Guide Overview
Many hard deliveries are defined less by total weight and more by geometry. Tight landings, sharp turns, shallow stair runs, and awkward upper-floor access change what a suitable stair climber looks like in real use.
This guide helps buyers review route photos, turning space, load control, and support questions before they move from research into a priority product comparison.
Key Comparison Points
- Start with route geometry: stair width, landing depth, doorway clearance, handrail conflict, and whether the path includes difficult turns.
- Compare equipment by control and repeatability, especially where appliance delivery, apartment access, or no-lift building work happens every week.
- Use support before payment when route measurements, building photos, or operator planning need manual confirmation.