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Starting a Plumbing Business in 2026: The Complete UK Guide

Everything you need to start a plumbing business in the UK — Gas Safe registration, insurance, pricing, finding customers, and managing jobs.

The Gaffer Team
Business Advice
Feb 8, 2026
15 min read

Starting a plumbing business in the UK is one of the most reliable paths to self-employment. Demand for plumbers consistently outstrips supply, and a well-run plumbing business can earn £50,000–£80,000+ per year. Here's everything you need to know.

Qualifications and Registrations

Essential qualifications:

  • NVQ Level 2/3 in Plumbing and Heating (or equivalent)
  • Gas Safe Registration (if you'll work on gas appliances) — this is a legal requirement
  • Unvented Hot Water Systems qualification (G3)

Recommended:

  • Water Regulations (WRAS) certification
  • Legionella awareness training
  • Asbestos awareness (essential for older properties)
  • First aid certificate

Legal Setup

Most plumbers start as sole traders — it's the simplest option. You'll need to:

1. Register with HMRC as self-employed (within 3 months of starting)

2. Open a business bank account

3. Get public liability insurance (minimum £2 million, £5 million for commercial work)

4. Professional indemnity insurance (recommended)

5. Van insurance (business use)

6. Tool insurance

Later, you might set up a limited company for tax efficiency (typically worthwhile above £40,000–£50,000 profit).

Costs to Get Started

Realistic startup costs for a UK plumbing business in 2026:

| Item | Cost |

| --- | --- |

| Van (used, reliable) | £8,000–£15,000 |

| Tools and equipment | £2,000–£5,000 |

| Gas Safe registration | £350/year |

| Public liability insurance | £300–£600/year |

| Accountant | £600–£1,500/year |

| Marketing (website, cards, uniforms) | £500–£2,000 |

| Job management software | £150–£350/month |

| **Total first year** | **£15,000–£30,000** |

Setting Your Prices

Use our [day rate calculator](/tools/day-rate-calculator) to work out what you need to charge. As a rough guide for 2026:

  • **Hourly rate**: £40–£60 (£60–£80 in London)
  • **Day rate**: £250–£350 (£300–£400 in London)
  • **Emergency callout**: £100–£200 + hourly rate

Don't compete on price alone. Compete on reliability, professionalism, and communication.

Finding Your First Customers

1. **Checkatrade / MyBuilder / Bark**: Good for initial leads, but fees eat into margins

2. **Google Business Profile**: Free, essential. Get 5+ reviews as fast as possible

3. **Word of mouth**: Still the best source. Ask every happy customer for a referral

4. **Local Facebook groups**: Community groups are goldmines for domestic work

5. **Leaflet drops**: Still work for local areas. Target new-build estates

6. **Your own website**: Essential for credibility. Doesn't need to be fancy

Managing Your Business

The plumbers who make real money aren't necessarily the best plumbers — they're the best at running a business. That means:

  • Quoting promptly (within 24 hours)
  • Following up on every quote
  • Invoicing on the day you finish
  • Chasing payments systematically
  • Tracking job profitability
  • Managing your diary efficiently

This is where job management software like Gaffer earns its keep. It handles quoting, scheduling, invoicing, and payments so you can focus on the work. Try our [free invoice generator](/tools/invoice-generator) and [RAMS generator](/tools/rams-generator) to see how Gaffer thinks about trade workflows.

The Gaffer Team
Business Advice

Writing about business strategy, technology, and best practices for contractors and tradespeople.

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