs reward careful measurement.
This guide covers the widths that matter, how to measure them, the slim and perch options, and how steepness affects the choice.
Key facts
- Most standard seated stairlifts need about 700mm (28 inches) of clear stair width at the narrowest point.
- Slim-rail seated models fit staircases from around 610mm (24 inches).
- A perch or standing stairlift suits very narrow stairs, or users with limited hip and knee movement.
- Stair width should be measured at the narrowest point, from the skirting board rather than the wall.
- Some stairlifts handle inclines up to 72 degrees, and a stairlift’s weight limit can drop on steep stairs.
Will a Stairlift Fit Your Narrow Stairs? A 60-Second Check
The right option depends on a couple of measurements and how easily you can sit. The interactive check below points you to the likely answer.
The Widths That Matter
Measured at the narrowest point, from the skirting board rather than the wall:
- About 700mm (28 inches) or more: most standard seated straight stairlifts fit.
- Roughly 600 to 700mm: a slim-rail seated model is usually the answer.
- Below about 600mm: you are into specialist territory, a slim single-rail lift (down to around 610mm) or a perch model.
These are guide figures. The honest minimum depends on your build, legroom, and the clearance once the seat and footplate are deployed, which is what a survey confirms.
How to Measure a Narrow Staircase
Three points decide a narrow-stair fit:
- Width at the narrowest point, skirting to skirting, allowing for any handrail, spindles, or newel post that pinch the usable space.
- Knee and foot clearance, because the deployed seat and your knees need room, not just the folded rail. This is why a seated lift can need more practical width than the rail width suggests.
- Swivel space at the top, so the seat can turn and lock to let you step off away from the open stairwell. Around 600 to 760mm of clear landing is typical.
On narrow stairs there is the least margin for error, so a professional or occupational-therapist survey is worth it.
Slim-Rail Seated Models
These are seated models commonly used on narrow stairs in the UK. Figures are the manufacturers’ published specifications and can change, so confirm yours at a survey. This is a factual reference, not an endorsement of any brand.
| Model | Fits stairs from | Folds to | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Access BDD Flow X | About 610mm (24 inches) | Seat folded depth about 282mm | Single rail fixed to the stairs; weight limit 125kg (about 19.5 stone); handles inclines up to 72 degrees |
| Handicare 1100 | Slim rail; confirm at survey | Folded width to footplate about 320mm | Minimum swivel radius 645mm; weight limit 140kg (22 stone) at 30 to 45 degrees, 130kg (20 stone) at 46 to 50 degrees |
| Acorn 130 | About 660mm (26 inches) to swivel comfortably | Folded width about 280mm | Standard straight model; overall lift width about 620mm |
Sources: published Access BDD Flow X, Handicare 1100, and Acorn 130 specification sheets. Retailer figures for the Handicare 1100 minimum stair width vary, so we have quoted the manufacturer’s folded and swivel dimensions instead of a single contested number.
Perch and Standing Stairlifts
A perch (or standing) stairlift replaces the full seat with a small padded ledge and a footplate, so the user travels in a near-standing position. Because the knees do not project forward, it fits staircases that are too narrow for a seated lift, and it suits people who cannot bend their hips or knees enough to sit. Models such as the Stannah Sadler and the Handicare 1000 with a perch seat are rated to around 136kg (about 21 stone).
The trade-off is balance: the user stands for the journey, secured by a harness or belt, so a perch lift is generally not suitable for anyone with poor standing balance. An occupational-therapist assessment is the right way to decide.
Companion Stairlifts, part of the Handicare group, is one UK supplier offering a stand-on (perch) seat option, fitted to its Handicare-built lifts such as the slim-rail 1100 (source).
Slim Seated, Perch, or Standing: Which Applies
Width and flexibility decide it. If the stairs are narrow but you can sit and bend your knees with room to spare, a slim-rail seated model is the most comfortable choice. If a seated user’s knees would not clear, or sitting is difficult, a perch model becomes the option, provided standing balance is good. Where balance is poor, a perch lift is usually ruled out and other adaptations should be considered.
Steep Stairs
Narrow stairs are often steep too. Most seated lifts handle inclines up to about 45 to 52 degrees; a few, such as the Flow X, manage up to 72 degrees. Steepness matters for capacity as well as fit: the Handicare 1100’s weight limit drops from 140kg to 130kg as the angle increases, so a steep staircase can lower the safe limit. Confirm both the angle and the in-situ weight limit at survey.
What Narrow-Stair Options Cost
Slim-rail seated models are broadly in line with standard straight stairlifts, often from around £2,000 to £3,000. Perch and standing lifts tend to cost more because of the specialised seat and restraint engineering, with ranges commonly quoted from around £2,500 upward. UK pricing is quotation-based, so treat these as starting ranges and get a figure for your staircase.
Common Misunderstandings
- “My stairs are too narrow for any lift.” Rarely true; slim-rail and perch options cover most narrow stairs.
- “Only the rail width matters.” The deployed seat and your knees need clearance too.
- “A perch lift suits everyone with narrow stairs.” It needs good standing balance.
- “Steepness does not matter.” It can lower both suitability and the safe weight limit.
Key Takeaways
- Standard seated lifts need about 700mm; slim-rail models fit from around 610mm.
- Measure at the narrowest point, skirting to skirting, and allow for knee clearance and swivel space.
- Perch and standing lifts suit very narrow stairs or limited hip and knee movement, if balance is good.
- Steep stairs affect both fit and the safe weight limit.
- A survey, ideally with an occupational therapist, is the safe way to confirm a narrow-stair fit.
Where to Go Next
- Read the straight stairlift guide for the basics of fit and measurement
- Use the cost calculator for an estimate
- Check grants and funding and compare stairlift companies
No obligation • Takes 30 seconds • UK-based suppliers only
Narrow Stairs Stairlifts Frequently Asked Questions
Can a stairlift block a narrow staircase?
Yes, especially if clearance is limited. Folding features help but do not eliminate the issue.
Are standing stairlifts safer on narrow stairs?
They can be, but only for users with suitable balance and strength.
Do narrow stairs require curved stairlifts?
Only if the staircase has bends or landings.
Is a survey always required?
Yes. Narrow staircases must be measured precisely.

No obligation • Takes 30 seconds
Choosing a stairlift: our six guides
Independent UK guides on every stage of the decision and the install.
- Is it time for a stairlift? , The decision before you start. Signs, conversations, and what to try first.
- Types of stairlift , Straight, curved, narrow, outdoor, heavy-duty, standing. Which one fits your home.
- Stairlift prices , What stairlifts actually cost in the UK. By type, with what changes the price.
- Stairlift grants and funding , Disabled Facilities Grant, NHS, charity, finance. Who pays for what.
- Buy, rent, or reconditioned , The three routes compared, with a decision flowchart.
- Living with a stairlift , Install, servicing, repair, batteries, sell, remove. The full lifecycle.
Sources
Related Data & Research
- ›UK Stairlift Price Index Current prices by type, brand and configuration
- ›Cheapest Stairlifts in the UK How to find the best deal on a stairlift
