Construction apprenticeships are one of the most direct routes into a skilled trade in the UK. You earn while you learn, you gain real site experience from day one, and at the end of it you hold a recognised qualification and a CSCS card that gets you working. But there's a lot of noise around apprenticeships — how they work, what they pay, how long they take, whether you need one at all — that makes the picture confusing.
This is the straightforward breakdown.
What a Construction Apprenticeship Actually Is
A construction apprenticeship combines on-the-job training with off-the-job learning, typically at a college one day per week or in blocks. You're employed — you get a payslip, you pay tax and NI, you get holiday. You're not a work experience student. You're an employee who's also working toward a formal qualification.
In England, apprenticeships are funded through the Apprenticeship Levy — a government scheme that requires large employers to contribute into a training fund. For smaller employers taking on apprentices, the government covers the majority of training costs. The employer pays the apprentice's wage; the government mostly covers the qualification costs.
Level 2 vs Level 3 — What's the Difference
Construction apprenticeships exist at two main levels, and understanding the difference matters.
Level 2 apprenticeships are equivalent to five GCSEs at grade A–C. They're the foundation — you learn the core practical skills of your trade, pass the relevant assessment, and come out with a Level 2 NVQ and the qualification for a Blue CSCS card. Duration: typically 18 months to 2 years.
Level 3 apprenticeships are equivalent to two A Levels. These take you to qualified tradesperson status — the level at which you can operate independently, supervise others, and in some trades, self-certify your work. Duration: typically 2–3 years, sometimes with a Level 2 as a prerequisite first.
For most trades, the full journey from starting out to fully qualified looks like: Level 2 apprenticeship → Level 3 apprenticeship → relevant advanced certification. For electricians, that means adding the 18th Edition (BS 7671) and the AM2 assessment on top of Level 3 to achieve ECS Gold Card status and full independent working capability.
Which Trades Offer Apprenticeships
Apprenticeships exist across the major construction trades. The ones with the most consistent availability and strongest employer demand:
- Electrical Installation — consistently the most sought-after trade. Level 2 and Level 3 available. JIB-graded at the end.
- Plumbing and Domestic Heating — strong availability. Level 2 and Level 3. Combines plumbing with basic heating systems.
- Bricklaying — high demand given the labour shortage. Level 2 apprenticeship standard widely available.
- Carpentry and Joinery — both site carpentry and bench joinery pathways. Level 2 and Level 3.
- Plastering — solid and solid plastering pathways. Less common but available through CITB-registered employers.
- Painting and Decorating — Level 2 standard. Good availability through maintenance contractors and housing associations.
- Roofing — slating and tiling vs flat roofing. More specialist, fewer placements but still available.
What Apprentices Get Paid
The national minimum apprentice wage is £7.55/hour (2026 rate). But in construction, most employers pay above this — particularly for Level 3 apprentices and in trades where competition for young people is high.
A realistic picture:
- Year 1 — £8–£10/hour is typical at smaller contractors. Larger firms often pay more.
- Year 2+ — wages generally rise as skills develop. Many employers shift to a trade rate once the Level 2 is achieved.
- After qualification — £26,000–£32,000 employed is the baseline for a newly qualified electrician or plumber in most parts of the UK outside London. In London and the South East, higher.
You're not getting rich during the apprenticeship. But you're earning, you're not in debt, and the trajectory once you qualify is strong.
Apprenticeship vs College — What's the Real Difference
College (typically a full-time Level 2 or Level 3 course at an FE college) and an apprenticeship can lead to the same qualification. The practical difference:
College: You're in education. You might get some work placement, but your primary environment is a classroom and training workshop. You may get bursary payments but you're not employed. At the end, you have the qualification but limited real site experience.
Apprenticeship: You're employed on a real site from day one. Your primary environment is work. College is one day a week or in blocks. You graduate with the same qualification plus 18 months to 3 years of employer experience and references.
For most young people, if you can get an apprenticeship, take it over full-time college. The real-world experience is worth more than the institutional setting. The exception: if you're struggling to find an employer willing to take you on, college first can give you enough foundation to make yourself more employable for a Level 3 apprenticeship afterwards.
How to Find One
The official route is Find an Apprenticeship at gov.uk — the government's searchable database of live apprenticeship vacancies. Filter by trade and region. It's not always comprehensive, but it's a reliable starting point.
The practical route: contact construction companies directly. Small and medium-sized electrical, plumbing, and building contractors often take on apprentices without advertising through the official system. They prefer someone who's been recommended or who walked in and showed genuine interest. Call them. Go to the site. Show up.
Local training providers — colleges with construction departments, CITB-registered training centres — often have employer links and can make introductions. They need apprentices to fill their college programmes too, so it's in their interest to help you find a placement.
A Note on Age
Apprenticeships are not just for school leavers. There's no upper age limit. Adult apprenticeships in construction are common, particularly for people changing careers or getting formally qualified after years of site experience. If you're 25 or 35 and you want to get properly qualified in a trade, the apprenticeship route is open to you.
The funding structure changes slightly for adults over 19 — you contribute a small percentage of costs — but the qualification and employment opportunity are the same.
What Comes After
Finishing an apprenticeship isn't the ceiling. It's the platform. After qualifying:
- Employed at a rising rate — most qualified tradespeople move from apprentice wage to trade rate immediately on qualifying
- CIS subcontracting — move to self-employed day rate, typically £200–£320/day depending on trade and experience
- Running your own domestic round — build a client base and work for yourself, setting your own hours and rates
- Further qualifications — some trades have higher certifications that unlock specialist work and premium rates
The progression is real and the timeline is reasonable. A young person starting an electrical apprenticeship at 18 can be earning £45,000+ as a self-employed electrician by 26. With zero debt.
Route 2 Trade gives young people — and the organisations that support them — a clear map of every construction trade pathway, including how apprenticeships fit in. If you want a structured way to show the young people you work with exactly where they could be in 3 years, start with a free readiness report.
Get a Free Readiness Report