How to become a lift engineer in England

Lift engineering is not one single, fixed job. Depending on the employer and training pathway, it may involve lifts, escalators, moving walks, stairlifts, platform lifts or service lifts. Some roles are more focused on installation, while others involve maintenance, repair, fault finding or modernisation work.

For a learner, the important thing is to understand how people usually get started, what kind of training is involved, and how practical competence is built over time. Employers need people who can work safely, follow technical information, use tools correctly, and develop reliable judgement around mechanical, electrical and site-based work.

This page explains the broad route into lift engineering in England. It is intended as a careers guide for new entrants, not a guide to specialist inspection-only roles or narrow product-only positions.

What is a lift engineer?

A lift engineer helps install, service, maintain, repair, modernise or test lifting and access equipment. Depending on the role, that can include passenger lifts, service lifts, platform lifts, stairlifts, escalators and moving walks. The work matters because it helps people and goods move safely and reliably through buildings, and it is safety-critical and standards-based.

“Lift engineer” can cover passenger lifts, service lifts, platform lifts, stairlifts, escalators and moving walks, and that different employers may focus on different equipment.

What does a lift engineer do?

The job is broader than many learners expect. It can include mechanical work, electrical work, adjustment, fault-finding, checking, recording and safe systems of work, not just breakdowns or part replacement.

Common day-to-day tasks include:

  • Following drawings, wiring diagrams, manuals, job sheets and safe working procedures
  • Preparing tools, parts, components and the work area
  • Installing, servicing, adjusting or repairing equipment
  • Carrying out checks, fault-finding and basic testing
  • Inspecting work and checking that equipment operates as intended
  • Recording work completed, faults found, parts used and follow-up actions
  • Following isolation rules, ppe requirements and quality standards
  • Dealing with customers, site contacts, supervisors or other engineers where needed

Lift engineers interpret wiring and layout diagrams, install and calibrate control systems, service and repair lifts and escalators, carry out safety checks, record results and respond to breakdown call-outs..  

Table of Contents

How do I become a lift engineer in England? Training routes explained

Careers route signpost illustration

In England there are multiple ways into lift engineering. They do not all give you the same level of qualification, workplace evidence or recognised competence, so it helps to compare them before you commit.

Common entry routes into lift engineering in England include:

  • A college course
  • An apprenticeship
  • Working towards the role
  • Applying directly

In practice, learners may also come across specialist training-provider courses and work-based NVQ routes linked to real jobs. The sections below explain what those routes usually mean in England.

Which lift engineer route might suit me best?

It is important to understand that not all routes lead to the same outcome. Apprenticeships and NVQs lead to recognised awarding body qualifications, whereas short courses may focus on skills development and may not result in a full occupational qualification on their own.

  • Apprenticeship: best if you want paid work, structured training and a clearer route into industry.
  • College course: best if you want core engineering knowledge before applying for trainee roles or apprenticeships.
  • Specialist training provider: best if you want shorter, focused practical training or a structured introduction.
  • Applying directly / working towards the role: best if you already have relevant experience or transferable engineering skills.
  • Work-based qualification / employer-led NVQ route: best if you are already in a company doing this work and need recognised evidence of competence.

The best route depends on your age, budget, location, experience and whether you want paid work straight away or a skills-building route first.

Pathway one: Lift and escalator electromechanic apprenticeship in England

Apprenticeship illustration

An apprenticeship is a paid job with training. Apprenticeships combine practical training in a job with study, and that to start one you need to be 16 or over, living in England and not in full-time education.

You can search and apply through the Find an apprenticeship service. Relevant apprenticeships include the Level 3 Lift and Escalator Electro-Mechanic apprenticeship and the Level 2 Stairlift, Platform Lift and Service Lift Electro-Mechanic apprenticeship.

What the apprenticeship experience typically includes:

  • You work and get paid
  • You train while doing a real job
  • You get time for training and study during working hours
  • You have employee rights, including holiday pay
  • Your exact tasks depend on the employer and the option or pathway

Apprentices get paid, get time for training or study as part of the apprenticeship, and get holiday pay and other employee rights. Off-the-job training takes place during working hours and is at least 20% of normal working hours.

For the current Lift and Escalator Engineering apprenticeship, the options include lift installation, escalator or moving walk installation, lift maintenance and repair, and escalator or moving walk maintenance and repair. The typical duration is 36 months and the typical assessment period is 4 months.

A closely related Level 2 apprenticeship also exists for stairlift, platform lift and service lift electromechanics with a typical duration of 24 months excluding the assessment period.

What is “EPA” and what is “gateway”?

  • End-point assessment (EPA) is the final independent assessment stage of an apprenticeship. It takes place after the apprentice has completed their training and met the required gateway checks. It is used to confirm that the apprentice can apply the knowledge, skills and behaviours expected for the role, rather than simply showing that they have attended the training.
  • Gateway is the point before EPA when training is complete and the apprentice has met the gateway requirements, so they can move into final assessment.

Pathway two: College engineering qualifications for lift engineering

This route usually means taking a college engineering course first, then applying for a trainee role or apprenticeship. It can make sense if you want time to build core engineering knowledge before moving into a lift-specific employer environment.

