Global Career Guide (EN)From Environment & Land β†’

Groundskeeper

A groundskeeper maintains sports pitches, parks, school grounds or estates, keeping grass, surfaces and facilities in good shape. It suits practical, outdoorsy people who take pride in a well-kept space and enjoy hands-on work with machinery and the land.

The Role & Expectations

The work is mowing and marking out pitches, looking after grass and surfaces, maintaining equipment and facilities, and preparing grounds for matches, events or daily use. A feel for turf and surfaces, care with machinery and reliability matter, along with the fitness for physical, all-weather work.

You will work outdoors year-round, often with early starts before events and busy spells in the playing season, and pay commonly starts around the minimum or skilled-trade rate depending on the role. It is physical, weather-dependent work that rewards people who like to see their grounds looking their best.

Many groundskeepers learn on the job or take a groundsmanship or horticulture course or apprenticeship. Tickets for certain machinery may be required, a driving licence helps, and experience can lead to head groundsperson roles.

Daily Responsibilities

  • Mow, roll and mark out pitches
  • Maintain grass, soil and surfaces
  • Prepare grounds for matches or events
  • Operate and maintain machinery
  • Repair turf and clear debris
  • Look after fences, paths and facilities
  • Work through the seasons and weather