In this article
Welcome to the world of property & facilities
Whether you're practical and reliable, or you want a stable, no-degree job with a sense of community, this guide covers what a building caretaker (janitor / superintendent) actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A building caretaker looks after a building and its residents. In simple terms: they maintain, clean, and look after a property. Think of them as the keeper of the building.
- Maintain the building and grounds
- Handle cleaning and small repairs
- Respond to residents' issues
- Keep the property safe and secure
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Practical ability โ fixing and maintaining
- Reliability โ residents depend on you
- Helpfulness โ serving the community
- Problem-solving โ handling what comes up
- Diligence โ keeping standards
- Trustworthiness โ access to the building
Education & qualifications
No qualifications required โ building caretakers are valued for practical ability and reliability, with training on the job, making it an accessible and stable role.
Typical responsibilities
- Maintain โ the building and grounds
- Repair โ small fixes and upkeep
- Clean โ communal areas
- Respond โ to residents' issues
- Secure โ keeping the building safe
- Oversee โ the day-to-day running
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior / Assistant Caretaker
0โ2 years
- Handles cleaning and basics
- Learns the building
- Assists maintenance
- Building skills
- Toward caretaker
Building Caretaker
2โ10 years
- Maintains the building
- Handles repairs and residents
- Trusted and reliable
- Often a key-holder
- Toward senior
Senior Caretaker / Facilities Supervisor
10+ years
- Oversees several buildings
- Handles complex maintenance
- Mentors juniors
- Manages property upkeep
- Toward facilities management
Where building caretakers work
๐ข Residential blocks
Apartment buildings.
๐ซ Schools
School caretaking.
๐๏ธ Public buildings
Civic facilities.
๐ฌ Commercial buildings
Offices and shops.
๐ Housing associations
Social housing.
โช Community buildings
Churches, halls.
A day in the life
Opening up and checking the building โ communal areas, security, any overnight issues.
Cleaning and maintaining communal spaces, keeping the building well-kept.
Handling a small repair and responding to a resident's issue, the helpful core of the role.
Checking grounds, bins, and safety, keeping the property safe and tidy.
Building maintained, repairs done, residents helped. The keeper of the building. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Stable, practical no-degree job
- Often comes with accommodation
- Sense of community
- Varied daily work
- Path to facilities management
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Stable, practical no-degree job
- Often comes with accommodation
- Sense of community
- Varied daily work
- Path to facilities management
- Job security
- Independent working
โ Disadvantages
- On-call for emergencies
- Modest pay
- Physically demanding at times
- Dealing with difficult residents
- Some unpleasant tasks
- Can be isolating
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Caretaker โ oversee several buildings
- Facilities Supervisor โ supervise upkeep
- Facilities Manager โ manage facilities
- Maintenance specialist โ technical upkeep
- Property management โ property roles
- Self-employed โ caretaking services
Building Caretaker vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Building Caretaker You are here | Maintains and looks after a building | Property, upkeep | Baseline | Accessible |
| Cleaner / Janitor | Cleans premises | Cleaning | Lower-similar | Accessible |
| Maintenance Technician | Maintains equipment | Maintenance | Similar | Accessible |
| Facilities Manager | Manages facilities | Facilities | Higher | Medium |
| Window Cleaner | Cleans windows | Cleaning | Lower-similar | Accessible |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Every building needs looking after, keeping caretakers in steady, recession-proof demand, with an accessible role and a path into facilities management.
- Every building needs upkeep
- It's recession-proof and stable
- No degree needed to start
- Often comes with accommodation
- Path to facilities management
Fun facts ๐ค
Building caretakers keep the places we live and work safe and well-kept.
The role often comes with accommodation.
It's accessible โ no qualifications needed.
It's a path into facilities management.
A good caretaker is the heart of a building's community.
Myths about this role
"It's just cleaning."
โ It's maintenance, repairs, security, and looking after residents โ far more than cleaning.
"Anyone can do it."
โ Practical skills, reliability, and handling people are real assets.
"It's a dead-end job."
โ It leads to facilities supervision and management.
"It's not important."
โ When a caretaker is good, the whole building runs better.
"It's being automated."
โ Hands-on maintenance and resident care need a person.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Are practical and reliable
- Like varied, hands-on work
- Want a stable no-degree job
- Enjoy a sense of community
- Can handle on-call work
- Want a path to facilities management
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want an office job
- You dislike physical work
- You can't be on-call
- You dislike dealing with people
- You want high pay immediately
- You want a purely desk role
Stable & practical
Building caretaker is a stable, practical, no-degree role, often with accommodation, where reliability keeps a building safe and well-kept, with a path into facilities management.
โ Advantages
- Stable, practical no-degree job
- Often comes with accommodation
- Sense of community
- Varied daily work
- Path to facilities management
โ Challenges
- On-call for emergencies
- Modest pay
- Physically demanding at times
- Dealing with difficult residents
- Can be isolating
How to get started
- Apply โ no qualifications needed valued for practical skill and reliability.
- Learn the building and its systems trained on the job.
- Build maintenance and people skills the core of the role.
- Take on more buildings and responsibility earn trust.
- Advance senior caretaker, facilities supervisor, facilities manager.
What to know before you start
- It's upkeep and care, not just cleaning
- Every building needs a caretaker
- No qualifications needed to start
- It often comes with accommodation
- It leads to facilities management
- A good caretaker makes a building run better
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think I just clean. I maintain the whole building โ repairs, security, grounds, the heating when it fails at 6am โ and I look after the residents, who rely on me. When the caretaker's good, nobody worries about the building. That's the job.
Building caretaker ยท 9 years in
It's stable, it came with a flat, and there's no degree needed โ just being practical and reliable. I like the variety and the community; I know everyone in the block, and being the person who keeps it all running feels good.
Building caretaker ยท 5 years in
They call it a dead-end. I started cleaning communal areas and now I supervise the upkeep of several buildings, with facilities management ahead. Every building needs looking after, so the work's always there.
Facilities supervisor ยท 13 years in