Where will you use it?
Indoors only? Around your neighbourhood? Out on trails? The honest answer — including where you'd go if the rollator let you — sets everything else.
→ Decides indoor vs outdoorA rollator is the difference between staying in and getting out. But the wrong one gathers dust in a hallway. This guide walks you through every decision — in plain language, with the numbers that matter — so you buy once and buy right.
Rollator is the international and medical term. Walker, rollator, rolling walker — they all describe the same thing: a four-wheeled walking frame with brakes and a seat. We use the terms interchangeably throughout this guide.
Almost every disappointing rollator purchase comes down to skipping one of these. Answer them honestly before you look at a single model — your answers point straight at the right wheel size and type.
Indoors only? Around your neighbourhood? Out on trails? The honest answer — including where you'd go if the rollator let you — sets everything else.
→ Decides indoor vs outdoorSmooth floors and tarmac, or cobbles, gravel, grass and slopes? The roughest surface you regularly cross sets the minimum wheel size you need.
→ Decides wheel sizeLifting it into a small car every day rewards a light, compact fold. If it mostly stays where you walk, capability matters more than weight.
→ Decides weight & foldHandle height should reach your wrists with a relaxed posture, and the seat should match your height. A rollator that fits is one you'll actually use.
→ Decides frame sizeRollators split into three honest categories by where they work. Most shops only sell the first. Trionic exists because the other two were missing — and because life mostly happens outside.
The standard rollator you see everywhere. Small hard wheels, light frame, narrow enough for doorways. Perfect for one job only.
Bigger air-filled wheels turn the daily walk back into something you look forward to. Pavements, parks, cobbles and gravel all disappear under the tires.
The Veloped category Trionic invented. A patented climbing wheel plus large pneumatic tires take you onto forest trails, sand, snow and up steps.
Ignore the spec-sheet noise. Five things decide whether a rollator earns its place in your life. Compare these and nothing else.
The single biggest factor. Bigger wheels roll over obstacles, smooth out vibration and grip better on slopes. Below 9" is an indoor wheel. For outdoor life, 12" or 14" changes everything.
Read: why wheel size matters →Cable loop brakes are standard but seize in cold and wet. Sealed hub brakes — like a bicycle — keep working in rain, mud and snow, and never need cable adjustment. For outdoor use, hub brakes are non-negotiable.
Look for: sealed hub brakesIf it doesn't fit your car, you won't take it anywhere. Check the folded size, not just the open one — and whether the wheels pop off without tools. A Trionic Walker folds flat in under 10 seconds.
Look for: under-10-second foldAluminium is light, strong and weatherproof — the right choice for an outdoor rollator. Steel is cheaper but heavy and rusts. Crucially, big wheels do not mean a heavy frame: every Trionic Walker is under 10 kg.
Look for: aluminium, under 10 kgHandle height, seat height and frame width all need to suit your body. A good rollator comes in sizes (S/M/L) rather than one-size-fits-all — and a dealer should set it up with you before you walk away.
Look for: S / M / L sizingPrices range widely because the categories do. Here's roughly what you'll pay in the UK in 2026, and what your money actually buys at each tier. A quality outdoor rollator is a multi-year investment, not a disposable aid.
Steel or basic aluminium, 6–8" wheels, cable brakes. Fine for indoor use; struggles the moment you go outside.
Bigger wheels and a lighter frame, but usually solid tires and cable brakes. A step up — still bumpy on rough ground.
Air-filled 12–14" tires, sealed hub brakes, aluminium frame, proper sizing. Where Trionic Walker sits. Lasts for years.
The Veloped class: patented climbing wheel, all-terrain tires, full hub braking. For genuine off-road and nature use.
A standard rollator costs less but is replaced often and limits where you go. A quality outdoor rollator costs more once — and reopens the world outside your door.
Find your match →Three quick questions about where you walk, what you cross and how you'll carry it. We'll point you to the Trionic that fits — then you can book a free test drive to be sure.
Trionic makes two things, both exceptionally well. The Walker is the outdoor rollator for everyday life. The Veloped is the all-terrain rollator for the wild. Between them, eight models cover every surface you'll ever cross.
Three wheel sizes — 9er, 12er, 14er — for pavements, parks, gravel and light terrain. Air tires, hub brakes, aluminium frame, all under 10 kg.
The patented climbing wheel takes you onto forest trails, sand, snow and up steps. Five trims — Sport, Tour, Trek, Golf, Jakt — for every kind of outdoor life.
Both routes are valid — they answer different needs. The NHS can supply a basic rollator at no cost where there's a clinical need; buying privately lets you choose exactly the wheel size, quality and outdoor capability that suits your life.
The questions we're asked most often when people are choosing their first — or their best — rollator.
Get the full printed catalogue with every model, size and price. Or talk to a real person who'll help you choose — no script, no pressure, just the right rollator for your life.