Featured in EverCraft

Site Carpenter

Work on construction sites carrying out first-fix and second-fix carpentry — from structural timber framing, floors, and roofs to internal doors, skirtings, and staircases — using hand and power tools in a dynamic on-site environment.

Canonical page: /careers/site-carpenter
Physical demand

High

People contact

Low

Time to entry

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

What you do

Site carpenters are the backbone of timber construction on UK building sites. First-fix work covers everything structural that happens before plastering: erecting stud partition walls, laying floor joists and tongue-and-groove boarding, installing door linings, fitting window boards, and working on roof structures — cutting and fixing rafters, ridge boards, and valley pieces, or installing manufactured roof trusses. On traditional builds and extensions, you may cut a full roof from scratch, which demands strong geometric understanding and experience with a range of hand and power saws.

Second-fix carpentry comes after the plastering is complete. You hang internal doors (fitting hinges, latches, and handles accurately), install skirtings and architraves, fit staircases, and sometimes complete kitchen unit installation. The transition from rough first fix to accurate second fix requires a shift in mindset — second fix is visible and finished, and the tolerances are tight.

Site carpenters typically work for building contractors, subcontractors, or as self-employed tradespeople taking on domestic and commercial work. You work outdoors in all weathers during structural phases and move indoors as the build encloses. Physical fitness, confidence with power tools, and the ability to read drawings and work independently are core requirements. CSCS card required for site access. The Level 3 NVQ Diploma in Site Carpentry and the Carpentry and Joinery Apprenticeship Standard (Site Carpentry route) are the recognised qualifications — distinct from the Bench Joinery route, which leads to a different career and CSCS card.

Why this career is resilient

Timber construction is fundamental to UK housebuilding — the vast majority of new residential properties use timber-framed internal structures, and the conversion, extension, and renovation of the existing housing stock generates consistent site carpentry demand regardless of new-build cycles. The UK government's housebuilding ambitions (1.5 million homes over the Parliament) will require a significant increase in the qualified carpentry workforce, and the CITB consistently identifies site carpentry as one of the most understaffed construction trades.

Site carpentry cannot be offshored and is difficult to automate in the varied, problem-solving conditions of live construction sites. Self-employment is widespread and well-established — experienced site carpenters frequently move into running their own businesses, taking on domestic extensions and renovation projects. Heritage and traditional timber-frame building is a specialist niche that commands premium rates and remains in consistent demand from conservation architects and heritage property owners.


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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