Security Companies UK: Top Firms, Pay and How to Choose
Compare UK security companies, ACS-approved firms, pay rates and how to spot a quality employer before signing your SIA officer contract.

Walk through any UK city and you will spot them. The hi-vis vest at the building site gate. The two officers chatting outside a Tesco. The watchful figure at a hospital reception. These men and women work for security companies, the firms that sit behind almost every staffed guarding operation in Britain.
The sector is bigger than most people realise. The UK private security industry pulls in over twelve billion pounds a year and employs more than four hundred thousand licensed operatives. A handful of giants dominate. Hundreds of mid-tier regional firms compete for everything else. And thousands of small outfits chase niche work: events, retail, residential, marine, even film sets.
If you are job-hunting with a fresh SIA licence, picking the right employer matters. Pay rates, shift patterns, uniform standards, vehicle access, training budgets, even whether you get paid on time — all vary wildly between companies. The right firm can launch a career. The wrong one will burn you out in six months.
This guide breaks down what UK security companies actually do, who the major players are, how to spot a decent employer from a cowboy outfit, and where the industry is heading next. We will also cover what the Security Industry Authority requires of any firm that wants to operate legally, and how the Approved Contractor Scheme separates the credible from the cut-rate.
UK Security Industry by the Numbers
Those numbers tell a story. The UK has a lot of security firms, but only a small fraction have earned Approved Contractor status. That gap is where most of the quality issues sit. Anyone can register a limited company, buy a few uniforms, and start bidding for contracts. Getting a client to actually trust you — and pay decent rates — is a different game entirely.
The largest contractors handle nationwide accounts. Banks, government buildings, retail chains, transport hubs. They run thousands of officers across hundreds of sites and have HR systems, vetting procedures, and operations rooms that smaller firms cannot match. The trade-off? You become a number on a roster. Career progression exists but moves slowly.
Mid-sized regional companies sit in the sweet spot for many officers. They know their patch, they pay competitively, and a hardworking guard can become a supervisor within two years. The smallest firms — under fifty officers — often pay the best hourly rates because they need to compete on something. But they can also vanish overnight if a major contract slips, leaving staff scrambling.
One thing that surprises newcomers: the visible giants are not always the most lucrative employers. Several mid-tier firms quietly pay better than the household names because they specialise in higher-margin work — corporate front of house, embassy contracts, high-value retail — and pass some of that margin back to staff. Reputation in this industry runs through word of mouth among officers who have worked at multiple sites, not through the marketing copy on company websites.

Any business that supplies licensable security services to a third party for reward must be regulated. That covers manned guarding, door supervision, CCTV monitoring, close protection, cash and valuables in transit, key holding, and vehicle immobilisation on private land.
In-house security teams employed directly by the site owner sit outside SIA contractor regulation — the officers still need licences, but the firm itself does not. This distinction shapes pay, terms, and career paths across the whole industry.
The distinction between contracted and in-house matters more than most candidates realise. A contracted officer is supplied by a third party — that is the bulk of the industry. An in-house officer works directly for the end client: a hospital trust, a university, a supermarket chain's loss prevention team. In-house roles usually pay better, offer pensions, and treat staff as proper employees rather than billable hours. The downside is they are harder to land and there are fewer of them.
Most newcomers start with a contractor, build experience for a year or two, then jump to a direct role when one opens up. Knowing this pathway from day one saves a lot of wasted applications.
There is a second axis worth understanding: generalist versus specialist. A generalist firm will deploy you anywhere their client base needs cover — one week a retail park, the next a corporate reception, then a building site. Specialists stay in one lane: events only, or hospitals only, or maritime only. Generalists give you variety and exposure. Specialists give you depth and, eventually, a better CV in that niche.
How UK Security Companies Are Structured
Mitie, G4S (now Allied Universal UK), Securitas, ABM, OCS. Multi-site contracts, corporate clients, formal training pathways, 24/7 control rooms.
200 to 2,000 officers. Strong local relationships, faster promotion, often run by ex-police or ex-forces leadership. Examples vary by region.
Close protection, maritime, events-only, retail loss prevention, aviation. Higher skill bar, higher pay, less consistent hours.
Under 50 staff. Tight margins, owner-operated, often the entry point for new licence holders. Quality varies enormously.
