Career Center · 16 trades · US · PL · NL · ES
Start your career in the trades
Future-proof work with real demand. Browse trade guides, see live local demand, take a 2-minute fit quiz, and see how your current skills translate.
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Learn how to become a plumber: licensing, apprenticeship programs, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become an electrician: training programs, licensing exams, salary data, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become an HVAC technician: EPA certification, training programs, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a roofer: training, safety certifications, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a carpenter: apprenticeship, licensing, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a professional painter: training, certifications like EPA RRP, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a landscaper: training, licensing, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a professional house cleaner: training, certifications, business setup, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a professional mover: licensing, DOT requirements, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
How to become a handyman: skills to develop, licensing, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.
Learn how to become a pest control technician.
Learn how to become an appliance repair technician.
Learn how to become a pool & spa technician.
Learn how to become a smart home installer.
Learn how to become a foundation specialist.
Learn how to become a concrete mason.
Already know where you'll work?
Open the country page to see all 16 trades ranked for that labour market — licensing time, journeyman pay, and hot specialisations side by side.
Coming from another field
What carries over, what's harder than it looks, how the pay shifts — first-hand from people who made the jump.
From IT to Plumbing: Trading Code for Pipes
Leaving a desk job for the trades is becoming increasingly common. Plumbers use the same systematic troubleshooting skills as software engineers, but with physical, tangible results. The pay can be highly competitive, and the demand is virtually recession-proof.
From Retail to Electrician: Powering Your New Career
Customer service professionals already possess one of the most critical skills for successful tradespeople: the ability to handle clients. By transitioning to become an electrician, you combine your interpersonal skills with a highly respected, well-paying technical craft.
From the Cubicle to HVAC: Building a Dynamic Career
Tired of staring at spreadsheets all day? HVAC technicians are constantly on the move, facing new environments and challenges daily. Your organizational skills from the office will help you excel at managing parts, tracking jobs, and eventually running your own truck or business.
From the Military to HVAC: A Mission-Critical Career
Veterans are highly sought after in the skilled trades. The discipline, focus, and ability to follow strict procedures learned in the military translate perfectly to the technical demands of HVAC work. Plus, many GI Bill benefits cover apprenticeship costs.
From Teaching to Carpentry: Building More Than Minds
Teachers looking to leave the classroom often find deep satisfaction in carpentry. Both professions require meticulous planning, patience, and the ability to break down complex projects into step-by-step processes. Carpentry offers tangible results at the end of every day.
From Healthcare to Electrician: A New Kind of Lifesaving Work
Healthcare workers bring an uncommon combination of crisis management, attention to detail, and safety-first thinking. These qualities make them excellent electricians, where mistakes can be just as dangerous as in a hospital — but the work-life balance is far better.
From Construction Laborer to Roofer: Specialize and Earn More
General construction workers already have the physical toughness and jobsite awareness needed in roofing. By specializing, you move from general labor into a skilled trade with higher pay, more autonomy, and the ability to eventually run your own crew.
From Finance to Landscaping: Growing a New Career Outdoors
Finance professionals looking to escape cubicle life often thrive in landscaping. Your ability to budget projects, estimate costs, and manage client relationships gives you a head start over most new landscapers — and working outdoors does wonders for mental health.
From Hospitality to Painting: A Fresh Coat on Your Career
Hospitality workers are used to long hours, tight deadlines, and making spaces look their best. Those same skills — attention to detail, working fast under pressure, and caring about the final presentation — make the transition to professional painting surprisingly natural. The work is physical but far less chaotic than a busy kitchen.
From Auto Mechanic to HVAC Technician: Same Diagnostic Mind, New Systems
Auto mechanics already understand refrigerant cycles, electrical diagnostics, and mechanical systems — the core of HVAC work. The transition leverages years of hands-on troubleshooting experience while moving into a field with strong residential and commercial demand. Many mechanics report higher earning potential and less back-breaking work compared to auto shops.
