In this paper, we advocate the "classical"\, approach to the a posteriori error estimation, which for the theory elasticity problems stems from the Lagrange and Castigliano variational
principles. In it, the energy of the error of an approximate solution, satisfying geometrical restrictions, is estimated by the energy of the difference of the stress tensor corresponding to
the approximate solution and any stress tensor, satisfying the equations of equilibrium. Notwithstanding a popular point of view that the construction of equilibrated stress fields requires considerable computational effort, we show that it can be practically always done for the number of arithmetic operations, which is asymptotically optimal. Numerical experiments show that a posteriori error estimators, based on the use of exactly equilibrated stress fields, provide
very good coefficients of effectiveness, which in many cases can be convergent to the unity. At the same time they have linear complexity and are robust.