Updated May 2026 UK Buyer's Decision Guide

How to Choose a UK Bespoke Staircase Manufacturer in 2026

Choosing a UK bespoke staircase manufacturer is a £10,000-£30,000 decision most homeowners make once. This complete 2026 guide gives you the 12 questions to ask, the 8 red flags that should disqualify a supplier, and the certification standards every manufacturer must meet to deliver a UK Building Regulations-compliant staircase.

12
Questions to Ask
8
Red Flags
5 yr
Min Warranty
EXC2
EN 1090 Min
Quick Answer

How do you choose a UK bespoke staircase manufacturer in 2026? Verify four mandatory criteria: (1) BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified steel manufacturing, (2) UKCA Declaration of Performance issued for every project, (3) in-house structural engineer who signs all calculations, (4) 5-year warranty across the assembly. Then ask the 12 questions in the interactive checklist below. Avoid suppliers with any of the 8 red flags — vague pricing, no certification, subcontracted installation without accountability, warranty under 5 years.

Which manufacturer category fits most UK projects? Most UK homeowners commissioning a serious bespoke staircase land with Premium Bespoke Manufacturers (£10,999-£18,000) — a category that includes Continox and offers full single-supplier accountability with all four mandatory criteria included as standard.

What's the most common mistake? Choosing a manufacturer based on headline price alone without normalising for scope. A £4,500 quote often becomes a £10,000 finished project after adding installation, structural certification, Building Control documentation and warranty extensions. Compare quotes with all eight elements (see "Red Flag #2" below).

Buying a bespoke staircase in the UK is a strange shopping experience. It's a £10,000-£30,000 purchase, you'll do it once or twice in your lifetime, and the market is genuinely opaque — the same product description ("modern open-tread staircase, oak and glass") can mean four wildly different things at four wildly different price points, and there's no consumer authority publishing manufacturer ratings.

This guide gives you the framework professional architects and specifiers use to evaluate manufacturers — adapted into language any UK homeowner can apply. Twelve questions to ask, eight red flags to disqualify, four certification standards to verify, and a decision matrix to match your project to the right manufacturer category. By the end, you'll be able to read any UK staircase quote and immediately know whether it's competitive within its band — or competitive only because key elements are missing.

The 4 Manufacturer Categories — Understand the Market First

UK bespoke staircase manufacturers fall into four clearly-defined categories by business model, manufacturing approach and price band. Recognising which category a supplier belongs to within the first five minutes of conversation tells you everything about what to expect — and what to ask next.

Before you can compare manufacturers, you need to understand that they aren't all selling the same thing. The UK staircase market splits into four distinct business models, each operating at a different price band, with different strengths, different limitations, and different appropriate use cases. Match your project to the right category before you start collecting quotes.

Category 01

DIY Kit Suppliers

£3,000 – £6,000 (supply only)

Online configurators and high-volume manufacturers shipping flat-pack kits to the homeowner or trade buyer. The price covers components only; everything else is the customer's responsibility.

  • Standardised geometry only
  • Online ordering, no site visit
  • Pine, oak veneer or engineered timber
  • Customer arranges installation separately
  • Best for: trade buyers, simple straight stairs, DIY-comfortable
Category 02

Local Joineries

£4,000 – £8,000 (made + fitted)

Traditional UK joiners running small workshops within a 30-60 mile radius of the project. Made-to-measure closed-string staircases in pine, oak or hardwood — the dominant model for replacement in mid-market UK housing.

  • Made-to-measure traditional construction
  • Hand-finished newels and handrails
  • Direct relationship with craftsman
  • Installation typically included
  • Best for: period properties, traditional aesthetic
Category 04

Designer Studios

£18,000 – £35,000+ (signature)

London-area or regional studios with named designers, physical showrooms and architect referral relationships. Specification often identical to Category 3; the £5,000-£10,000 premium pays for brand, showroom, designer name and longer lead times.

