Comprehensive Guide to Trade Day Rates & Hourly Costs
Regional Labour Rates for Builders, Tradespeople & General Labourers
Construction labour rates in the UK vary significantly by region, skill level, employment type, and market demand. Understanding current labour costs is essential for accurate project budgeting, competitive pricing, and fair employment practices. Our comprehensive 2026 guide covers day rates and hourly costs for all major construction trades across England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, reflecting post-Brexit changes, inflation adjustments, and National Minimum Wage increases.
Labour typically represents 30-50% of total construction costs, making accurate rate knowledge critical for profitability and project planning. This guide includes self-employed day rates, employed hourly wages, regional variations, and specialist trade premiums. Use alongside our concrete calculator for complete project cost estimation including materials and labour.
General construction labour encompasses labourers, groundworkers, and multi-skilled operatives working across residential, commercial, and civil engineering projects. Rates vary by experience level, location, and whether self-employed or PAYE employed.
Day Rate (Self-Employed): £100-150 per day
Hourly Rate (Employed): £11.50-15.00 per hour
Typical Tasks: Site clearance, material handling, mixing, digging
Experience: 0-2 years construction experience
Regional Variation: London +25-35%, Scotland/Wales -10-15%
Day Rate (Self-Employed): £150-200 per day
Hourly Rate (Employed): £14.00-18.00 per hour
Typical Tasks: Formwork, basic carpentry, concrete finishing
Experience: 2-5 years with specific skills
Qualifications: CSCS card, NVQ Level 2
Day Rate (Self-Employed): £180-250 per day
Hourly Rate (Employed): £16.00-22.00 per hour
Typical Tasks: Excavation, drainage, foundations, concrete
Experience: 3-10 years specialist groundworks
Equipment: Often includes use of mini-digger/dumper
Day Rate (Self-Employed): £200-280 per day
Hourly Rate (Employed): £18.00-25.00 per hour
Typical Tasks: Team supervision, site coordination, quality control
Experience: 5+ years with leadership responsibility
Qualifications: SMSTS, First Aid, Supervisor training
Day Rate (Self-Employed): £180-240 per day
Hourly Rate (Employed): £16.00-21.00 per hour
Typical Tasks: Screeding, floating, troweling, finishing concrete
Experience: 3-8 years concrete specialist work
High Demand: Premium rates for power trowel operators
Day Rate (Self-Employed): Not applicable
Hourly Rate (Employed): £7.55-12.00 per hour
Typical Tasks: Assisting tradespeople, learning skills
Experience: 0-3 years formal apprenticeship
Note: Apprentice NMW applies (age/year dependent)
Qualified tradespeople command premium rates reflecting years of training, certification, and specialist expertise. Most skilled trades require NVQ Level 2/3 qualifications and relevant industry cards or licenses.
| Trade/Skill | Day Rate (Self-Employed) | Hourly Rate (Employed) | London/SE Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bricklayer | £200-300/day | £18-26/hour | £250-380/day |
| Carpenter (1st Fix) | £180-260/day | £17-24/hour | £230-330/day |
| Carpenter (2nd Fix) | £200-280/day | £18-26/hour | £250-350/day |
| Joiner (Bench) | £180-250/day | £16-23/hour | £220-310/day |
| Plasterer | £200-300/day | £18-27/hour | £260-380/day |
| Plumber | £220-320/day | £20-28/hour | £280-400/day |
| Electrician | £220-340/day | £20-30/hour | £280-420/day |
| Roofer | £180-280/day | £17-25/hour | £230-350/day |
| Painter & Decorator | £160-240/day | £15-22/hour | £200-300/day |
| Tiler | £180-280/day | £17-25/hour | £230-350/day |
| Dryliner | £180-260/day | £16-24/hour | £220-320/day |
| Scaffolder | £200-300/day | £18-27/hour | £250-370/day |
| Steelfixer | £200-280/day | £18-26/hour | £250-350/day |
| Plant Operator (Digger) | £180-260/day | £17-24/hour | £230-320/day |
| Plant Operator (Crane) | £240-350/day | £22-32/hour | £300-450/day |
Construction labour rates vary significantly across UK regions, reflecting differences in cost of living, demand for skills, project volumes, and local market conditions. London and the South East command the highest premiums, while Northern regions and rural areas typically see lower rates.
