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Stonemason

Shape, carve, and set natural stone to build, restore, and maintain the walls, arches, and decorative features of Britain's built heritage.

Canonical page: /careers/stonemason
Physical demand

High

People contact

Low

Time to entry

3–4 years via apprenticeship; 2–3 years via college + site placement

What you do

Stonemasons work with natural stone — limestone, sandstone, granite, marble — to construct new buildings, restore historic structures, and create bespoke architectural features. The trade divides broadly into banker masons, who work at a bench from architects' drawings to cut, carve, and profile stone; and fixer masons, who set prepared stone into buildings using lime mortar, lead, and traditional fixing techniques. Heritage repair work demands an understanding of lime mortars, pointing styles, and the behaviour of historic masonry — skills that are quite distinct from modern construction. You may work on cathedrals, listed country houses, churchyard monuments, or civic buildings. Progression routes include conservation masonry, letter-cutting, and site supervision. Some stonemasons specialise in memorial work or decorative carving.

Why this career is resilient

Stonemasonry is an irreplaceable manual craft — every stone has unique characteristics that demand skilled human judgement in cutting and fitting. Historic England estimates that the UK has around 500,000 listed buildings requiring ongoing maintenance, and there are fewer than 3,000 practising conservation stonemasons. The shortage is so acute that heritage organisations consistently cite mason availability as a bottleneck. Listed building regulations require like-for-like repair using traditional materials and methods. Automation cannot replicate the fine hand-finishing, site-specific problem-solving, or lime mortar skills that heritage masonry demands.


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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