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Stairlift Cost in Utah — 2026 Prices & Ways to Pay

A stairlift in Utah costs about the same as anywhere else in the U.S. As a national baseline, expect roughly $2,500-$8,000 installed for a standard straight-rail lift, $10,000-$20,000 for a custom curved-rail model, and $4,000-$12,000 for an outdoor unit. Those are general industry ranges, not Utah-specific quotes, so the part of this page that is genuinely Utah-specific is which state programs may help pay for a stairlift or other home modifications, and how that coverage actually works. None of these programs pay for a stairlift automatically; most are case-by-case, capped, or are loans rather than grants, so read the details below before counting on any of them.

Quick answer: typical installed cost ranges

Straight (installed): $2,500–$8,000

Curved (installed): $10,000–$20,000

Outdoor (installed): $4,000–$12,000

Broad consumer-guide planning ranges—not quotes. All prices in U.S. dollars (USD).

By Eleanor HayesLast reviewed July 2026

How much does a stairlift cost in Utah?

Utah's overall cost of living and contractor labor rates are broadly near the national average, so the standard ranges above are a reasonable starting point. Along the populous Wasatch Front (Salt Lake City, Provo, Ogden), competition among installers and easy access to dealers tends to keep straight-stair pricing in the typical band. In rural and remote areas of southern and eastern Utah, fewer local dealers and longer travel distances can add to installation or service-call costs, and a curved or outdoor lift may require waiting for a specialist. These are general tendencies, not fixed figures. Always get itemized written quotes from two or three installers before deciding, and ask each quote to spell out the equipment, installation, warranty, and ongoing service costs separately.

Stairlift typeTypical installed range
Straight$2,500–$8,000
Curved (custom rail)$10,000–$20,000
Outdoor$4,000–$12,000

These are national planning ranges that apply in Utah; your quote depends on your staircase, options, and local labor. See the full stairlift cost guide for what's included and what drives price.

Ways to help pay for a stairlift in Utah

Original Medicare doesn't cover stairlifts (they're treated as a home modification, not durable medical equipment), but several Utah programs may help. Coverage is usually case-by-case and based on an assessment—confirm details directly with each program.

Utah Medicaid New Choices Waiver - Environmental Accessibility Adaptations (S5165) — This Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waiver is specifically for people who are already living long term in a nursing facility, a licensed assisted living facility, a licensed small health care (Type N) facility, or another Utah-licensed medical institution, and who want to move back into a community setting such as their own home. You must meet nursing-facility level of care at application and throughout enrollment, and you must be Medicaid-eligible. It is a transition-out-of-an-institution waiver; people who are merely 'at risk of' placement are generally not eligible for this particular waiver. The waiver covers Environmental Accessibility Adaptations (home modifications) under service code S5165, which have a payment limit of $2,000 per episode per the most recently published New Choices Waiver rate sheet (confirm the current limit with the program office). A stairlift may qualify when it is assessed as medically necessary, written into the person's care plan, and installed by a licensed provider, but coverage is decided case-by-case. To confirm whether you qualify, call the New Choices Waiver program at 1-800-662-9651, option 6.

Utah Medicaid Aging Waiver and other HCBS Waivers — Utah operates several 1915(c) HCBS waivers, including the Aging Waiver for adults 65+ (which is the one more suited to people at risk of nursing-home placement), the Acquired Brain Injury Waiver, and the Physical Disabilities Waiver. Some of these cover environmental accessibility adaptations / home modifications such as ramps, grab bars, and accessibility changes when written into the person's individual care plan. None of them cover a stairlift automatically; whether a stairlift is approved is decided by an individual assessment and is case-by-case. Under the Aging Waiver, environmental accessibility adaptations (S5165) have a $5,000 per-purchase limit (per a 2024 legislative rate report). You must be Medicaid-eligible and meet the waiver's level-of-care and slot-availability rules. For Medicaid eligibility questions, call 1-866-435-7414; to ask which waiver fits your situation, start with the Utah Medicaid HCBS waiver page below.

Utah Assistive Technology Program (UATP) - Small Grants — Run by Utah State University's Institute for Disability Research, Policy & Practice as Utah's federally funded Assistive Technology Act program, UATP offers a limited number of small grants of up to $500 to help Utahns obtain assistive technology, which can include accessibility-related equipment. To qualify for a small grant, applicants generally must be at or below 150% of the federal poverty guidelines and have no other funding source. Because the maximum grant is small relative to a stairlift's price, it is best thought of as partial help rather than full funding. Statewide; call 1-800-524-5152.

Utah Assistive Technology Foundation (UATF) - Low-Interest Financing Loans — UATF partners with Zions Bank to provide low-interest loans of roughly $1,000 to $50,000 to purchase assistive technology and accessibility equipment. The foundation pays half of the interest on the loan, and the most interest UATF will pay over the life of any single loan is $2,500, with no application or documentation fees. This is financing, not a grant, so you do repay the principal, but the interest subsidy can make a stairlift more affordable. Apply through UATP at 1-800-524-5152 (direct program line: 435-797-2025).

