Disability Aids and Equipment

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Disability Aids and Equipment

Introduction

Getting Equipment from your Local Council or NHS

NHS Wheelchairs

Buying New Disability Equipment

Buying and Selling Second Hand Equipment

Hiring Disability Equipment

Hiring From Disability Equipment Stores

Equipment Advice

Donating secondhand mobility aids and equipment

Personal and Home Alarms

 

Introduction

Disability equipment can range from simple aids such as cordless kettle tippers and easy grip cutlery, through to more complex items such as specialist beds and stair lifts. Mobility aids and equipment can include items like walking sticks, wheelchairs and mobility scooters.

This guide provides information on how to get disability equipment for free from your local Health and Social Care Partnership, as well as buying, selling, hiring and donating equipment. It also explains where you can get advice on different equipment types.

If you are looking for information on how to adapt your home to make it more accessible, see our Disabled Home Adaptations information guide .

Getting equipment from your local council or NHS

Your local council’s Social Work department can provide equipment to individuals, following a care needs assessment.

A care needs assessment should be carried out for anyone who appears to need a social care service, for example, if you are disabled, an older person, or have a long-term health condition. You can contact your council’s Social Work department and ask for an assessment yourself, or you can ask someone like a relative or carer to ask for you.

To find the telephone number for your local council’s Social Work department, either contact our helpline or check online at: https://www.mygov.scot/find-your-local-council

The assessment is usually carried out by a care professional such as an Occupational Therapist and normally takes place in your own home. The professional will ask you about your circumstances and look at how you manage day-to-day.  They may recommend equipment, care services or adaptations to make life easier for you.

You may have to wait to be seen as waiting lists can be long and assessments are carried out depending on how urgently you need help.

If it counts as “free personal and nursing care” any equipment is free. Usually councils are unlikely to provide mobility scooters or stair lifts. We have a guide on grant funding which may be useful if you need these items.

NHS wheelchairs

The NHS may provide you with a wheelchair, for example when you leave hospital.  You can also ask your GP or hospital consultant, NHS physiotherapist or occupational therapist to refer you for a wheelchair assessment. Each area has their own procedures and eligibility criteria to help them decide what type of wheelchair you’ll receive and how quickly you receive it.

Buying new disability equipment

There are many local shops in Scotland  where you can purchase specialist disability equipment. There are also lots of online shops where you can purchase equipment.

To find a local supplier, either call us or search our Scottish Disability Directory.

You may be entitled to VAT relief when buying disability equipment. For more information see our VAT Exemption Guide.

If you’re looking for a specialist piece of equipment that’s not on the market, REMAP is a charity that designs, manufactures and supplies equipment and adaptation solutions for disabled people where no commercial solutions currently exist.

Buying and selling secondhand equipment

There are a few ways to buy or sell secondhand disability equipment:

  • check with your local disability supplier if they sell second hand or reconditioned equipment.
  • ask a local disability organisation or club if they know of any local people or organisations looking to buy or sell equipment
  • advertise locally through a newspaper, community centre or local library.
  • buy or sell online; there are several websites where you can buy or sell items online:
  • Gumtree
  • Ebay
  • Facebook MarketPlace
  • Preloved
  • MobilityBuyers: this company will buy secondhand disability equipment from you. Simply fill in their online form for a quote. Due to pickup costs from their premises in Preston, they tend to only buy scooters and power chairs in Scotland.

Always be careful when buying or selling online. Buying privately does not give you as many consumer rights as buying from a trader. The product and service review website ‘Which?’ have provided information about your shopping rights on an online marketplace here.

Donating secondhand mobility aids and equipment

Do you want to donate a piece of disability equipment that you or your family no longer need? Due to health and safety regulations, it can be challenging to find organisations which will accept donations of secondhand equipment. We will list below some organisations which do take donations.

Before you donate, check whether you received the equipment from the NHS or your local council, as they may want it back. If can’t find the correct department to contact, give us a call and we can give you the contact details.