Percentage variations from national average rates
Premium: +30-40% above national average
Skilled Trades: £250-420/day typical
Labourers: £140-180/day
Drivers: Congestion, parking, high living costs
Demand: Very high - major infrastructure projects
Premium: +15-25% above national average
Skilled Trades: £220-350/day typical
Labourers: £120-160/day
Drivers: Proximity to London, commuter belt
Areas: Surrey, Kent, Essex, Sussex, Berkshire
Premium: +5-10% above national average
Skilled Trades: £200-300/day typical
Labourers: £110-145/day
Drivers: Tourism demand, second homes
Areas: Bristol, Bath, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset
Premium: +5-15% above national average
Skilled Trades: £200-310/day typical
Labourers: £110-150/day
Drivers: Cambridge/Peterborough growth
Areas: Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Suffolk
Premium: -5% to +5% (baseline)
Skilled Trades: £180-280/day typical
Labourers: £100-140/day
Drivers: Manufacturing/logistics hubs
Areas: Birmingham, Coventry, Nottingham, Leicester
Premium: -5 to +5% (varies by city)
Skilled Trades: £180-290/day typical
Labourers: £100-145/day
Drivers: Manchester/Liverpool regeneration
Areas: Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Cheshire
Premium: -10 to 0% below national average
Skilled Trades: £170-260/day typical
Labourers: £95-135/day
Drivers: Lower living costs, competitive market
Areas: Leeds, Sheffield, York, Hull
Premium: -15 to -10% below national average
Skilled Trades: £160-240/day typical
Labourers: £90-125/day
Drivers: Lower demand, economic factors
Areas: Newcastle, Sunderland, Middlesbrough
Premium: -10 to +10% (varies widely)
Skilled Trades: £170-280/day typical
Labourers: £95-140/day
Drivers: Edinburgh/Glasgow higher, rural lower
Areas: Central Belt premium, Highlands -20%
Premium: -15 to -5% below national average
Skilled Trades: £160-250/day typical
Labourers: £90-130/day
Drivers: Cardiff higher, rural valleys lower
Areas: South Wales cities vs rural North Wales
Premium: -15 to -10% below national average
Skilled Trades: £160-240/day typical
Labourers: £90-125/day
Drivers: Belfast higher, rural areas lower
Areas: Greater Belfast vs rural counties
Premium: -15 to -25% below urban rates
Skilled Trades: £150-230/day typical
Labourers: £85-120/day
Drivers: Travel time, limited pool, distance
Note: Some trades charge mileage (£0.45-0.60/mile)
Understanding the difference between self-employed subcontractor rates and employed labour costs is crucial for accurate budgeting. Self-employed rates appear higher but exclude employer costs that employed labour incurs.
💼 Self-Employed Labour Characteristics:
✅ Employed Labour Characteristics:
| Trade/Skill Level | Self-Employed Day Rate | Employed Hourly Rate | Employed Daily Cost (8hrs) | True Employer Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General Labourer | £100-150 | £11.50-15.00 | £92-120 | £120-168 (with oncosts) |
| Skilled Labourer | £150-200 | £14.00-18.00 | £112-144 | £146-202 |
| Bricklayer | £200-300 | £18.00-26.00 | £144-208 | £187-291 |
| Carpenter | £180-280 | £17.00-26.00 | £136-208 | £177-291 |
| Electrician | £220-340 | £20.00-30.00 | £160-240 | £208-336 |
| Plumber | £220-320 | £20.00-28.00 | £160-224 | £208-314 |
Multiple factors influence construction labour rates beyond basic skill level. Understanding these variables helps contractors negotiate fairly and workers price their services competitively in the 2026 market.
Newly Qualified: Lower end of rate bracket
3-5 Years Experience: Mid-range rates
10+ Years Experience: Upper range + premium
Specialist Certifications: +10-20% for advanced qualifications
Multi-Skilled: Higher rates for versatile operatives
New Build Residential: Standard rates
Commercial/Industrial: +10-15% premium
Renovation/Refurb: +5-10% (more complex)
Listed Buildings: +15-25% (specialist skills)
High-End Residential: +10-20% (quality standards)
Standard Site Work: Base rates
Height Work: +£20-40/day for scaffolding/roofing
Confined Spaces: +£30-50/day premium
Night Work: +25-50% shift premium
Weekends: +50% Saturday, +100% Sunday typical
High Demand Period: April-September peak rates
Winter Slowdown: November-February -10-15%
Skills Shortage: Electricians, bricklayers command premium
Regional Hotspots: Infrastructure projects drive local rates up
Emergency/Short Notice: +20-30% rush premium
Long-Term Contract: Negotiable lower day rate
Short-Term/Casual: Higher day rates expected
Piece Rate Work: Varies (e.g., £1-2 per brick laid)
Price Work: Fixed price for completed job
Labour-Only: Rate excludes materials/equipment
Large Main Contractors: Often lower rates, steady work
Small Builders: Mid-range rates, varied work
Specialist Subcontractors: Higher rates, niche skills
Direct Client Work: Higher rates, less steady
Agency Work: Agency takes 15-25% margin
The UK National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage set legal minimum hourly rates for employed workers. Construction employers must comply with these rates as absolute minimums, with most construction roles paying significantly above these thresholds.
⚖️ National Minimum Wage Rates 2026 (April 2026):
✅ Real Living Wage 2026 (Voluntary):
The Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) governs how contractors must handle payments to subcontractors. Understanding CIS deductions is essential for accurate labour cost budgeting and subcontractor payment calculations.
🔧 CIS Deduction Rates 2026:
Standard working hours are typically 39-40 hours per week (8 hours per day, Monday-Friday). Work beyond standard hours attracts premium rates, with significant increases for evenings, weekends, and bank holidays.
| Time Period | Premium Rate | Example (£20/hr base) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Hours (Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm) | 1.0× (base rate) | £20.00/hour | 39-40 hours per week |
| Weekday Overtime (after 5pm) | 1.25-1.5× base | £25-30/hour | First 2-3 hours overtime |
| Extended Weekday Overtime | 1.5-2.0× base | £30-40/hour | After 8pm or 10+ hour day |
| Saturday Work | 1.5-2.0× base | £30-40/hour | Whole day premium rate |
| Sunday Work | 2.0-2.5× base | £40-50/hour | Double time standard |
| Bank Holidays | 2.0-3.0× base | £40-60/hour | Triple time for Christmas |
| Night Shift (10pm-6am) | 1.25-1.5× base | £25-30/hour | Plus night shift allowance |
| Emergency Call-Out | 2.0-3.0× base + min 4hrs | £40-60/hour (4hr min) | Minimum payment applies |