  • Named designer-led service
  • Physical showroom + samples
  • Premium-tier portfolio
  • 10-14 week lead times typical
  • Best for: high-end London residential, hotel, retail, signature design

For most UK homeowners commissioning a serious bespoke staircase as part of a renovation or new build, Category 3 (Premium Bespoke Manufacturers) represents the value sweet spot — the band where every mandatory certification is included, where warranties run to 5 years across the whole assembly, and where pricing reflects the actual cost of fabrication, engineering and installation rather than brand premium. For a deeper market analysis with worked examples, see our complete UK Staircase Price Bands guide.

Interactive Checklist · Print Ready

12 Questions to Ask Every Manufacturer

Tap each question to reveal what to expect, what a good answer looks like, and what should make you walk away. Print or screenshot before your supplier site survey — every question here protects you against the £20,000 mistake.

Bespoke staircase steelwork must be calculated under BS EN 1991-1-1 (imposed loading 1.5 kN/m² + 0.5 kN point load) and BS EN 1993-1-1 (Eurocode 3 steel design). The right manufacturer has an in-house or contracted structural engineer who signs every project's calculations. The wrong manufacturer either skips this step entirely or treats it as a £1,500-£3,000 add-on.
Good answer: "Our in-house structural engineer signs every project. Calculations are issued at design approval stage and form part of your Building Control documentation."
Walk away if: "We don't do structural calculations" or "You'd need to engage a structural engineer separately."
BS EN 1090-1 is the mandatory European standard for the manufacture of structural steelwork in the UK market. Architectural staircases require minimum Execution Class 2 (EXC2) — typical residential and small commercial. EXC3 and EXC4 are for major civil engineering structures. If a manufacturer cannot specify their EXC certification number on demand, they are not currently producing UK-Building-Regs-compliant architectural steel.
Good answer: "Yes, our workshop is BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified. The certification number is on every project's UKCA Declaration of Performance."
Walk away if: "We use trusted local fabricators" without specifying certification, or "EN 1090 is overkill for residential" — it isn't, it's the legal minimum.
A bespoke staircase is a 25-30 year asset. The right manufacturer warrants the complete assembly (steel, oak, glass, fittings, finish) for minimum 5 years against manufacturing defect. The wrong manufacturer fragments warranties — 1 year on installation, 2 years on glass, 5 years on steel — meaning you have to argue with multiple parties when something goes wrong.
Good answer: "5-year manufacturer's warranty across the entire staircase assembly, single point of contact, no exceptions for components."
Walk away if: Warranty under 5 years; warranty fragmented across multiple parties; or warranty conditional on annual servicing.
Under UK Construction Products Regulations, structural products including architectural staircases must be issued with a UKCA marking (or CE marking pre-2025 transition) and accompanied by a Declaration of Performance (DoP). The DoP states the product's performance against harmonised standards. If a manufacturer cannot issue a DoP, they cannot legally sell architectural steelwork in the UK market.
Good answer: "Yes, every project is issued with a UKCA Declaration of Performance signed by our authorised representative. It's part of your Building Control documentation pack."
Walk away if: "What's a DoP?" or "We don't bother with that for residential" — both are non-compliance with current UK law.
Installation accountability matters because a beautifully manufactured staircase can be ruined by poor fitting. The right manufacturer either installs with their own team (full accountability), or works with named long-term installation partners who carry the same accountability under contract. The wrong manufacturer hands you off to "a fitter" they've never used before, with no quality control loop back to manufacturing.
Good answer: "Our own installation team for UK installs, or our named partner installers (X, Y, Z) for areas outside our direct coverage. All work guaranteed under our warranty."
Walk away if: "We deliver — you arrange installation" without offering a vetted partner; or "We use whoever's local" without naming them.
Realistic UK lead times in 2026: 2-4 weeks for DIY kits, 4-8 weeks for joinery, 6-8 weeks for premium bespoke manufacturers (Continox standard), 10-14 weeks for designer studios, 6-12 months for luxury architectural commissions. Suppliers quoting dramatically shorter or longer than these bands warrant questioning — too short suggests they're skipping engineering or quality steps; too long suggests poor production planning.
