How to Hire Temporary Construction Workers Fast
Last updated: April 2026 · 12 min read
Whether you need labourers tomorrow or a full site team next week, hiring temporary construction workers requires careful planning to ensure compliance, quality, and reliability. This guide covers everything contractors need to know about sourcing, vetting, and managing temporary construction labour in the UK.
Why Contractors Use Temporary Construction Workers
The UK construction industry relies heavily on temporary labour to manage fluctuating workloads, cover programme peaks, and access specialist skills on a project-by-project basis. According to the CITB, temporary and agency workers make up a significant proportion of the construction workforce, particularly in London and the South East.
Common reasons contractors hire temporary workers include:
- Programme peaks requiring additional manpower
- Covering staff absences, holidays, or sickness
- Accessing specialist skills not available in-house
- Testing workers before offering permanent positions
- Managing project-specific labour requirements
- Reducing fixed overhead costs during quieter periods
Step-by-Step: How to Hire Temporary Construction Workers
1. Define Your Requirements Clearly
Before contacting an agency or advertising for workers, define exactly what you need: specific roles and skill levels, number of operatives required, start date and expected duration, site location and access arrangements, any specialist qualifications needed (CPCS tickets, JIB cards, etc.), and whether you need PAYE or CIS workers. The more specific your requirement, the faster an agency can match suitable candidates.
2. Choose Your Sourcing Method
There are three main ways to source temporary construction workers:
Recruitment Agency
Fastest and most compliant option. Agency handles vetting, employment, and insurance. Best for ongoing or urgent requirements.
Direct Hire
You manage recruitment, employment, and compliance directly. Lower cost per worker but higher administrative burden and risk.
Labour-Only Subcontractor
Self-employed workers under CIS. Flexible but requires careful management of IR35, CIS verification, and supply chain compliance.
3. Verify Compliance Before Placement
Non-compliance with employment law, Right to Work requirements, or health and safety regulations can result in significant fines, project shutdowns, and reputational damage. Before any temporary worker starts on your site, ensure the following checks are completed:
- Right to Work in the UK — original documents checked and recorded
- CSCS card verified against CITB database (not just a visual check)
- Photo ID confirmed and matched to Right to Work documents
- Relevant qualifications and tickets verified (CPCS, PASMA, IPAF, etc.)
- References checked from previous employers or agencies
- Health declaration or medical fitness confirmation where required
4. Understand PAYE vs CIS
The choice between PAYE and CIS employment has significant implications for compliance, cost, and risk. Most Tier 1 contractors now require PAYE-only supply chains to reduce IR35 risk and ensure proper employment standards. PAYE workers are employed by the agency (or directly by you), with tax and National Insurance deducted at source. CIS workers are self-employed subcontractors with tax deducted at 20% or 30%. Hard Hat employs all temporary operatives on PAYE, ensuring full tax compliance and reducing risk for our clients. Read our full CIS vs PAYE comparison →
5. Manage and Support Workers on Site
Once temporary workers arrive on site, effective management is essential for productivity and safety. Provide a thorough site induction covering hazards, emergency procedures, and welfare arrangements. Brief workers on relevant RAMS and ensure they understand their specific tasks. Assign a supervisor or point of contact for day-to-day management. Monitor performance and attendance, reporting any issues to the supplying agency promptly.
6. Review and Build Ongoing Relationships
The best temporary workforce outcomes come from ongoing relationships with trusted supply partners. Keep a record of good workers and request them back for future projects. Provide feedback to your agency so they can improve matching. Consider temp-to-perm arrangements for outstanding operatives.
Common Mistakes When Hiring Temporary Construction Workers
Not verifying CSCS cards properly
Always check against the CITB database — visual checks are not sufficient. Cards can be expired, cancelled, or fraudulent.
Using uninsured workers
Ensure your agency carries adequate Employer's Liability (£10m+) and Public Liability (£5m+) insurance. Request certificates.
Failing to check Right to Work
Employers face unlimited fines for employing workers without valid Right to Work documentation. Never skip this check.
Choosing the cheapest option
Low-cost agencies often cut corners on compliance. A compliant, reliable workforce is more cost-effective in the long run.
Poor site inductions
Temporary workers need thorough inductions. They may be unfamiliar with your site, its hazards, and its safety protocols.
Why Use Hard Hat for Temporary Construction Workers
Hard Hat Recruitment Agency specialises in supplying vetted, CSCS-certified construction operatives to contractors across London and the South East. Every worker we supply is:
- Right to Work checked with original documents
- CSCS card verified against the CITB database
- ID verified with photographic identification
- Employed on PAYE with full tax compliance
- Covered by comprehensive insurance (£10m EL, £5m PL)
- Reference checked before placement