England
England vacancies are connected through the official DfE Display Advert API, so you can search live apprentice roles and open the official advert.
Earn while you learn. A comprehensive guide to how trade apprenticeships work, what you'll get paid, and how to find the right one — whether you're 16 or 46.
Apprenticeship finder
Search the official route, save a UK Trade Jobs alert, and prepare a trade CV before vacancies get crowded.
Official sources
England is connected to live DfE vacancies. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland use separate official services, so use those links first and keep a UK Trade Jobs email alert running in parallel.
England vacancies are connected through the official DfE Display Advert API, so you can search live apprentice roles and open the official advert.
Skills Development Scotland runs the official apprenticeship vacancy search for Scotland. Use the official source first, then set a UK Trade Jobs email alert for new local roles.
Careers Wales and Welsh Government apprenticeship services cover Welsh vacancies and routes. Use this for official Wales searches and set a matching UK Trade Jobs email alert.
Northern Ireland apprenticeship roles appear through JobApplyNI and NI Direct routes. Use the official search first, then keep a UK Trade Jobs email alert running.
Apprenticeship action plan
Apprenticeship pages work best when they join up three things: official vacancies, realistic pay expectations and a CV/application routine. This page now pushes readers towards all three instead of leaving them with theory.
Start with live apprentice and trainee roles by trade and area.
CVShow reliability, tools, site readiness and transferable work history.
FundingCheck grants, loans and free training options before paying privately.
ProvidersCompare course routes and provider coverage before committing.
Popular apprenticeship searches
These pages combine official apprenticeship vacancies, alerts and CV support so a one-off search can become a real application pipeline.
Search official vacancies, save an alert and build a trade CV for the UK.
Open page →ElectricianSearch official vacancies, save an alert and build a trade CV for London.
Open page →ElectricianSearch official vacancies, save an alert and build a trade CV for Manchester.
Open page →PlumberSearch official vacancies, save an alert and build a trade CV for the UK.
Open page →PlumberSearch official vacancies, save an alert and build a trade CV for London.
Open page →Gas EngineerSearch official vacancies, save an alert and build a trade CV for the UK.
Open page →A trade apprenticeship is a structured training programme where you work for an employer in a skilled trade while studying towards a nationally recognised qualification. Unlike college courses where you pay to attend, an apprenticeship pays you a wage from day one. Your employer covers all training costs, and the Government funds the qualification through the apprenticeship levy (for large employers) or co-investment funding (for smaller ones).
Apprenticeships aren't just for school leavers. In fact, around 47% of apprenticeship starts in 2023/24 were by people aged 25 and over (Department for Education data). There's no upper age limit. If you're a 35-year-old office worker wanting to retrain as an electrician, a 50-year-old looking for a career change, or a 16-year-old leaving school — the apprenticeship route is open to you.
The structure is straightforward:
Trade apprenticeships are available at different levels:
| Level | Name | Equivalent to | Typical Trades |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level 2 | Intermediate | 5 GCSEs (9–4) | Bricklayer, Plasterer, Painter & Decorator |
| Level 3 | Advanced | 2 A-levels | Electrician, Plumber, Carpenter, Welder |
| Level 4+ | Higher | Foundation degree | Construction Site Manager, Building Services Engineer |
Most trade apprenticeships are Level 2 or 3. Level 3 is the "gold standard" for most trades and is what most employers look for when hiring qualified tradespeople.
Apprentice pay is set by the National Minimum Wage. The current rates from 1 April 2026 are:
| Age / Status | Hourly Rate | Approx. Annual (37.5hrs/wk) |
|---|---|---|
| Apprentice rate (under 19, or age 19+ in year 1) | £8.00 | ~£15,600 |
| Age 18–20 (after year 1) | £10.85 | ~£21,158 |
| Age 21+ (after year 1) | £12.71 | ~£24,785 |
Important: These are legal minimums. Many trade employers pay above the floor, especially in London and other competitive markets, or once an apprentice becomes useful on site. GOV.UK confirms apprentices aged 19 or over are entitled to the minimum wage for their age once they have completed the first year.
Also remember: you're being paid to gain a qualification that would otherwise cost you £5,000–£12,000+. The real value of an apprenticeship is the free training plus the experience, not just the wage.
If you're over 25 and thinking "I'm too old for an apprenticeship," you're wrong. Here's the reality:
The main challenge for adult apprentices is the pay cut. If you're leaving a £30,000 office job to start an apprenticeship at £12,000–£22,000, you need to plan financially. Some strategies that work:
| Trade | Level | Duration | End Point Assessment | More Info |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electrician | Level 3 | 3–4 years | AM2 Assessment | Training guide → |
| Plumber | Level 3 | 4 years | Practical assessment | Training guide → |
| Carpenter | Level 2/3 | 2–3 years | Practical assessment | Training guide → |
| Bricklayer | Level 2 | 2–3 years | Practical assessment | Training guide → |
| Welder | Level 3 | 2–4 years | Coded welder test | Training guide → |
| Gas Engineer | Level 3 | 4 years | ACS assessment | Training guide → |
| Roofer | Level 2 | 2 years | Practical assessment | Training guide → |
| Plasterer | Level 2 | 2 years | Practical assessment | Training guide → |
Finding the right apprenticeship takes effort, but there are several proven channels:
The official Find an Apprenticeship portal lists thousands of live vacancies. You can search by trade, location, and level. Create an account, set up alerts, and apply directly. This should be your first port of call.
Many trade apprenticeships — especially in smaller firms — are never advertised online. The best way to find them:
The Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) runs its own apprenticeship matching service through its apprenticeship programme. They work with construction employers across the UK and can help match you with a suitable position. CITB also offers grants to employers who take on apprentices, which can make it easier to convince a small company to take you on.
GTAs employ apprentices and rotate them between different host employers. This is particularly common in electrical and plumbing apprenticeships. The advantage is stability — if one host employer loses work, you move to another rather than losing your apprenticeship. The JIB (Joint Industry Board) and BPEC are key bodies for electrical and plumbing GTAs respectively.
Do not rely on one job board. Use official adverts, trade bodies, training providers and major employer career pages together, then save alerts so you can apply quickly.
Official England apprenticeship vacancies from GOV.UK. Best for live apprentice jobs and account-based alerts.
Open source →constructionConstruction apprenticeship routes, employer support and trade training information.
Open source →electrical and plumbingElectrical, plumbing, heating and engineering services apprenticeship training.
Open source →energyEngineering, smart energy and service apprenticeship routes from Centrica and British Gas.
Open source →renewablesLow-carbon energy and installer career routes, useful for heat pump and renewables candidates.
Open source →constructionConstruction, civil engineering and built environment apprenticeships across UK projects.
Open source →infrastructureMajor contractor apprenticeships for infrastructure, construction and engineering roles.
Open source →energyEnergy, network and engineering apprenticeships with a major UK utilities employer.
Open source →Apprenticeships are rewarding but demanding. Here's an honest picture:
Completing a trade apprenticeship opens serious doors:
Browse training courses by trade, explore funding options, or search for jobs to kickstart your career.