Good answer: "6-8 weeks from confirmed order to install for our standard configurations. Bespoke geometry adds 1-2 weeks. We confirm the install date in writing at order stage."
Walk away if: "We can have it with you next week" (no time for engineering or proper fabrication) or "It depends — we'll let you know" (no production planning system).
The right manufacturer issues a single fixed-price quote after free site survey covering design, manufacture, installation, certification — all elements. The fixed price is invoiced at agreed milestones; there are no add-ons during the project. The wrong manufacturer issues a low headline price with "subject to site conditions" caveats, and add-ons appear during fitting (typically £1,500-£4,000 of additional cost the homeowner didn't budget).
Good answer: "Single fixed price after free survey. Includes everything except VAT and unusual making-good. No add-ons during the project."
Walk away if: "Subject to final site measurement" without explaining what could change; "Glass charged extra at install"; or "Day-rate add-ons if the structure needs more work."
Eight items must be specified as in or out: (1) site survey, (2) 3D design visuals, (3) structural calculations signed by engineer, (4) Building Control documentation pack, (5) professional installation, (6) UKCA / DoP certification, (7) warranty, (8) VAT basis. A £14,000 quote with all 8 included is competitive against a £4,500 "supply only" kit that needs £6,000 of additions before completion. Always normalise.
Good answer: Provides a clear written list of all 8 elements with In/Out clearly marked. For residential, expects all to be Included.
Walk away if: "Most of that is extra" without specifying which items, or refuses to put inclusions in writing.
A bespoke staircase costs £10,000-£30,000 and you cannot see it before it's installed. Reputable manufacturers issue 3D photorealistic visuals at design approval stage — typically before full payment is taken — so you can sign off on geometry, materials and proportions while changes are still cheap. Manufacturers without 3D visualisation capability are operating below current industry standard.
Good answer: "Yes, photorealistic 3D rendered in your space using survey measurements. Issued at design approval stage. You sign off the visuals before manufacture starts."
Walk away if: "We send 2D sketches" (insufficient for proportion sign-off); "Visuals are extra"; or "We'll make it the way we always do."
BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 is a European standard — it applies identically whether the workshop is in Sheffield, Krakow or Stuttgart. The location of fabrication is irrelevant; what matters is the certification, traceability and quality control. Honest manufacturers state where their fabrication happens. Continox is UK-branded with EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified manufacturing near Krakow, Poland — this is openly stated and is the reason we can offer Category 3 specification at £10,999 vs equivalent Category 4 pricing of £18,000+.
Good answer: Tells you where the workshop is, the EN 1090 EXC class, and provides the certification number on request.
Walk away if: Vague answers like "from a trusted partner" or "various UK suppliers" — both suggest no consistent quality control.
Even on premium installations, occasional snags occur — a small finish blemish, a fascia detail needing tweaking, a balustrade fitting requiring adjustment after settlement. The right manufacturer has a defined snag process: a snag list at handover, a specific window (typically 30-90 days) for return visits, and a named contact who manages the resolution. The wrong manufacturer disappears after the final invoice is paid.
Good answer: "Snag list at handover, return visit within 30 days included as standard, named project manager handles resolution. 5-year warranty covers manufacturing defects beyond that."
Walk away if: "We don't do snag visits" or "Anything after install is extra" — both indicate disposable customer relationships.
Reputable UK manufacturers maintain a portfolio of completed projects available for review — typically on their website, on Houzz, or by request. The right manufacturer can provide 3-5 case studies in your region (within 50-100 miles), often with the homeowner's permission to be contacted. Continox publishes case studies in our portfolio, including Romsey, Salisbury, Kensington and Cotswolds projects.
Good answer: Provides specific recent projects with photos, locations (anonymised at street level), and offers to put you in touch with past clients on request.
Walk away if: "Our portfolio is confidential" (legitimate manufacturers love showing off work); "We're new to this area" (look elsewhere); or "All on Instagram" without a structured portfolio.

