Skip Ribbon Commands
Skip to main content Can't find what you're looking for?

Job profiles

Building surveyor

  • Hours

    30-40 per week

  • Starting salary

    £18,000 + per year

Building surveyors advise clients about the design and construction of new buildings. They also advise on the maintenance and repair of existing buildings. Clients can range from home owners to large commercial and industrial companies. If you are interested in buildings and like the idea of a varied job where expert advice is key, this could be perfect for you.

To be a building surveyor, you should have good problem-solving skills. You will need strong communication and presentation skills. You will also need to be able to understand your client’s business needs.

To qualify as a building surveyor, you will need to complete a degree course accredited by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.



The work

As a surveyor, you would usually focus on three main areas – surveying, legal work, and planning and inspection. Your work could include:

  • surveying properties, identifying structural faults and making recommendations for repairs
  • assessing damage for insurance purposes, for example following a fire or flooding
  • establishing who is responsible for building repair costs
  • advising clients on issues such as property boundary disputes
  • acting as a client’s supporter or standing as an expert witness during legal proceedings
  • checking properties to make sure that they meet building regulations, and fire safety and accessibility standards
  • dealing with planning applications and with improvement or conservation grants.

Depending on the size of the company, you may cover all of these tasks or you might specialise in just one.

Other duties would include supervising a surveying team made up of assistants and technicians.


Hours

Normal working hours would be between 9 am and 5 pm, Monday to Friday. Your time would be split between office and site work. Some contracts may involve spending periods of time away from home.

Site work would take place in all weather conditions, and you may have to work at heights and on dangerous structures.


Income

Newly-qualified graduates earn between £18,000 and £22,000 a year.

Experienced surveyors earn between £23,000 and £38,000 a year, and senior staff with chartered status can earn over £50,000 a year.

Figures are intended as a guideline only.


Entry requirements

To qualify as a building surveyor, you will need to complete a degree course accredited by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), followed by professional development. For details see the Training and Development section below. Relevant RICS accredited degrees are available in subjects such as:

  • surveying
  • construction
  • civil engineering
  • building engineering.

To search for accredited qualifications, see the RICS Courses website.

You could also start work in a trainee position with a surveying firm, and study for qualifications while you are working.

If you have a non-accredited degree, you will need to take a postgraduate course in surveying. You can do this through a company graduate traineeship, or by studying full-time at a RICS-accredited university. If you are working in engineering or construction, you could take a distance learning postgraduate conversion course with the College of Estate Management (CEM). For more details, see the CEM website.

With an HNC/HND or a foundation degree in surveying or construction, you may be able to start working as a surveying technician and take further qualifications to become a building surveyor.

Please see the technical surveyor for more information.

For more information about surveying careers, accredited degree programmes and membership routes, contact the RICS and the Chartered Institute of Building's (CIOB) Faculty for Architecture and Surveying.

You are likely to need a driving licence in this job so that you can visit sites and clients.


Training and development

You would be expected to continue your professional development by working towards chartered status. You can achieve this through the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) or the Chartered Institute of Building's (CIOB) Faculty for Architecture and Surveying.

With a RICS-accredited qualification, you can complete the RICS Assessment of Professional Competence (APC). This involves a period of supervised practical training to build up your professional knowledge and skills. It can take between two and six years of postgraduate experience to pass the APC, which leads to chartered status.

The CIOB has a variety of routes to chartered membership depending on your qualifications and experience. You would work through a Professional Development Programme (normally around three years) followed by a Professional Review.

Contact the RICS and CIOB for more information.


Skills and knowledge

To be a building surveyor, you should have:

  • good problem-solving skills
  • excellent STEM skills (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths)
  • the ability to work to a high degree of accuracy
  • the ability to interpret data
  • strong communication, negotiation and presentation skills
  • the ability to prioritise and plan effectively
  • an understanding of the client’s business needs
  • a commitment to continuing professional development
  • the ability to work as part of a team
  • a comprehensive knowledge of building regulations
  • an understanding of planning legislation, and health and safety.

Language skills may be useful if you want to work overseas or for a company with international clients.


More information

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) (Opens new window)
Parliament Square
London
SW1P 3AD
Tel: 020 7334 3875
www.rics.org

College of Estate Management (Opens new window)
Whiteknights
Reading
Berkshire
RG6 6AW
Tel: 0800 019 9697
www.cem.ac.uk

Asset Skills (Opens new window)
2 The Courtyard
48 New North Road
Exeter
Devon
EX4 4EP
Tel: 01392 423399
Careers Advice: careers@assetskills.org
www.assetskills.org

Chartered Institute of Building (Opens new window)
Englemere
Kings Ride
Ascot
Berkshire
SL5 7TB
Tel: 01344 630700
www.ciob.org.uk


Opportunities

You can find employment with local authorities, construction and engineering firms, building conservation bodies and specialist surveying practices.

Your progression options include project or senior management, partnership in private practice, self-employment as a consultant, or working in related fields, for example building control.

Please see the building control officer job profile for more information.

