In this article
Welcome to the world of mechanics & repair
Whether you like working with your hands and solving mechanical problems, or you want an accessible, always-needed trade, this guide covers what a mechanic actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A mechanic diagnoses, repairs, and maintains engines, vehicles, and machinery. In simple terms: they fix the machines that keep things running. Think of them as the doctors of machines.
- Diagnose mechanical faults
- Repair and service machines
- Maintain vehicles and equipment
- Keep machines running safely
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Problem-solving โ diagnosis is detective work
- Practical skill โ it's hands-on
- Mechanical sense โ understanding how things work
- Patience โ some faults are stubborn
- Reliability โ people depend on the fix
- Care โ safety depends on quality
Education & qualifications
No degree required โ mechanics train through apprenticeships and qualifications, making it an accessible, hands-on trade with a clear path to self-employment.
Typical responsibilities
- Diagnosis โ finding the fault
- Repair โ fixing the problem
- Servicing โ routine maintenance
- Testing โ making sure it works
- Safety โ keeping machines safe
- Maintenance โ keeping things running
Responsibilities by seniority
Apprentice
0โ3 years
- Learns the trade
- Assists on repairs
- Builds diagnostic skill
- Hands-on training
- Toward independent
Mechanic
3โ8 years
- Diagnoses and repairs
- Works independently
- Builds a reputation
- Trusted and skilled
- Specialising
Senior / Workshop Owner
8+ years
- Master of the trade
- Or runs own workshop
- Handles complex jobs
- Mentors apprentices
- Toward business
Where mechanics work
๐ง Garages / workshops
Vehicle repair.
๐ Fleet / commercial
Commercial vehicles.
๐ญ Industrial
Machinery maintenance.
๐ Agricultural
Farm machinery.
โ๏ธ Specialist
Aviation, marine.
๐ Self-employed
Own workshop / mobile.
A day in the life
Taking in the day's jobs โ diagnosing what's wrong with each machine or vehicle.
The detective work โ tracing a fault to its root cause, the heart of the job.
Repairing and servicing, the hands-on skill of putting things right.
Testing the fix, making sure the machine runs safely and properly before it goes back.
Faults found, machines fixed, everything running again. The doctor of machines. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Accessible, always-needed trade
- Hands-on problem-solving
- No degree needed
- Path to self-employment
- In-demand everywhere
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Accessible, always-needed trade
- Hands-on problem-solving
- No degree needed
- Path to self-employment
- In-demand everywhere
- Good earning potential
- Satisfying, tangible work
โ Disadvantages
- Physically demanding
- Dirty, hands-on conditions
- Can be heavy work
- Some unsocial hours
- Diagnostic frustration
- On your feet all day
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 Mechanic โ master the trade
- Specialist Mechanic โ aviation, marine, performance
- Workshop Owner โ run your own business
- Master Technician โ top of the trade
- Service Manager โ manage a workshop
- Self-employed โ own / mobile mechanic
Mechanic vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanic You are here | Fixes engines and machinery | Mechanical repair, diagnostics | Baseline | Accessible |
| Car Mechanic | Repairs vehicles | Vehicle repair | Similar | Accessible |
| Electrician | Installs electrical systems | Electrical, trade | Similar | Accessible |
| Welder | Joins metal | Welding, fabrication | Similar | Accessible |
| Mechanical Engineer | Designs machines | Engineering, design | Higher | Hard |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Vehicles and machines always break down and need fixing, keeping mechanics in steady, high demand, with diagnostics evolving alongside electric and modern technology.
- Machines always break down
- Repair can't be outsourced
- Self-employment is accessible
- Modern tech adds new skills
- Steady, high demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Mechanics are the doctors of machines โ diagnosing and curing what's wrong.
Much of the job is detective work โ finding the root cause of a fault.
It's an accessible trade reached through apprenticeship.
Many mechanics go self-employed with their own workshop.
Modern and electric machines are turning mechanics into tech-skilled diagnosticians.
Myths about this role
"It's just turning spanners."
โ It's diagnosis, problem-solving, and skilled repair.
"Anyone can do it."
โ Diagnosing and fixing machines takes real skill.
"Modern cars can't be fixed."
โ Mechanics adapt to new tech, including electric and hybrid.
"It's a dead-end job."
โ It leads to specialism, master technician, and owning a workshop.
"There's no money in it."
โ Skilled and self-employed mechanics earn well.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Like working with your hands
- Enjoy solving problems
- Are mechanically minded
- Want an accessible trade
- Like tangible results
- Dream of self-employment
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want a clean office job
- You dislike physical work
- You're not mechanically minded
- You dislike getting hands dirty
- You want a desk role
- You dislike problem-solving
Accessible & hands-on
Being a mechanic is an accessible, always-needed, hands-on trade, where mechanical know-how and diagnostic skill keep vehicles and machines running, with a clear path to self-employment.
โ Advantages
- Accessible, always-needed trade
- Hands-on problem-solving
- No degree needed
- Path to self-employment
- In-demand everywhere
โ Challenges
- Physically demanding
- Dirty, hands-on conditions
- Can be heavy work
- Some unsocial hours
- On your feet all day
How to get started
- Get a mechanic apprenticeship the route into the trade.
- Learn diagnostics and repair the core of the job.
- Build hands-on experience skill comes from doing.
- Specialise or build a reputation or go self-employed.
- Advance specialist, master technician, or own workshop.
What to know before you start
- It's diagnosis and skill, not just turning spanners
- Modern machines need tech-skilled mechanics
- No degree needed โ it's an apprenticeship trade
- Machines always break down, keeping demand high
- Self-employment is an accessible path
- Skilled mechanics earn well
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think it's just turning spanners. Half the job is diagnosis โ detective work tracing a fault to its root cause. Modern engines are full of electronics and sensors, so you have to understand the tech as much as the mechanics. Getting it right takes real skill.
Mechanic ยท 7 years in
It's an accessible trade โ I did an apprenticeship, no degree โ and it's always in demand because machines always break down. The work is satisfying too: someone brings in a vehicle that won't run, and you send it back working. Tangible results every day.
Senior mechanic ยท 11 years in
The path to self-employment is real. I started as an apprentice, built my skills and reputation, and now I run my own workshop. A skilled mechanic with their own business earns well, and there's always work. It's one of the most reliable trades there is.
Workshop owner ยท 15 years in