Utah Area Agencies on Aging / Aging & Adult Services — Utah's local Area Agencies on Aging (AAAs), coordinated by the state Division of Aging & Adult Services, administer Older Americans Act funds and the Alternatives / Home and Community-Based Services program, which provides individualized in-home services that help older adults stay in their own homes. The state's services page does not specifically list stairlifts or home modifications, and what is available varies by region and by income/eligibility, so home-modification help is not guaranteed and must be confirmed locally. Call the Utah Division of Aging & Adult Services (801-538-3910, toll-free 1-877-424-4640) and ask to be referred to your local AAA, or find your local agency on the Utah Commission on Aging AAA directory.

Compare nearby states: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho.

Frequently asked questions

Does Utah Medicaid pay for a stairlift?

Sometimes, but not automatically. Utah Medicaid does not cover stairlifts as a routine benefit. Several Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers, such as the New Choices Waiver and the Aging Waiver, cover environmental accessibility adaptations (home modifications), and a stairlift can be considered when an assessment shows it is medically necessary and it is written into your care plan. Coverage is case-by-case. Under the New Choices Waiver, home modifications (service code S5165) have a payment limit of $2,000 per episode per the most recently published New Choices Waiver rate sheet (confirm the current limit with the program office), and that waiver is only for people who are already living long term in a nursing facility or similar licensed institution and are moving back into the community. You must be Medicaid-eligible and enrolled in the relevant waiver.

How much does a stairlift cost in Utah?

Utah prices track national ranges: roughly $2,500-$8,000 installed for a straight-rail lift, $10,000-$20,000 for a curved-rail lift, and $4,000-$12,000 for an outdoor lift. Curved and outdoor lifts cost more because the rail is custom-built. These are general estimates, not Utah quotes, so get itemized written quotes from two or three installers, and ask whether the price includes installation, warranty, and ongoing service.

Is there low-interest financing for a stairlift in Utah?

Yes. The Utah Assistive Technology Foundation (UATF), working with Zions Bank, offers low-interest loans from roughly $1,000 to $50,000 for assistive technology and accessibility equipment. The foundation pays half the interest, the most interest it will pay over the life of any single loan is $2,500, and there are no application fees. This is a loan you repay, not a grant. The Utah Assistive Technology Program (UATP) also offers a small number of small grants (up to $500 for those at or below 150% of the federal poverty guidelines). Both are reached at 1-800-524-5152.

Where can I get help finding home-modification assistance in Utah?

Start by calling the Utah Division of Aging & Adult Services at 801-538-3910 (toll-free 1-877-424-4640) and asking for your local Area Agency on Aging. For Medicaid eligibility and waiver questions, call 1-866-435-7414, or the New Choices Waiver program at 1-800-662-9651, option 6. For assistive technology loans and small grants, call the Utah Assistive Technology Program at 1-800-524-5152. These offices can explain what you may qualify for. This page is for cost and decision support only and is not medical or legal advice.


Want to estimate your range in under a minute? Try the free stairlift cost calculator.

Sources

  1. Utah Medicaid - Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Waiver Programs: https://medicaid.utah.gov/ltc-2/
  2. Utah Medicaid - New Choices Waiver: https://medicaid.utah.gov/ltc-2/nc/
  3. Utah Medicaid - New Choices Waiver Rate Sheet (Environmental Accessibility Adaptations S5165, $2,000 per episode): https://medicaid-documents.dhhs.utah.gov/Documents/pdfs/ltc/nc/NCW%20FY23%20Rate%20Sheet%20Effective%207.1.2022.pdf
  4. Utah Assistive Technology Program (UATP) - USU: https://idrpp.usu.edu/uatp/
  5. UATP - Small Grants (up to $500, 150% of federal poverty guidelines): https://idrpp.usu.edu/uatp/financing/small-grants
  6. UATP - Loans to Purchase Assistive Technology (Utah Assistive Technology Foundation): https://idrpp.usu.edu/uatp/financing/loans-to-purchase-at
  7. Utah DHHS Aging & Adult Services - Services: https://daas.utah.gov/services/
  8. Utah Commission on Aging - Area Agencies on Aging: https://ucoa.utah.edu/area-agencies-on-aging.php
  9. Utah Legislature - Medicaid Aging Waiver Rates and Spending (2024 legislative rate report; S5165, $5,000 per purchase): https://le.utah.gov/interim/2024/pdf/00003568.pdf
  10. Utah DHHS Aging & Adult Services - Contact: https://daas.utah.gov/contact-2/
  11. Fixr - Stairlift Installation Cost (straight $2,000–$8,000; curved $8,000–$20,000; outdoor $4,000–$12,000): https://www.fixr.com/costs/stairlift-installation