Candidates: Create an Account or Sign In
Service Engineer – No On-Call. Just Quality Work.
Tired of getting woken up at 3 AM for an "urgent" fire alarm fault? Good news—you won’t have to. This is a service role with
no on-call rota
. You do your job, you go home, and you sleep easy.
What’s in it for you?
A £42,000 salary, depending on experience.
A fully equipped company vehicle.
A Quality pension scheme.
Life assurance at 4x your salary.
22 days of paid holiday, plus bank holidays, with an extra day for every full year of service (up to 25 days).
A mental health & well-being scheme.
An employee recognition scheme.
And if you refer a mate, you could pocket up to £1,000 per referral.
What you’ll be doing
You’ll be out on the road, servicing fire detection and alarm systems across London. That means planned maintenance, emergency call-outs, and keeping everything compliant with the latest regs. You’ll be troubleshooting faults, liaising with clients, and making sure they know what’s what when it comes to their fire safety. You’ll also be on the out-of-hours rota—because fires don’t keep office hours.
What you’ll need
At least three years of experience in a similar role.
A solid grasp of BS5839 Part 1 and a knack for diagnosing fire alarm faults.
Basic electrical safety training (ECA).
If you’ve worked with Siemens or Gent analogue systems, even better.
Manufacturer training on VESDA, radio fire alarms, or suppression systems?
That’s a bonus.
You’ll need to be proactive, organised, and able to explain fire safety to clients in a way that actually makes sense.
Who you’ll be working for
A fire protection and security company that’s big enough to offer stability and career growth but small enough to still care. You won’t be buried in red tape or treated like just another cog in the machine—here, you’ll actually make a difference.
What next?
If this sounds like your next role, click the apply button. We understand your CV might not be up to date—just send what you have, and we’ll take it from there. Every applicant will receive a response