You may find the following useful for vacancies and general reading (links open in a new window):

Job profiles are based on the latest information supplied to us by industry bodies, such as Sector Skills Councils. Please be aware that with the introduction of the Qualifications and Credit Framework (Opens in a new window) there has been, and will continue to be, changes to vocational qualifications. For more information, please check with industry bodies directly.

We do not accept responsibility for the content of external sites.


Related industry information

Industry summary

The construction sector is represented by ConstructionSkills Sector Skills Council. Construction is the creation of the built environment covering all stages of the construction process, from creating the initial ideas and designs to actually building the structure and ensuring that everything continues to work after it is completed. The sector covers the following areas: building infrastructure (such as roads and rail); the building of public and private housing; the construction of public non‐housing (such as schools); industrial building; the construction of commercial premises (such as offices and retail units); together with the repair and maintenance of these constructions.

ConstructionSkills represents every part of the UK construction industry, from architects to bricklayers. The sector employs 2.35 million people, representing over 8% of the UK workforce.

Professional and managerial staff in the construction sector can be involved at all stages of a construction project from the early planning stages to maintaining a building after it has been constructed. The industry covers a whole range of different roles including:

  • Design – Architects, Structural Engineer, Geospatial Modeller
  • Surveying – Quantity Surveyor, Building Surveyor, Hydrographic Surveyor
  • Management – Construction Manager, Project Manager, Site Supervisor
  • Planning – Planner, Facilities Manager, Town Planner.

Some who enter this area of the industry will become specialised in their chosen field, whilst others will start their own companies or become managers in construction businesses.

Key facts for the construction sector as a whole:

  • 92% of organisations in the construction sector employ less than 10 people.
  • 55% of the workforce is employed in manual occupations.
  • 37% of the workforce is self‐employed.
  • Much of the workforce is mobile.
  • More than 35% of people in the sector are their own boss running their own companies.

Jobs in the industry range from: senior executive, business process manager, construction manager, civil engineer, town planner, mechanical engineer, architect, surveyor, project manager, structural engineer, geospatial modeller, facilities manager.


National and regional data

Fewer employers in the East Midlands and West Midlands who had tried to recruit skilled staff had encountered difficulties (9% and 16% respectively); compared with London and Scotland, where two in five employers had experienced recruitment difficulties (40% and 39% respectively).

East Midlands – There are annual recruitment requirements for civil engineers (210), other construction professionals (140), construction managers (100) and surveyors (less than 50). There are little or no requirements for senior executive and business process managers, and architects.

East of England – There are annual recruitment requirements for construction managers (600), surveyors (480), other construction professionals (340), senior executive and business process managers (190) and architects (150). There is little or no requirement for civil engineers in the region.

London – There are annual recruitment requirements for senior executive and business process managers (470), surveyors (260), construction managers (200) and civil engineers (180). There are little or no requirements for other construction professionals and architects in the region.

North East – There are annual recruitment requirements for construction managers (70), civil engineers (70) and architects (less than 50). There are little or no requirements for senior executive and business process managers, other construction professionals and surveyors in the region.

North West – There are annual recruitment requirements for construction managers (200), architects (210) and senior executive and business process managers (80). There are little or no requirements for civil engineers and surveyors in the region.

South East – There are annual recruitment requirements for civil engineers (330) and architects (250). There are little or no requirements for senior executive and business process managers, construction managers, other construction professionals and surveyors.

South West – There are annual recruitment requirements for senior executive and business process managers (60) and construction managers (60). There are little or no requirements for civil engineers, other construction professionals, architects and surveyors.

West Midlands – There are only annual recruitment requirements for construction managers (720) in the region. There is little or no requirement for all other professional and management occupations in construction.

Yorkshire and the Humber – There are annual recruitment requirements for civil engineers (100), construction managers (90) and other construction professionals (40). There are little or no requirements for senior executive and business process managers, architects and surveyors.

Northern Ireland – There are annual recruitment requirements for senior executive and business process managers (110) and surveyors (80). There are little or no requirements for construction managers, civil engineers, other construction professionals and architects.

Scotland – There are annual recruitment requirements for construction managers (630), civil engineers (380), other construction professionals (205), senior executive and business process managers (70) and architects (60). There is little or no requirement for surveyors. Total employment to 2014 is expected to increase in senior executive and business process management, construction management occupations and civil engineers.

Wales – There are annual recruitment requirements for construction managers (330), civil engineers (240), architects (70), other construction professionals (30) and surveyors (less than 50). There is little or no requirement for senior executive and business process managers. Total employment to 2014 is forecast to increase for senior executive and business process managers, civil engineers and architects.

[N.B. Data derived from Constructionskills Labour Market Intelligence 2010‐2014.]


Career paths


Further sources


View full Job market information






Get skills in..

Want to get the skills needed to be prepared for this job? Click on the links below to see relevant courses.



What are people talking about today?

View our Forums

Career Tools

We’re interested in your opinion!

We’d like to know what you think of the National Careers Service website.

If you would like to take part in a short survey after you have finished using the website, please click ‘yes’ below.