8 Red Flags That Should Disqualify a Manufacturer

Beyond the 12 questions above, eight specific red flags should immediately disqualify a manufacturer from your shortlist. Each flag below indicates either non-compliance with UK Building Regulations, lack of professional capability, or a customer-care model that will leave you exposed if anything goes wrong. None of these are minor concerns — each one is a project-killer.
01

No EN 1090-1 certification mentioned anywhere

BS EN 1090-1 is mandatory for structural steelwork sold in the UK. A manufacturer who can't produce certification numbers and Execution Class on request is operating outside the regulatory framework — your project may fail Building Control, your insurance may be voided, and the asset may be unsellable when you come to move home.

02

Vague pricing — won't issue a fixed quote

"Subject to site conditions" caveats, "to be confirmed" line items, or quotes that hedge with day-rate add-ons all signal a pricing model designed to extract additional money during fitting when you have no leverage. Any reputable manufacturer issues a fixed-price quote after free site survey.

03

No structural engineer in-house or contracted

Structural calculations are mandatory for Building Control sign-off on architectural staircases. A manufacturer without engineering capability either skips this step (non-compliance) or treats it as a £1,500-£3,500 add-on you'd pay to a separate engineer. Both are problems.

04

Subcontracts installation to "a fitter we found"

Manufacturing quality can be undone by poor installation. Manufacturers who hand you off to an unvetted local fitter remove themselves from the accountability chain — when the staircase squeaks or moves, manufacturer blames installer, installer blames manufacturer, you're the one chasing.

05

Warranty under 5 years or component-only

A bespoke staircase is a 25-30 year asset. Anything less than 5-year warranty across the whole assembly indicates the manufacturer doesn't expect their product to last that long, or doesn't want to commit. Component-only warranties (1 year glass, 2 years finish, 5 years steel) fragment your recourse when something fails at the boundary between components.

06

Won't provide written construction method

Particularly relevant for "cantilever" staircases, where the difference between true and faux cantilever determines wall requirements, cost and certification path. A manufacturer who refuses to specify construction method in writing is hiding something — see our Faux vs True Cantilever guide.

07

Pressure to commit before site survey

"Sign today and we'll hold this price" or "Deposit now to lock in your slot" before a site survey has happened are classic high-pressure sales techniques inappropriate for a £10,000+ purchase. Reputable manufacturers conduct free site survey, issue fixed quote, and give you reasonable time to decide. No exceptions.

08

No portfolio or verifiable references

Every legitimate UK staircase manufacturer maintains a portfolio of completed projects — on their website, on Houzz, on Trustpilot, or as case studies. A "manufacturer" who can show only stock photos, render-only examples, or "completed projects under NDA" without any verifiable proof is either too new to the market to trust or not actually delivering what they claim.

The disqualification ruleEven one red flag is enough to remove a manufacturer from your shortlist. These are not minor preferences — they are markers of regulatory non-compliance, operational immaturity, or customer-care models designed to maximise their margins at your expense. The UK staircase market has enough competent manufacturers operating without these problems that you should never compromise on any of the eight.

Certification Standards You Must Verify

Four certification standards apply to virtually every UK bespoke staircase. The right manufacturer treats these as mandatory baseline; the wrong manufacturer treats them as optional extras. Verify all four before signing any contract — printable as a one-page architect's cheat sheet.
BS EN 1090-1 EXC2

Steel Manufacturing Certification

The European standard for execution of steel and aluminium structures. Architectural staircases require minimum Execution Class 2 (EXC2). The manufacturer's workshop must hold this certification — issued by an accredited Notified Body and verifiable on the certification body's public register. Continox holds EN 1090-1 EXC2 at our Krakow workshop.

UKCA / DoP

UK Conformity Assessment + Declaration of Performance

UKCA marking replaced CE marking for most UK-market products from 2025. Architectural steelwork must carry UKCA marking accompanied by a Declaration of Performance (DoP) stating the product's performance against harmonised standards. Without both, the product cannot legally be sold for use in UK construction projects.

