Write down the exact rooms, surfaces, fixtures, and finish standard so every quote is pricing the same task list.
£100–£300 per day for most trades, £500–£3,000 for standard room projects
This is the UK guide range. Final quotes in Lincoln vary based on demand, access, parking/logistics, property type, and service scope.
Typical timeline: 1–3 days for most jobs, 1–2 weeks for larger projects
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Lincoln's historic uphill streets, terraces, and surrounding villages often need tradespeople aware of access, heritage settings, damp, and roofing details.
Keep local quotes comparable by fixing the same scope, quality threshold, and access assumptions before you let providers price the job.
Write down the exact rooms, surfaces, fixtures, and finish standard so every quote is pricing the same task list.
Confirm who supplies materials, how many visits are needed, and whether waste disposal is included.
Ask for making-good, touch-up work, and snagging to be stated clearly rather than implied.
Request a start window and completion estimate before comparing lower-priced general trade quotes.
Local availability and logistics can make weak quotes look persuasive. Push these risks into writing before you approve the shortlist.
Vague labour-only quotes with no finish standard, room count, or materials split.
No insurance, no recent work examples, and no written snagging agreement.
Requests for full payment up front on short-duration maintenance jobs.
A contractor who will not confirm what happens if hidden defects or extra work appear.
Expect to pay £300–£600 per room for skimming over existing plaster, or £600–£1,000 for full replastering including stripping back to brick. Ceiling plastering adds £200–£400 per room.
Most exterior paintwork needs refreshing every 5–7 years depending on exposure, paint quality, and substrate. South-facing and exposed walls may need more frequent maintenance.
A carpenter works on site — fitting kitchens, hanging doors, laying flooring, building stud walls. A joiner works in a workshop making bespoke items like staircases, windows, and furniture. Many professionals do both.
For small, straightforward jobs (shelving, curtain rails, minor repairs), a handyman is fine. For anything involving electrics, gas, plumbing, or structural changes, always use a qualified specialist trade.
Compare local context before requesting quotes.