Within each tier, a security company can specialise further. Some firms only do construction sites — fast turnover, outdoor work, plenty of overtime, but rough conditions and limited career ladder. Others focus on corporate front-of-house — quieter, smarter uniforms, better pay, but you need presentation skills and patience for procedure. Events specialists fill stadiums and festivals seasonally; brilliant if you want weekend work and varied locations, miserable if you need steady weekday hours.
The mistake most new officers make is treating all security work as the same. It is not. A door supervisor at a Friday-night venue and a hospital lobby officer do completely different jobs, work different hours, deal with different people, and earn very different money. Choosing your sector before choosing your employer cuts your job search in half.
Geography matters too. London pay tends to run a couple of pounds above the national rate for the same role, but rents eat the difference. Manchester, Birmingham, and Edinburgh sit in a comfortable middle band. Coastal and rural areas often pay lower headline rates but offer steadier hours and less commute. Officers willing to relocate for a specific contract can sometimes negotiate higher rates than locally hired colleagues — particularly for high-clearance or high-skill roles.

Major Service Categories Offered by UK Security Companies
The bread and butter. Static and mobile officers patrol or staff a fixed site. Construction, corporate offices, warehouses, residential estates, retail parks. Pay typically GBP 11.50 to GBP 14 per hour for standard sites, higher for high-risk locations. Requires SIA Security Guard Licence.
A handful of companies operate across all five categories. Most stick to two or three. When you apply, look at the firm's actual contract base, not their marketing pages. A company with twelve construction sites and one corporate account is fundamentally a construction guarding firm — the corporate work might disappear at the next tender, and you will be offered a building site to keep your hours.
Glassdoor reviews from current officers reveal more than any company website. So does asking, in your interview, who supervises the site you would be working at and how often a manager visits. If the answer is vague, the site is probably under-managed and you will be left to handle problems alone.
One other tell: ask how long the average officer has been at the site you are interviewing for. Healthy contracts have officers who have been there over a year. Sites with constant rotation usually have a problem — bad client relationship, poor pay, or unreasonable working conditions. The firm will not volunteer this, but they will usually answer if asked directly.
Watch for these warning signs. Cash-in-hand offers (illegal under SIA regulations and HMRC rules). No written contract within four weeks. Uniform deductions taken from your first wage. Pay below the National Minimum Wage once unpaid breaks are stripped out. No proper site induction.
Demands that you sign zero-hours contracts with a 24-hour cancellation clause. Pressure to work shifts beyond the 48-hour Working Time Directive without an opt-out form. Any firm that pushes back on showing you their SIA Approved Contractor Scheme status is hiding something.
The Approved Contractor Scheme — usually called ACS — is the single most useful filter when comparing firms. It is voluntary, but companies must meet defined standards across financial stability, training, customer service, and management quality to qualify. Roughly eight per cent of UK security firms are ACS approved. They handle most of the serious corporate and government work because clients increasingly require ACS membership in their procurement criteria.
You can check any company's status free on the SIA register. If the firm you are applying to is not ACS-approved, ask why. Some smaller specialists deliberately stay out because the audit fees do not pay back at their scale, which is fine. Others are not approved because they cannot pass the audit, which is a problem.
The same register lets you confirm that the company is a legitimate trading entity and verify any officer's licence number. Both checks take under a minute and protect you from working for a firm that will fold before payday. It also lists the company's registered head office — a useful sanity check, because a firm operating across the South East from a residential address in the North is rarely as scaled as their pitch suggests.
Companies House data is the other half of the same picture. A quick search of the registered directors will tell you whether the people running the company have a track record of dissolved firms or county court judgements. Reputable contractors will not mind being checked. It is a routine due-diligence step, exactly like the ones their corporate clients run on them.

Questions to Ask Before Accepting a Security Job Offer
- ✓Are you ACS approved? If not, why not?
- ✓What is the exact hourly rate, and is it paid for all hours on site or only patrolling time?
- ✓Who supervises this contract, and how often do they visit?
- ✓Is the uniform free, deposit-only, or deducted from wages?
- ✓What is the holiday accrual rate and how do I book leave?
- ✓Are breaks paid? If unpaid, how does that affect my effective hourly rate?
- ✓How are wages paid: weekly, fortnightly, monthly? Direct to bank?
- ✓What happens if a client cancels the contract — am I redeployed or terminated?