From Retail to Plumbing: Customer Skills Meet a Hands-On Trade
Retail and customer service professionals already know how to manage expectations, communicate under pressure, and handle difficult situations. These skills are gold in plumbing, where explaining a repair to a worried homeowner is half the job. The trade offers steady year-round demand, clear advancement from apprentice to master, and earning potential that often surpasses retail management.
From Military to Electrician: Discipline Powers a New Mission
Veterans bring discipline, precision under pressure, and strict adherence to safety protocols — exactly what electrical work demands. Many military roles already involve wiring, generators, and power systems. The transition offers a structured apprenticeship path, strong union options, and a career where attention to detail literally saves lives.
From Office Job to Landscaper: Trading Fluorescent Lights for Sunlight
Office workers who crave outdoor work and visible results are increasingly finding fulfillment in landscaping. Project management, client communication, and budget skills transfer directly, while the work itself offers physical activity, creative design, and the satisfaction of transforming spaces. Entry barriers are lower than many trades, and the path to running your own crew is well-established.
From Hotel Housekeeping to Residential Cleaning Business
Hotel housekeepers already know professional cleaning standards, chemical handling, and speed-cleaning techniques. Transitioning to residential cleaning lets you set your own schedule, pick your clients, and earn significantly more per hour. The startup cost is minimal — most supplies fit in a car trunk — and the demand for quality house cleaners is consistently high.
From Warehouse Work to Professional Moving: Same Hustle, Better Pay
Warehouse workers already have the physical endurance, lifting technique, and logistics mindset that moving companies value most. The transition is one of the most natural in the trades — you're already comfortable with heavy items, tight timelines, and organized loading. Professional movers earn tips on top of hourly rates, and experienced crew leaders can eventually start their own companies with just a truck and a license.
From Construction Laborer to Handyman: Be Your Own Boss
Construction laborers who are tired of jobsite politics and foreman schedules often thrive as independent handymen. You already know how to use every tool in the kit, work with drywall, basic plumbing, and light electrical. As a handyman, you set your own rates, choose your jobs, and build direct relationships with repeat clients. The demand is enormous — homeowners need someone reliable for the hundred small jobs that specialized contractors won't touch.
From Accounting to Electrician: Rewiring Your Career
Accountants bring precision, code compliance instincts, and comfort with regulations — skills that transfer directly to electrical work. The trade offers higher earning potential than many desk jobs, hands-on problem solving, and a shortage-driven job market where licensed electricians are in strong demand.
From Food Service to House Cleaning: Same Hustle, Better Hours
Restaurant workers already know speed, cleanliness standards, and customer service. House cleaning lets you apply those skills on your own schedule, with lower startup costs than almost any other trade. Many food-service veterans build full client rosters within months.
From Trucking to Handyman: Turning Road Skills into Home Repairs
Truck drivers and delivery workers have mechanical aptitude, problem-solving grit, and self-reliance that translate perfectly to handyman work. The transition lets you stay local, sleep in your own bed, and build direct relationships with clients instead of dispatchers.
From Nursing to HVAC: Diagnosing Systems Instead of Symptoms
Nurses are trained diagnosticians who work under pressure, follow strict protocols, and communicate with people in stressful situations. HVAC technicians need exactly the same skills — but applied to heating and cooling systems instead of patients. The pay is comparable, the burnout is lower, and the demand is year-round.
From Office to Smart-Home Installer: Software Skills, Hardware Hands
Smart-home installation is one of the few trades with no national licensing in any of our four countries — meaning you can start charging customers within months of training. Office workers who already use Wi-Fi, Zigbee, Matter, and HomeKit on a hobbyist level have a head start that takes most newcomers a year to build.
From Construction to Foundation Specialist: Deeper Cuts, Higher Pay
Foundation work pays 30–50% more than general construction labour because it sits at the intersection of structural engineering and physical grit. Workers who already know how to read site plans, operate small excavators, and pour concrete have the foundation (literally) — what's left is the diagnostic side: reading cracks, picking the right pier system, and handling the insurance/warranty paperwork that comes with structural fixes.