BS 6180:2011

Glass Balustrade Code of Practice

The British Standard for protective barriers in and about buildings. Specifies loading requirements, glass type (toughened or laminated, depending on application), height (typically 900mm minimum, 1100mm in some applications), and post-failure behaviour. Continox standard glass spec is 17mm toughened laminated, comfortably exceeding BS 6180 requirements.

BS EN 1991-1-1

Eurocode 1 — Imposed Loadings

Specifies imposed loads for buildings, including stairs. Domestic stairs: 1.5 kN/m² uniformly distributed + 1.5 kN concentrated point load, with a 1.4 partial safety factor under serviceability limit state. Manufacturers must calculate to these values regardless of construction method (true cantilever, faux cantilever, central spine, conventional stringer).

For the full architect-level NBS-compatible specification clauses covering all four standards, see our Staircase Specification Guide for Architects — including downloadable spec text for Q40 (stairs) and P30 (balustrade) NBS sections.

UK bespoke staircase manufacturer U-shape steel plates system showing complex bespoke geometry typical of premium category 3 manufacturer capability
Bespoke Capability
U-Shape Steel Plates · Complex Geometry
UK bespoke staircase manufacturer platform close detail showing 105mm solid oak treads with hidden steel structure typical of premium bespoke quality finish
Quality Finish
105mm Solid Oak · Premium Finish

The Decision Matrix — Match Your Project to Manufacturer Type

Use the four-step decision framework below to identify which manufacturer category genuinely fits your project before you start collecting quotes. Knowing your category before contacting suppliers means you'll only request quotes from manufacturers operating in your band — and won't waste time being quoted out of band on either end.
01

Define Project Complexity

Standard straight stair on identical wall thickness → Category 1-2. Bespoke geometry (Y, U, helical) → Category 3 minimum. Architect-led signature → Category 4. One-off sculptural → outside this guide entirely (luxury architectural).

02

Set Realistic Budget

Total project budget (not headline-only). UK staircase typically 0.5-2% of property value. £400k home → Category 2-3. £1.5M home → Category 3-4. £4M+ home → Category 4 or above. Match honestly.

03

Define Aesthetic

Traditional / period → Category 2. Modern open-tread → Category 3. Architect-led signature → Category 4. Specification quality matters more than name → stick with Category 3 even at higher project values.

04

Risk Tolerance

Comfortable handling installation + structural certification yourself → Category 1 saves money. Single-supplier accountability and single warranty preferred → Category 3-4 only.

The 70/20/10 Rule for UK Homeowners

Across UK residential staircase commissions in 2026, an approximate distribution emerges: 70% of homeowners end up matching to Category 3 (Premium Bespoke Manufacturers) when their project is honestly assessed against the four-step framework above. 20% are best served by Category 2 (Local Joineries) — typically period properties, traditional aesthetics, or simple replacement projects. 10% genuinely benefit from Category 4 (Designer Studios) — typically high-end London residential, hotel, or architect-led signature design where the brand premium is justified by the project context.

If your initial instinct is Category 4 but the project is a typical UK domestic renovation, work through the framework honestly — Category 3 may deliver identical specification at 30-50% lower cost. If your initial instinct is Category 1 and the project is bespoke geometry on a serious renovation, work through the hidden costs honestly — Category 3 may be cheaper finished than Category 1 + add-ons.

Pricing Reality Check — What Each Category Actually Costs

The summary table below shows realistic 2026 UK pricing across all four manufacturer categories — both headline price and true total cost after add-ons. The featured row highlights the category where most UK homeowners actually land when project complexity is honestly matched to manufacturer capability.
Manufacturer Category Headline Price True Total Cost Lead Time Best For
1. DIY Kit Suppliers £3k-£6k £7,500-£10,000 (after install + cert) 2-4 weeks Trade buyers, simple stairs
2. Local Joineries £4k-£8k £5,000-£9,000 (typically inclusive) 4-8 weeks Period property, traditional
4. Designer Studios £18,000-£35,000+ £18,000-£35,000+ 10-14 weeks High-end / signature design

