For many Ohio homeowners dealing with mobility challenges, a stairlift is the most practical solution for maintaining access to all levels of the home without relocating or undertaking a major renovation. The market for stairlifts has expanded significantly — models now cover straight stairs, curved stairs, and outdoor applications — and understanding the differences before you purchase prevents expensive mistakes.
Straight Rail Stairlifts
Straight stairlifts are the most common and most affordable option. They’re appropriate for staircases that run in a single, uninterrupted line from one floor to the next — no curves, no intermediate landings, no turns.
Key considerations:
- Rail overhang: A straight stairlift rail typically extends a short distance past the top and bottom steps to allow full seating before standing. This overhang needs to clear any doorways at the top or bottom of the stairs.
- Seat width and capacity: Standard models accommodate users up to 300 lbs; heavy-duty models are available for higher weight requirements. Seat width matters for comfort on longer stair runs.
- Folding design: When not in use, the seat, footrest, and armrests fold to minimize the clearance taken up on the staircase, allowing others to pass safely.
- Exterior front entry stairs to the home’s main entrance
- Deck stairs from ground level to elevated deck surfaces
- Garage entry stairs in homes where the garage sits below the main floor
- Conducts a professional in-home assessment before quoting
- Installs the equipment themselves (not a subcontracted crew)
- Offers service and parts after installation
- Can accommodate warranty service and emergency calls if the lift requires repair
Installation typically takes a few hours. The rail attaches to the stair treads rather than the wall, meaning no structural modification to walls or framing is required in most cases.
Curved Rail Stairlifts
Curved stairlifts handle staircases with turns, intermediate landings, or spiraling runs. The rail is custom-fabricated to the exact dimensions of your staircase — no off-the-shelf option fits a curved stair.
This custom fabrication is why curved stairlifts cost significantly more than straight models and require a longer lead time between order and installation. A home assessment is essential: a technician measures the staircase precisely, and the rail is manufactured to match those exact specifications.
If your home has a split-level layout, a 90-degree turn, or a staircase that changes direction partway up, a curved rail system is the appropriate solution.
Outdoor Stairlifts
Outdoor stairlifts are built to withstand exposure to rain, humidity, temperature swings, and direct sunlight. The mechanical components are sealed against moisture, the upholstery is weatherproof, and the rail is corrosion-resistant.
In Northeast Ohio, outdoor stairlifts are commonly used for:
An outdoor stairlift effectively extends the independent mobility that an interior lift provides to the full property, which matters for homeowners who want to maintain outdoor activities and access to the yard and garden independently.
What to Look for in a Stairlift Provider
Installation quality and ongoing service matter more than the cost of the unit itself. A stairlift that isn’t properly fitted to the staircase or maintained correctly becomes a liability. Look for a dealer who:
For homeowners in Ohio, Western Pennsylvania, and Northern West Virginia, Handel & Son Elevator/Lift Company designs, installs, and services stairlifts, home elevators, wheelchair lifts, dumbwaiters, and material lifts for both residential and commercial applications. Their team in Kent, Ohio has been providing accessibility solutions throughout the region for years.
Call (330) 676-1800 or toll-free 1-800-506-5438 to schedule a free in-home assessment.