Live demand by city
See which trades are hiring most in your area, with a 0-100 demand score blended from local supply and recent activity.
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View comparisonFind an apprenticeship
Real programs with paid training and licensing pathways — official government portals and the unions / vocational schools that actually place people.
- apprenticeship.govOfficial portal
U.S. Department of Labor's Registered Apprenticeship finder — filter by trade, state, and ZIP for paid, registered programs nationwide.
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- IBEW Local Union finderUnion
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers — 700+ locals run paid 4–5-year apprenticeships (Inside Wireman, Solar, Outside Lineman).
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- United Association local finderUnion
UA represents plumbers, pipefitters, sprinkler fitters, and HVAC service techs — 300+ locals offer 5-year paid apprenticeships with full benefits.
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- SMART (Sheet Metal / HVAC) apprenticeshipUnion
Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers — ductwork, HVAC installation, and metal-roof systems through 4–5-year apprenticeships.
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- ABC Merit Shop apprenticeshipsIndustry association
Associated Builders & Contractors runs the largest non-union apprenticeship network — over 800 chapters and training centres nationwide.
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- IEC (Independent Electrical Contractors) apprenticeshipIndustry association
Non-union electrical apprenticeship — 4-year program combining online theory with paid on-the-job training at member contractors.
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Listings are curated by the HireLocal editorial team — opening a program takes you to the program's own site. We don't take a cut on placements.
Frequently asked questions
Which trades are most in demand in 2026?
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data projects above-average growth through 2032 for HVAC technicians (+6%), electricians (+6%), and plumbers (+2%) — driven by aging infrastructure, EV charging build-out, and heat-pump adoption. In Poland and the Netherlands, electricians and HVAC techs are the tightest labor markets per Eurostat 2025. In Spain, INE's 2025 shortage list highlights the same three trades plus dedicated photovoltaic installers — driven by the RD 244/2019 self-consumption boom and the RD 477/2021 heat-pump rebates.
How long does it take to become a licensed tradesperson?
In the US, 4–5 years of paid apprenticeship plus exams gets you a journeyman license for most trades. Master status takes 2–4 more years. Poland: 3 years vocational school plus the relevant SEP/UDT exam. Netherlands: MBO level 2/3, 2–4 years. Spain: 2 years FP Grado Medio plus the REBT (electrical) or RITE-IT (heating/cooling) carnet from your autonomous community's Consejería de Industria — 2–4 years total. Painters, landscapers and house cleaners can start working in months in all four countries.
Do trades pay better than office jobs?
Top trades match or beat the median U.S. office salary. Master electricians clear $90,000–$120,000+ in major metros; experienced plumbers and HVAC techs sit in the $75,000–$110,000 band. In Spain, electricistas with the Especialista REBT category plus photovoltaic speciality reach €36,000–€50,000 — well above the Spanish office median; RITE-IT HVAC techs with the F-Gas Categoría I top €40,000 on the Mediterranean coast. Office work has a lower entry floor in some roles but trades reach those numbers without student debt — apprenticeships pay you while you learn.
Can I switch to the trades from a desk job?
Yes — and people do. Logical troubleshooting from IT, methodical problem-solving from accounting, and customer service from retail all transfer directly. Most of our 20 transition guides are written by people who made the jump after 25–40. Expect 1–2 years of apprentice pay before journeyman wages, and harder physical days at first.
What's the cheapest way to start a trade career?
Union apprenticeships (IBEW for electrical, UA for plumbing/HVAC in the US) are the cheapest path: tuition is free, you earn 40–60% of journeyman wage from day one, and you get pension and benefits. Non-union community-college programs cost $1,500–$8,000 total. In Spain: FP pública is free, and the <em>tarifa plana</em> autónomo (€87/month flat Social Security for the first year of self-employment) cushions the transition into solo work. All these paths beat 4-year college on debt and time-to-paycheck.
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (Occupational Outlook Handbook 2024), Eurostat labour-market indicators 2025, GUS (Polska), CBS (Nederland), INE (España).
Last updated: May 2026 · Edited by HireLocal Editorial