When £4,500 Becomes £10,000 (Hidden Cost Reality)

The most common UK staircase commissioning mistake: comparing a Category 1 headline price (£4,500 kit) to a Category 3 inclusive quote (£14,000 fully installed) and assuming the kit saves £9,500. After adding installation (£2,000-£4,000), structural certification (£1,500), Building Control fees (£400-£800), existing stair removal (£200-£600), and making-good (£300-£800), the kit project totals £8,000-£11,500 finished — closing most of the gap to the £14,000 bespoke. And you're left with a generic catalogue product when you could have had bespoke geometry, premium materials and 5-year warranty for the same money. See full breakdown in our Hidden Costs in UK Staircase Replacement guide.

When £25,000 Brand Premium Isn't Justified

The opposite mistake: paying Category 4 brand premium for Category 3 specification. A £25,000 designer studio project and a £14,000 Continox project may use identical S275 steel grade, identical 17mm laminated glass, identical Grade A oak, identical EN 1090-1 EXC2 certification, identical 5-year warranty. The £11,000 premium pays for the named designer, the showroom experience, the brand identity — not the physical product. For typical UK residential projects (semi-detached, terrace, modest detached), this premium often isn't justified. For £3M+ properties or architect-led signature commissions, it may be — but verify before you pay.

Lead Times in 2026 — What's Realistic

Realistic UK lead times in 2026 vary by category and reflect the actual manufacturing, engineering and installation work required. Suppliers quoting dramatically shorter or longer than these bands warrant questioning:

  • 2-4 weeks (DIY kit suppliers) — components shipped from stock or built from standardised configuration. Realistic because no design or engineering time is required. Customer arranges installation separately, which often adds another 4-6 weeks of finding a fitter, getting structural calculations done if missing, and Building Control documentation.
  • 4-8 weeks (local joineries) — small-batch hand-fabrication in a local workshop. Realistic and competitive timing for traditional staircase replacement. Quality varies; the very best local joiners can match Category 3 quality on traditional designs.
  • 6-8 weeks (premium bespoke / Continox) — the sweet spot. Sufficient time for proper site survey, 3D design approval, structural engineering, EN 1090 EXC2 fabrication, delivery and professional installation. Continox standard 6-8 weeks from confirmed order to installed staircase, fixed at order stage.
  • 10-14 weeks (designer studios) — extended timeline for showroom-based design service, multiple design iterations, longer manufacturing queues. Reasonable for complex projects but excessive for standard configurations at this band.
  • 6-12 months (luxury architectural) — only relevant for signature one-off commissions in £3M+ properties. Outside the scope of typical homeowner decision-making.

Why Manufacturer Location Matters Less Than You Think

UK homeowners often default to assuming "UK-fabricated = better" without examining the certification reality. BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 is a European harmonised standard — it applies identically whether the workshop is in Sheffield, Krakow or Stuttgart. What matters is the certification, traceability and quality control system, not the postcode of the workshop.

UK-Fabricated vs EU-Fabricated — The EN 1090 Reality

The European standard BS EN 1090-1 applies identically across all member and post-Brexit-aligned countries. A workshop in Yorkshire, Krakow, or Stuttgart certified to BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 produces structural steel to the same standard, with the same testing, the same documentation, and the same legal status in the UK construction market. The UK Building Control Body doesn't distinguish between origins of fabrication — it requires only the EN 1090 certification, the UKCA marking and the Declaration of Performance.

What does vary between workshops is cost base, not capability. UK-based workshops carry UK overheads (rent, wages, energy costs reflecting UK market). Continental workshops carry their respective national cost bases. For a single steel staircase, the cost difference can be £3,000-£8,000 — and this is the entire reason Category 3 (Premium Bespoke Manufacturers) and Category 4 (Designer Studios) can produce identical specification staircases at substantially different prices.

