Construction, M&E & HVAC Recruitment Insights for the UK
Explore expert insights from Robert Hurst Group on construction, M&E, ductwork and HVAC recruitment across the UK. Each article is
written to help employers and candidates make smarter decisions, avoid costly hiring mistakes, and build stronger project teams.
The site is quiet. Your project manager is staring at a Gantt chart that is turning increasingly red. The mechanical installation phase was supposed to be in full swing by now, but you’re staring at a "talent desert." You’ve posted on the usual job boards. You’ve reached out to your local contacts. Yet, the high-calibre HVAC technicians and pipefitters you need are either already booked until Christmas or lack the specific certifications your client demands. If this sounds familiar, you aren’t alone: but you are at risk. In the UK’s current mechanical and engineering (M&E) landscape, recruitment is no longer a simple administrative task. It has become a high-stakes strategic challenge where the wrong hire: or no hire at all: can lead to spiralling costs, missed milestones, and lasting reputational damage.
Recruiting skilled HVAC technicians has become increasingly challenging for UK employers across the construction, mechanical, and building services sectors. As demand for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems continues to rise, driven by new developments, refurbishments, and energy-efficiency requirements, employers face growing pressure to secure reliable technicians who can deliver safe, compliant, high-quality work.
Hiring HVAC technicians in the UK has become increasingly difficult. Demand continues to rise across commercial, industrial and residential projects, while the pool of qualified technicians remains limited. Employers are competing for the same talent, often under pressure to deliver projects on time and within budget.
You’ve felt it. That sinking feeling when a lead technician hands in their notice just as you’re about to break ground on a major commercial fit-out. Or worse, the silence on the other end of the phone when you realize your "go-to" subcontractor is fully booked for the next six months. In 2026, the UK construction and engineering landscape has reached a fever pitch.