Guest viewing is limited

Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

Part time plumbing

View the thread, titled "Part time plumbing" which is posted in UK Plumbers Forums on UK Plumbers Forums.

L

london2345

Hi all, looking for some basic advice on the feasibility of training and working as a plumber part-time.

I'm in my mid twenties and have a 9-5 job in a fairly precarious industry. It's fine, but slightly volatile (good pay but the work's not massively skilled so easy to be made redundant) and not always fulfilling. I've always wanted to learn a 'useful' skill and would love to work part-time (i.e. evenings and weekends) in plumbing - partly to manage employment risk (i.e. if the poo hits the fan with the current job, I've got a skill that will always be valuable), partly to get some extra cash and partly to keep me busy.

I'm aware that becoming a plumber requires a significant investment though, both in terms of money and time. My ideal scenario would be to get qualified and then be 'on call' for work outside 9-5 on weekdays. The advantage would be that even if I didn't get any work for a few weeks, I'd still be fine as my usual job pays fine.

I'm basically looking for your opinions on whether the idea of qualifying and working part-time is ridiculous or is whether exploring further.

Let me know what you think - any feedback would be really appreciated.

Cheers!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
The trouble with that scenario is that you need to be able to come up with some weird and wonderful solutions based on your wits and what you have in the van.

And unfortunately that comes with experience.

you would also find there are things you can't fix there and then. The punter would be expecting you back the next morning which, with your primary job, you wouldn't be able to do!

I can see your thinking, it just has a lot of problems attached.
 
There are a lot of qualified full-time plumbers who are currently only managing part-time!

As croppie says, experience counts for a lot. The less you do, the longer it takes to build up that experience. If you only work out of hours you'll need to carry a huge range of stuff on the van as you've no chance to temporarily make safe then nip to the merchants.

I'd say it's not financially viable on the terms you describe, but if you want to retrain as a permanent career change, then go for it, it's a great profession.
 
Many thanks for the responses all - really useful and there's definitely a lot that I hadn't considered!

All the best
 
The sheer scope of fittings and parts you would need in order to do this would be mind boggling.

If you have garage space at home and a couple of grand spare, you could perhaps make a mini merchants at home to nip back to.

Failing that team up with a plumber who works days only and no evening callouts.
You then charge for the callout to make safe. And he pops round in the am to complete repairs.
 

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Reply to the thread, titled "Part time plumbing" which is posted in UK Plumbers Forums on Plumbers Forums.

We recommend City Plumbing Supplies, BES, and Plumbing Superstore for all plumbing supplies.

Thread statistics

Created
london2345,
Last reply from
kay-jay,
Replies
5
Views
691
Back
Top