The Current Headcount
The UK electrical workforce is one of the largest in the construction and services sector, but the exact number is difficult to pin down precisely because "electrician" encompasses several different roles, qualification levels, and employment arrangements.
Estimates for 2026:
- Total electrical workers (all roles, all levels): approximately 320,000–360,000
- Qualified electricians (Level 3 NVQ or equivalent): approximately 180,000–220,000
- NICEIC-registered contractors: approximately 26,000 businesses (covering sole traders to large companies)
- NAPIT-registered electricians: approximately 10,000–12,000 businesses
- JIB-registered operatives: approximately 100,000–120,000 (the JIB covers directly employed operatives in the electrical contracting industry)
These numbers include both employed electricians (working for electrical contracting companies) and self-employed/business owner electricians. The ONS Labour Force Survey consistently shows approximately 280,000–320,000 people identifying as electricians or electrical engineers in their primary occupation.
Geographic Distribution
Electricians are distributed roughly proportionally to population, with some variation:
| Region | Estimated Electricians | As % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Greater London | 40,000–50,000 | 15–17% |
| South East (ex-London) | 30,000–38,000 | 10–12% |
| North West | 28,000–35,000 | 9–11% |
| Yorkshire and Humber | 22,000–28,000 | 7–9% |
| West Midlands | 20,000–26,000 | 7–8% |
| East of England | 18,000–24,000 | 6–7% |
| South West | 18,000–22,000 | 6–7% |
| Scotland | 22,000–28,000 | 7–9% |
| Other regions | 60,000–80,000 | 20–25% |
In terms of electricians per capita, densely populated urban areas like London, Birmingham, Manchester, and Leeds have the highest concentrations, but many rural areas have genuine shortages where even routine EICR work has multi-week waiting times.
New Entrants: Apprenticeship Completions
The pipeline of new qualified electricians entering the workforce is measured by apprenticeship completion rates. In England and Wales:
- Level 3 Electrotechnical Technology apprenticeship starts: approximately 6,000–8,000 per year
- Completion rate: approximately 55–65% (many start but don't finish the 4-year programme)
- New qualifications issued per year: approximately 4,000–5,000
JTL (the main electrical apprenticeship training provider) handles approximately 40–50% of all electrical apprenticeships in England and Wales. The balance is handled through further education colleges and independent training providers.
These completion numbers need to be compared to retirement and attrition. With the average age of a qualified electrician estimated at 43–45, and significant numbers reaching retirement age over the next decade, net new supply is not keeping pace with expected retirements — let alone the growing demand from EV charging, heat pumps, and housing construction.
The Supply/Demand Imbalance and What It Means
The numbers tell a consistent story: UK electrician supply is tight and getting tighter. The implications for electrician business owners:
Pricing power is increasing
When demand outstrips supply, prices rise. The 4–6% annual rate increases seen 2021–2026 are consistent with a market where demand is structurally higher than supply. Business owners who understand their market position can price accordingly and resist downward pressure on rates.
Staffing is genuinely difficult
The difficulty finding qualified staff isn't imagined — there genuinely aren't enough qualified electricians to meet demand. ECA surveys consistently show >65% of electrical businesses reporting recruitment difficulties. Building a team requires investment in retention, competitive pay, and developing internal talent through apprenticeships.
The market is local, not national
While national supply figures matter, what matters more for your business is supply in your specific area. A town with 15 active electricians covering 50,000 homes is a very different competitive environment from a town with 3. Local research — checking how many businesses appear in Google local results for your key terms — gives you a much more actionable picture than national statistics.
International recruitment is a partial solution
Some UK electrical businesses recruit qualified electricians from Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and parts of Europe under skilled worker visa provisions. This is increasingly common for larger businesses but requires investment in visa sponsorship and integration support.
Implications for Your Business Planning
Understanding the supply picture helps you make better business decisions:
- Pricing: In a supply-constrained market, you have more pricing power than you may realise. If you're fully booked and turning away work, your prices are too low — the market is telling you it will bear more
- Apprenticeships: Growing your own talent is the most reliable long-term staffing strategy. An apprentice who qualifies with you, knows your systems, and has been developed by you is worth more than a lateral hire from the open market
- Specialisation: As the market for standard domestic work becomes more competitive as more sole traders enter, specialisation in higher-value areas (EV infrastructure, commercial, solar integration) provides a defensible competitive position
- Geographic focus: A well-established business in a defined geographic area has a competitive moat that a national competitor finds difficult to penetrate. Build depth in your area before expanding geographically