Relevant college courses can include maintenance engineering technology, building services engineering, and mechanical or electrical engineering. Entry requirements vary by provider and course.

Entry requirements vary by course and provider

Pathway three: Specialist lift engineering courses with a training provider

Lift engineering training-provider courses sit outside the usual school or college route. They may suit adult learners, career changers, people already in engineering, or learners who want focused practical training. Format, length, assessment and entry requirements vary widely between providers.

A short or focused course can help with foundation skills, supervised practice, workshop time, confidence, system awareness, or an introduction to specific equipment.

In many cases, short courses provide a certificate of attendance or skills development rather than a full awarding body qualification required to be recognised as a competent lift engineer.

Employers will still look for evidence of safe working and real capability.

Pathway four: Applying directly or working towards a lift engineer role

Direct application illustration

Learners can move into lift engineering by applying directly to employers or by working towards the role from a related position. This route is more realistic if you already have relevant qualifications, transferable engineering skills or experience in electrical, electro-mechanical or building services engineering.

You can apply directly to employers if you have relevant qualifications and experience. Some learners may join a lift engineering company as a new starter and develop through on-the-job training.

Pathway five: NVQ (work-based lift engineering qualification)

Pathway five: NVQ - work-based qualification

An NVQ (National Vocational Qualification) is a work-based route usually taken by people already employed in a lift engineering or related role. Instead of classroom learning alone, your competence is assessed through real work tasks.

This typically involves workplace observations, completed jobs, assessor feedback and evidence built up over time. Delivery may happen in the workplace, through a training provider, or through a mixed model.

NVQs typically take around 18 to 24 months depending on the pathway and employer requirements

Unlike short courses, an NVQ leads to a recognised awarding body qualification. This means it is used by employers as evidence of occupational competence, not just attendance or basic skills.

Becoming a lift engineer with Elevated Knowledge

Elevated Knowledge is based in Stockport and offers lift-engineering apprenticeships and related lift-industry qualifications – see the courses page for the exact detail of any route.

Other related Elevated Knowledge routes and qualifications:

Why become a lift engineer?

This is a practical route for learners who want mechanical systems, electrical systems, fault-finding, safety checks and real site work in the same job. Whether it suits you depends on whether you like structured practical work, problem-solving and working to standards.

What might I earn?
Typical lift engineer salaries range from around £22,000 for starter roles up to about £45,000 for more experienced positions. Pay varies by employer, location, overtime, shifts and the type of work you do.

How long does it take to become a lift engineer?
There is no single answer. The current Lift and Escalator Engineering apprenticeship gives a typical duration of 36 months plus a typical 4-month assessment period, while the related Stairlift, Platform Lift and Service Lift pathway has a typical duration of 24 months excluding assessment. Other provider courses and work-based qualifications vary.

What are the working hours and conditions?
Typical working hours for a lift engineer are 40 to 45 hours per week. That work also includes evenings, weekends, bank holidays or shifts, and that lift engineers may work at a client’s business, travel often, and work in cramped or dirty environments.

What happens after I’ve become a qualified lift engineer?

Progression usually comes from time on the job, broader equipment experience, trusted safe working and evidence that you can handle more responsibility.

Experienced lift engineers may move into supervisory management, project management, lift engineering design, technical sales or safety inspection. You can use your skills in the wider building services engineering sector.

In practice, progression can also mean specialising in passenger lifts, stairlifts, service lifts, platform lifts, escalators, moving walks, installation, maintenance, repair, commissioning or testing. Elevated’s Level 4 testing-operations qualification is one example of a later-stage specialist route.

What you’ll learn (learning outcomes)

Learning outcomes vary by route, but the common thread is building repeatable competence so you can work safely and consistently on lift or access equipment. Common learning outcomes include:

  • Working safely and preparing the work area
  • Reading and using technical information, instructions, diagrams and manuals
  • Identifying and checking tools, parts, components and systems
  • Setting up equipment correctly
  • Carrying out installation, service, adjustment, maintenance or repair tasks to the required standard
  • Recognising common safety or quality issues
  • Understanding inspection, checking, testing or verification
  • Completing records and documentation accurately

Depending on the route, you may also need documented workplace evidence or final external assessment before completion. An apprentice must complete training and meet gateway requirements before EPA, and several related qualifications at Elevated Knowledge are competence-based and assessed through real work activity.

Pay and progression as a professional lift engineer

Professional progression illustration

This section separates two topics that are often mixed together:

  • Apprentice pay rules (legal minimums)
  • Typical pay for qualified lift engineers (labour market information)

Apprentice pay rules in England

The apprentice rate is £8.00 per hour from 1 April 2026. The apprentice rate applies if you are under 19, or if you are 19 or over and in the first year of your apprenticeship. If you are 19 or over and have completed the first year, you must be paid at least the minimum wage for your age band.

Apprentices get training or study time as part of the apprenticeship, and apprentice training takes place during working hours.

Typical pay and hours for lift engineers

Lift engineers typically earn about £22,000 when starting out and up to around £45,000 when experienced, with working hours commonly around 40 to 45 per week.

These figures are a broad guide, not a guarantee, and real pay varies by location, employer, overtime, call-out work, shifts and specialism.

Sources used in this article

Last reviewed: 22 April 2026