UK Brand + Continental Manufacturing = The Continox Model

Continox is UK-branded — UK design service, UK installation team, UK customer care, UK structural engineering, UK accountability. Manufacturing happens at our EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified workshop near Krakow, Poland — the same European standard required for any architectural steel staircase in the UK market, with the cost base advantage that allows us to deliver Category 3 specification at £10,999-£18,000 vs equivalent Category 4 pricing of £18,000-£35,000+.

This isn't a hidden detail — it's openly stated, it's the reason our pricing structure works, and it's compatible with every UK Building Regulations requirement. The certification, traceability, structural engineering and warranty are all UK-standard. The cost saving is real, the specification is uncompromised, and the visual outcome is identical to any UK-fabricated equivalent.

Continox at a Glance — Why Premium Bespoke at £10,999

Continox operates as a Category 3 Premium Bespoke Manufacturer with all four mandatory criteria included as standard: BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified manufacturing, UKCA Declaration of Performance issued for every project, in-house structural engineer signing all calculations, and 5-year warranty across the assembly. Pricing starts at £10,999 for central spine, £11,999 for floating, £12,500 for fully bespoke geometry — all turnkey, all installed across the UK, all with no hidden add-ons.

Our model: UK design and engineering, EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified manufacturing in Krakow, UK installation team. Result: Category 3 specification at pricing 30-50% below equivalent Category 4 designer studios. Same steel grade. Same glass spec. Same oak quality. Same warranty. Different overheads.

£10,999
Central Spine ★
£11,999
Floating
EXC2
EN 1090 Cert
5 yr
Warranty

People Also Ask

The most common questions UK homeowners and architects ask when researching bespoke staircase manufacturers — direct answers below, with deeper detail in the FAQ section.

How do I find a reputable UK staircase manufacturer?

Start with the four mandatory criteria: BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 certification, UKCA Declaration of Performance, in-house structural engineer, 5-year minimum warranty. Any manufacturer missing one of these is not delivering current UK Building Regulations-compliant work.

What questions should I ask before signing a contract?

The 12 questions in this guide cover everything material: structural process, EN 1090 certification, warranty scope, UKCA/DoP, installation team, lead times, fixed pricing, inclusions, 3D visuals, fabrication location, snag process, and references.

How do I avoid hidden costs in a staircase quote?

Demand a fixed-price quote with all 8 elements specified as In or Out: site survey, 3D design, structural calcs, Building Control pack, installation, UKCA/DoP, warranty, VAT basis. Reputable Category 3 manufacturers include all of these.

Is a UK-fabricated staircase better than EU-fabricated?

Not inherently. BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 applies identically across European workshops. Quality depends on the certification, traceability and quality control system — not the postcode. Continental fabrication often delivers identical specification at lower cost.

What's the difference between a bespoke and off-the-shelf staircase?

Bespoke = made-to-measure for your specific dimensions, with custom geometry options (Y-shape, U-shape, helical), premium materials and full structural engineering. Off-the-shelf = catalogue product with fixed geometry, often supplied without structural calculations or installation. Different products entirely.

How long should a UK bespoke staircase last?

A properly engineered Category 3 or 4 staircase has a 25-30 year design life for the steel structure, oak treads typically refinished every 8-12 years, glass balustrade indefinite if not damaged. Continox 5-year warranty covers the first portion of this lifetime against manufacturing defect.

Manufacturer Choice FAQ

Detailed answers to the most common technical and commercial questions about choosing a UK bespoke staircase manufacturer in 2026.

