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Bricklayer

Lay bricks, blocks, and stone to construct walls, chimneys, arches, and foundations in new-build and renovation projects across residential and commercial construction.

Canonical page: /careers/bricklayer
Physical demand

High

People contact

Low

Time to entry

2–3 years via apprenticeship; 1–2 years via college + site experience

What you do

Bricklayers build the structural fabric of buildings. Work involves interpreting drawings, setting out courses, mixing mortar, cutting bricks and blocks to size, building to accurate line and level, installing damp-proof courses, and working on foundations, walls, and chimneys. Many bricklayers specialise in restoration and heritage masonry — pointing, repointing, and matching historic materials — which commands higher rates. Others focus on new-build volume construction or commercial blockwork.

Why this career is resilient

Bricklaying is physically site-specific and requires fine craft judgement — level, line, mortar mix, and material compatibility — that cannot be automated in standard construction contexts. The UK faces a persistent shortage of qualified bricklayers, and housebuilding programmes consistently cite bricklayer shortfall as a constraint on delivery. The regeneration of existing housing stock creates ongoing heritage masonry demand.


Routes in

Apprenticeship

Earn while you learn: work with an employer and study part-time, leading to a nationally recognised qualification. Typically funded by the government and your employer.

Duration: 1–4 years depending on trade

Full-time college course

Study full-time at a further education college, usually for 1–2 years. You will need to fund yourself or apply for a student loan (available for Level 4+ courses).

Duration: 1–2 years

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Bricklayer — EverCraft | Steady Path