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Reviewed by Jacob Whitmore, Whito · Fact-checked for accuracy

Last Updated on June 25, 2026

2026 Data Report

Published by Whito | Updated May 2026

Executive summary

The UK plumbing, heating, and air conditioning installation market is worth £24.3 billion in 2026, with over 46,000 businesses competing for residential and commercial work. Most of these businesses are small, most of their marketing is reactive, and most of them have no idea how they compare to the competition.

This page breaks down how UK plumbers find work, what they charge, and where the market is heading, so you can see exactly where your business sits relative to the rest of the industry.

Key facts

Key takeaways

  • The UK plumbing sector is worth £24.3 billion with over 46,000 businesses, the vast majority of which are sole traders or micro businesses.
  • Average plumber hourly rates range from £45 to £75 nationally, with London rates reaching £65 to £105 per hour.
  • Boiler installations are the highest-value common job at £1,500 to £3,500, making them worth targeting in your marketing.
  • Google is the dominant customer acquisition channel, with “plumber near me” searches driving the majority of emergency and planned work.
  • Cost per lead ranges from £15 to £40 through Local Services Ads, with a typical close rate of 60% on qualified leads.

How to read this page

This is a reference page, not a blog post. You don’t need to read it top to bottom.

If you want to understand the market size, start at Section 3. If you’re looking at average job values, go to Section 4. If you want to know how customers find plumbers, go to Section 5. For search demand data, check Section 6. If you want to know what’s going wrong for most businesses, skip to Section 8.

All figures are in GBP and reflect UK market data as of early 2026.

Market size and structure

£24.3 Billion
UK Plumbing, Heating and AC Market Size (2026)
Growing at 2.8% CAGR since 2020
46,336
Number of Businesses
Growing at 3.1% CAGR between 2020 and 2025
118,600
Plumbing and HVAC Workforce
Expected to remain stable at 118,800 by 2027

The market is dominated by small businesses. The vast majority of plumbing firms are sole traders or micro businesses with fewer than 5 employees. This means the competitive landscape is fragmented, with no single firm controlling a meaningful share of local markets.

That fragmentation is both an opportunity and a challenge. It means there is space for well-marketed businesses to dominate their local area, but it also means the barrier to entry is low, so competition is constant.

Business structure breakdown

Business SizeEstimated ShareTypical Turnover
Sole trader (1 person)55 – 65%£30,000 – £70,000
Micro (2-4 people)25 – 30%£100,000 – £400,000
Small (5-10 people)5 – 10%£400,000 – £800,000
Medium+ (10+ people)2 – 5%£800,000+

Average job values

Understanding what each type of job is worth helps you work out which services to target in your marketing and how much you can afford to spend acquiring each customer.

Job TypeAverage ValueNotes
Emergency call-out£120 – £250Call-out fee (£60-£120) plus first-hour labour
Standard repair£100 – £300Tap replacement, toilet repair, leak fix
Boiler service£70 – £120Annual service, lower margin but recurring
Boiler installation£1,500 – £3,500Highest-value common job
Full central heating system£4,000 – £8,000Major project, often via referral or SEO
Bathroom installation (labour only)£1,500 – £3,500Multi-day job, good margin
Full bathroom (labour + materials)£2,500 – £6,000Higher value when supplying materials

Hourly and day rates

Rate TypeNational AverageLondon / South East
Hourly rate£45 – £75£65 – £105
Day rate£250 – £500£400 – £700
Emergency call-out fee£60 – £120£80 – £150

The key insight for marketing: boiler installations and bathroom work generate the highest revenue per job, so they justify the highest marketing spend per lead. Emergency work converts quickly but at lower total value. The smartest plumbers run separate marketing campaigns for each service type, with different cost-per-lead targets.

How customers find plumbers

How customers choose a plumber has shifted dramatically in the last five years. Word of mouth is still important, but it is no longer the dominant channel for new customer acquisition.

ChannelEstimated Share of New LeadsTrend
Google Search (organic + ads)35 – 45%Growing, especially “near me” searches
Word of mouth / referral20 – 30%Stable but declining as a share
Trade platforms (Checkatrade, MyBuilder)15 – 20%Growing, but margins thinning
Google Business Profile (map pack)10 – 15%Growing fast, especially mobile
Social media3 – 5%Growing slowly for trades
Other (directories, print, leaflets)5 – 10%Declining

The most significant shift is the dominance of Google. When you combine paid ads, organic search results, Google Business Profile listings, and Google Local Services Ads, Google accounts for roughly half of all new customer enquiries for plumbers in urban and suburban areas.

Word of mouth remains important, but it is increasingly mediated through online reviews. A customer may be “referred” by a friend, but they will still check your Google reviews before calling.