Three verification steps: (1) Request the EN 1090-1 certification number and Notified Body name in writing, then verify on the certification body's public register (e.g. NQA, Lloyd's Register, BSI). (2) Request a sample UKCA Declaration of Performance from a recent project — this should clearly state the manufacturer's authorised representative, product description, and harmonised standards reference. (3) Ask for the structural engineer's professional qualification (typically MICE or MIStructE) and indemnity insurance details. A reputable manufacturer provides all three within 24 hours of request. Continox provides this documentation as standard with every quote.
Choose based on the certification, accountability and price — not on the postcode of the workshop. BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 is a European harmonised standard that applies identically across UK and EU workshops, and UK Building Control treats EN 1090-certified steel from any European workshop as equally compliant. The cost difference between UK-based and Continental-based workshops is typically £3,000-£8,000 per staircase, reflecting cost base differences rather than quality differences. The Continox model — UK design + engineering + installation + accountability, with EN 1090-1 EXC2 manufacturing in Krakow — delivers Category 3 specification at pricing 30-50% below equivalent UK-based Category 4 designer studios, with no compromise on certification or quality. The decision should be: are the four mandatory criteria all in place? If yes, location is irrelevant.
3 quotes from different manufacturer categories gives the clearest picture — typically one from Category 2 (local joinery), one from Category 3 (premium bespoke / Continox), one from Category 4 (designer studio). Three quotes from within the same category just shows you the price range for that category, not whether it's the right category for your project. The four-step decision matrix in this guide identifies your category before you collect quotes — saving everyone time and avoiding price-shock from being quoted out of band.
Because cheaper quotes typically exclude scope. A £4,500 Category 1 kit becomes a £7,500-£10,000 finished project after adding installation (£2,000-£4,000), structural certification (£1,500+), Building Control documentation (£400-£800), existing stair removal (£200-£600), and making-good (£300-£800). The £14,000 Category 3 quote includes all of these — so the "true gap" between Categories 1 and 3 is often £3,000-£5,000, not £9,500. And you're paying for measurably better specification (solid oak vs engineered, 17mm laminated glass vs 12mm, EN 1090 EXC2 vs none, 5-year warranty vs 1-2). For full breakdown see our Hidden Costs guide.
UK industry standard for Category 3 (Premium Bespoke) is 30-50% deposit at order, with the balance split across milestones (typically 30-40% on manufacturing complete, balance on installation completion and snag list signed off). Deposits exceeding 50% upfront are unusual for residential and warrant questioning. Deposits below 25% may indicate the manufacturer is operating without sufficient cash flow buffer. Continox standard payment schedule: 30% deposit on order, 40% on manufacturing complete (with site visit / 3D approval), 30% on installation complete and snag list cleared.
Three protective measures: (1) Use a credit card for any deposit over £100 — Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 makes the credit card company jointly liable if the supplier fails to deliver. (2) Check the manufacturer's company status on Companies House before ordering — look for accounts filed on time, no pending insolvency proceedings. (3) Avoid manufacturers requesting unusually large upfront deposits (>50%). For Continox specifically, our limited company status, filed accounts and trading history are publicly verifiable on Companies House under Continox Ltd.
For Category 3 and Category 4 manufacturers with in-house structural engineering signed under MICE/MIStructE professional indemnity insurance, independent verification is rarely necessary — the engineering is already accountable. For Category 1 and Category 2 where structural calculations are commissioned separately or skipped, an independent engineer at £1,500-£3,500 is essential to achieve Building Control sign-off. The mandatory criteria (in-house structural engineer signing all calcs, MICE/MIStructE qualification, professional indemnity insurance) are precisely designed to make independent verification unnecessary. If you're choosing a Category 1-2 supplier and need to commission a structural engineer separately, the total project cost often equals or exceeds Category 3 — at which point switch categories.
Three differentiators within Category 3: (1) Pricing transparency — Continox publishes fixed starting prices on the homepage (Floating £11,999, Central Spine £10,999, Bespoke £12,500); most Category 3 competitors require contact for pricing. (2) Continental manufacturing under UK brand — EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified Krakow workshop combined with UK design, engineering, installation and accountability allows Category 3 specification at the lower end of the band. (3) No hidden add-ons — single fixed-price quote covers everything except VAT and unusual making-good; what's quoted is what's invoiced. For comparison context across the full UK market, see our Price Bands Compared guide.
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Continox operates as a Category 3 Premium Bespoke Manufacturer with all four mandatory criteria included: BS EN 1090-1 EXC2 certified, UKCA Declaration of Performance, in-house structural engineering, 5-year warranty. Floating from £11,999, Central Spine from £10,999, fully bespoke from £12,500 — all turnkey, no hidden costs.