Between the apprenticeship levy, government co-investment, and loan schemes, the person learning the trade rarely pays tuition out of pocket. Here’s how the money actually flows.
Large employers pay the apprenticeship levy and spend it on training; smaller employers get most training costs co-funded by government. Apprentices don’t pay tuition.
Government-backed loans for eligible level 3β6 college courses in England β repaid like student loans, only once you earn above the threshold.
Government-funded intensive courses (typically up to 16 weeks) in high-demand skills, including construction routes β free for individuals, with a guaranteed interview built into many programmes. Backed by a Β£100m construction expansion. Search “Skills Bootcamps” on the National Careers Service.
The Construction Industry Training Board funds training across the industry β grants for short courses, qualifications, and apprenticeships, plus 50% course co-funding for smaller employers through Employer Networks.
Many adults in England can take selected level 3 qualifications free β the official list and eligibility live on the National Careers Service.
Skills funding is devolved β Skills Development Scotland runs apprenticeships and funding north of the border.
Careers Wales is the national service for Welsh apprenticeships, courses, and funding.
NI Direct covers apprenticeships (ApprenticeshipsNI) and training support in Northern Ireland.
Funding rules differ across the four nations and change over time β always confirm on the official page before enrolling.