The UK construction industry has long been male-dominated — but that is changing. Industry bodies, leading contractors, and professional institutions are all investing in attracting, supporting, and retaining women in every construction role, from apprentice tradesperson to boardroom director.
Women currently represent approximately 15% of the UK construction workforce. Increasing this figure is not just a diversity goal — it is an economic necessity given the scale of the skills shortage facing the sector.
Many professional construction roles now operate with explicit pay equity policies. Quantity Surveying, Project Management, and engineering roles typically offer the most transparent salary bands, with fewer historic pay gaps than trade and site roles.
Construction Job Board connects women construction professionals with leading UK employers who value diversity. Register your free CV at constructionjobboard.co.uk and search for roles with employers committed to inclusive hiring.
A: Yes. Construction offers strong careers for women across every specialism — from architecture, engineering, and project management to site management, surveying, and skilled trades. The industry is actively working to improve diversity.
A: Currently around 15% of the UK construction workforce is female, rising to higher percentages in professional and management roles. Industry initiatives are actively targeting improvement.
A: Women in Property, Women in Construction, NAWIC (National Association of Women in Construction), and the CITB's diversity programmes all support women entering and progressing in the sector.
A: Gender pay gap reporting shows construction has work to do, but many professional roles and major contractors now have explicit pay equity policies and active diversity targets.
A: Project management, sustainability, BIM, commercial management, and site management are seeing the fastest growth in female representation, driven by active recruitment strategies.