Organisations which will accept donations:

Wheels to Heal

Wheels to Heal are a charity based in Glasgow which sends disability equipment to people in need, abroad. The equipment is mostly sent to countries in Asia and the Middle East such as Lebanon, Iraq and Bangladesh. Although they are based in Glasgow, they collect equipment from most areas in Scotland on a quarterly basis, and have locations where you can drop off equipment too. You can donate items such as wheelchairs (manual and electric), zimmer frames, rollators, commodes, walking sticks, hoists, medical beds, and shower chairs.

Telephone Number: 03333 446259
Email: info@wheelstoheal.org.uk
Email for uplift inquiries: uplift@wheelstoheal.org.uk

Or fill in the online Equipment Donation form

Treasure Tree (Edinburgh)

Treasure Tree is a social enterprise run by Edinburgh charity Vocal which supports unpaid carers. Treasure Tree sells secondhand mobility equipment from its shop in Ocean Terminal Shopping Centre and from its Ebay store online.  If you want to buy, donate or sell secondhand equipment, they can help.

Telephone: 0131 622 6666
Email: sell@vocal.org.uk

Freecycle

This is a website where you can give items to individuals for free, and also receive items for free.

Stairlift and Mobility Recycling

Stairlift and Mobility Recycling is a company which takes donations of used stairlifts and mobility scooters, and sells them on at a reduced price. They will uninstall and uplift your stairlift or mobility scooter for free. However if you have a straight stairlift more than 7 years old or a curved stairlift over 3 years old, there will be a charge for the service. The organisation operates across all of mainland Scotland.

Telephone: 01535 612167
Email: info@stairliftrecycling.co.uk
Website: https://stairliftrecycling.co.uk

Charity Shops

Some charity shops will take donations of walking sticks and crutches. For example, many Red Cross Charity Shops will take these items. It is best to double check with a store before dropping off equipment.

Hiring disability equipment

Shopmobility

If you are going shopping or visiting local leisure facilities, you may be able to borrow or hire a wheelchair from the Shopmobility Scheme. There are Shopmobility outlets at locations throughout Scotland, often in shopping centres. You can hire manual wheelchairs, powered wheelchairs or powered scooters. Anyone with mobility problems can use the service, whether you have a long term disability or a broken leg.

Some shopmobility branches have started hiring out wheelchairs on longer term loans for wider use than just in shopping centres. To find Shopmobility schemes in your area, you can search on the Shopmobility website. Schemes not listed on the  website, we’ve listed below.

Other charities & shopmobility schemes who loan/hire disability equipment (mostly wheelchairs):

Hiring from disability equipment stores

Some disability equipment stores and online retailers also hire out wheelchairs and other disability equipment. If you are struggling to find a store local to you, you can call our helpline on 0300 323 9961 or email us at info@disabilityscot.org.uk

Equipment advice

If purchasing equipment independently, it is always best to get advice from a professional.

Lothian Disabled Living Centre, based at the Astley Ainslie Hospital in Edinburgh, has a permanent exhibition of products and equipment with professional staff on hand to offer advice. Other independent living services across the country are available if you are referred by a health or care professional, and many professionals can provide advice.

The Disabled Living Foundation run a website called Living Made Easy which provides free, impartial information on disability aids and equipment.

Rica produces a range of consumer reports to help when purchasing equipment such as bathing and daily living aids, mobility aids and stairlifts.

If you are thinking of buying a mobility scooter or electric wheelchair and don’t know where to start, we have a guide on choosing a mobility scooter or electric wheelchair/power chair.

 

Personal and home alarms

For information on alarms and monitors please call our helpline on 0300 323 9961.

Information last updated on 13 December 2024. Please note that information may be subject to change. All information is provided in good faith but Disability Information Scotland does not endorse any product or service referred to within this resource.

We are grateful to the Scottish Government for funding this publication

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