How Much Do Carpenters Earn in the UK? — 2026 Salary Guide
Complete guide to carpenter and joiner salaries in the UK for 2026. First fix vs second fix pay, employed vs self-employed rates, specialist joinery, apprentice wages, and how to maximise carpentry earnings.
·2 min read
Carpentry and joinery cover a wide range of woodworking skills in the construction industry. Here’s what carpenters and joiners earn across different specialisms and settings.
Employed Carpenter Salaries
By Experience
Level
Salary Range
Apprentice (Year 1)
£14,000-£17,000
Apprentice (Year 2-3)
£17,000-£22,000
Newly qualified
£24,000-£30,000
Experienced (3-5 years)
£28,000-£36,000
Highly experienced (5-10 years)
£34,000-£42,000
Foreman / lead carpenter
£38,000-£48,000
Site manager (carpentry background)
£42,000-£55,000
By Employer Type
Employer
Salary
House builder (volume)
£28,000-£38,000
Construction contractor
£28,000-£40,000
Joinery manufacturer
£26,000-£38,000
Shopfitting company
£28,000-£42,000
Local authority / housing
£28,000-£36,000
Heritage/restoration
£30,000-£42,000
Self-Employed Carpenter Earnings
Day Rates
Level
Day Rate
Annual Equivalent
Newly qualified
£130-£180
£26,000-£40,000
Experienced
£180-£260
£36,000-£57,000
Specialist/skilled
£220-£320
£44,000-£70,000
London
£250-£380
£50,000-£84,000
Annual based on 220 working days
First Fix vs Second Fix
Type
Description
Day Rate
First fix
Structural — roofs, floors, stud walls, door linings