Search demand and keywords

Search demand for plumbing services is high and consistent throughout the year, with seasonal spikes during winter months when boiler breakdowns and frozen pipe emergencies increase.

Top search terms by volume

KeywordEstimated Monthly Searches (UK)Intent
plumber near me90,000 – 120,000High intent, immediate need
emergency plumber40,000 – 60,000Urgent, highest conversion
plumber [city name]5,000 – 20,000 per cityLocal intent
boiler installation25,000 – 35,000High value, planned purchase
boiler repair20,000 – 30,000Urgent-ish, good conversion
gas engineer near me15,000 – 25,000Specific, high-value work
bathroom plumber5,000 – 10,000Project-based, higher value

The seasonal pattern is important for budgeting. Search volume for emergency plumber terms increases by 40 to 60% between October and February. Smart plumbers increase their Google Ads budget during winter and reduce it during summer, when demand drops but competition stays constant.

Customer acquisition costs

What it actually costs to win a new customer depends on the channel, the type of job, and your conversion rate.

ChannelCost Per LeadTypical Close RateCost Per Customer
Google Local Services Ads£15 – £4050 – 60%£25 – £80
Google Search Ads£20 – £6030 – 40%£50 – £150
SEO (organic)£10 – £25 (amortised)40 – 50%£20 – £60
Checkatrade£15 – £4030 – 50%£30 – £130
MyBuilder£10 – £35 (per shortlist)20 – 30%£35 – £175
Word of mouthFree60 – 80%Free

The key metric is not cost per lead but cost per acquired customer relative to the job value. If a boiler installation is worth £2,500 and it costs you £80 to acquire that customer through Google Ads, that is a 31:1 return. If a standard repair is worth £150 and costs £80 to acquire, that is barely worth doing through paid channels.

This is why the most profitable plumbers segment their marketing by service type: paid ads for high-value jobs (boilers, bathrooms, central heating), SEO and Google Business Profile for emergency and standard work, and platforms for early-stage credibility building.

Red flags and common mistakes

Mistake 1: Treating all leads the same

A boiler installation lead is worth 10 to 20 times more than a dripping tap lead. Your marketing budget should reflect this. Run separate campaigns with separate budgets for high-value vs. standard work.

Mistake 2: No online reviews strategy

Plumbers with 50+ Google reviews and a 4.7+ rating get significantly more enquiries than those with fewer than 10 reviews. Yet most plumbers never ask for reviews. Set up an automated review request that goes out after every job.

Mistake 3: Ignoring seasonal patterns

Search demand for emergency plumbing jumps 40 to 60% in winter. If your ad budget stays flat year-round, you are under-spending when demand is highest and over-spending when demand drops.

Mistake 4: Relying on a single channel

Plumbers who depend entirely on Checkatrade, or entirely on word of mouth, or entirely on Google Ads are one algorithm change or price increase away from a quiet month. Spread your marketing across at least three channels.

Mistake 5: No website in 2026

Around 30% of sole trader plumbers still have no website. Even a basic 5-page site with your services, service area, contact details, and reviews gives you credibility that a Checkatrade profile alone cannot match.

Methodology

This page is based on a combination of publicly available UK market data, Google search volume data, platform pricing research, and industry reports.

Sources include:

  • IBISWorld UK Plumbing, Heating and Air Conditioning Installation industry report (2025-2026)
  • Google Ads Keyword Planner data for UK plumber search terms (2025-2026)
  • Office for National Statistics (ONS) business and employment data
  • Published pricing from Checkatrade, MyBuilder, and other trade platforms
  • Published rate guides from UK plumbing industry bodies and trade publications
  • Whito proprietary analysis of UK plumber websites and marketing strategies

Market size figures, business counts, and employment data are based on the latest available industry reports. Search volume estimates are based on Google Keyword Planner ranges and may vary by month and region.

Whito is not affiliated with any of the platforms, agencies, or industry bodies mentioned on this page.

About Whito

Whito helps UK businesses figure out what’s working and what’s not in their marketing. We’re not an agency and we don’t manage marketing campaigns for plumbers. We publish independent research, tools, and audits designed to give business owners the information they need to make better decisions about where to spend their marketing budget.

We built this page because too many plumbers are making marketing decisions based on guesswork or sales pitches rather than data. This page gives you the numbers so you can benchmark yourself against the rest of the industry.

Common questions

What do the numbers say about marketing for UK plumber in 2026?

The UK plumbing sector is worth £24.3 billion with over 46,000 businesses, the vast majority of which are sole traders or micro businesses.

What are the key marketing statistics for UK plumber?

Average plumber hourly rates range from £45 to £75 nationally, with London rates reaching £65 to £105 per hour.

What should a UK plumber do about these marketing trends?

Cost per lead ranges from £15 to £40 through Local Services Ads, with a typical close rate of 60% on qualified leads.

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