- ✓Do you provide ongoing CPD training or just the initial SIA top-up?
- ✓Can I see a copy of the assignment instructions before my first shift?
Pay structure deserves a closer look. The headline rate gets quoted in adverts, but two officers on the same nominal rate can take home very different money depending on how the company treats unpaid breaks, travel time, and uniform deductions. A genuine GBP 13 an hour with paid breaks and a free uniform beats GBP 14.50 with thirty minutes unpaid per shift and a forty-pound uniform deposit.
Many of the largest contractors also operate enhanced rates for unsocial hours: a small premium for nights, a slightly bigger one for bank holidays. The smallest firms often pay the same flat rate around the clock. If you are happy to work nights and weekends, choosing an employer with proper shift premiums adds real money over a year.
Some firms offer a small loyalty bonus after twelve or twenty-four months. Others run a referral scheme paying GBP 100 to GBP 250 if you bring in a friend who passes probation. None of these extras matter if the underlying culture is poor, but they are worth asking about once you are happy with the basics.
Watch the pay-frequency question carefully. Weekly pay sounds appealing — and for many officers it works fine — but it is also the format most often used by firms with shaky cashflow. A monthly-pay employer is usually a more financially mature business with predictable client billing cycles. Fortnightly sits comfortably in the middle. None of these is inherently bad, but if a firm switched from monthly to weekly recently, that change is worth a question.
Working for a Large vs Small Security Company
- +Large firms: structured HR, predictable payroll, defined progression routes
- +Large firms: branded training programmes that look good on a CV
- +Large firms: pension schemes, sick pay, and employee assistance lines
- +Small firms: faster promotion to supervisor or manager
- +Small firms: direct relationship with the company owner
- +Small firms: often higher hourly rates to compete with the big names
- −Large firms: you can feel like a payroll number on a roster
- −Large firms: rigid policies make flexible scheduling difficult
- −Large firms: pay rises are slow and centrally controlled
- −Small firms: payroll errors are more common
- −Small firms: less internal mobility if you outgrow your role
- −Small firms: contract loss can mean the whole company folds
The right answer depends on your career stage. New licence holders usually benefit from a large or mid-tier contractor for the first eighteen months — the training is structured, the experience looks credible on a CV, and you learn the procedural side of the job in an environment where mistakes are coachable. Once you have that under your belt, switching to a smaller firm or moving into an in-house security officer position becomes easier.
Officers planning to stay in the industry long term often eventually look at specialist routes: CCTV operator roles, control room supervision, close protection, or training delivery. Each of those needs additional qualifications, but they take you out of the static guarding pay band and into something more sustainable physically and financially.
A useful exercise is to write down where you want to be in three years and reverse-engineer your next employer from that. Want to become a control-room operator? Pick a firm with a 24/7 monitoring centre and ask about the internal application process. Aiming for close protection? Choose a contractor that operates corporate CP teams, get noticed on static, and move across. Want to stay self-employed and pick your own hours? Build relationships with smaller agencies who handle ad-hoc bookings rather than the big rota-based firms.
SIA Guard Questions and Answers
Security companies are not interchangeable. The badge on the uniform might look the same from the outside, but the experience of working for one firm versus another differs more than most outsiders appreciate. Picking well at the start of your career — and being prepared to move on once a role stops growing you — is the single biggest lever on long-term earnings in this industry.
Before you apply anywhere, get your licensing sorted. The Security Industry Authority will not let you work without it, and no reputable employer will offer you a contract without seeing your licence number. Use practice questions to prepare for the SIA training course assessment, then keep practising once you start work — the procedural knowledge you build during licensing is what will make you a credible candidate for supervisor roles later on.
Apply broadly. Five strong applications beats fifty generic ones. Tailor your covering letter to the contract type the firm specialises in: mention loss-prevention experience for retail-heavy firms, mention front-of-house composure for corporate firms, and mention crowd-management awareness for event operators. Most officers send the same CV everywhere; the candidates who win interviews demonstrate that they have read the company's profile properly.
Ask the awkward questions in interview and walk away from any company that will not answer them. Reputable firms know that informed officers stay longer and perform better, and they welcome the questions. Cowboy outfits will brush you off. That information alone tells you whether to take the job.
The UK security industry pays decent money to people who treat it as a career rather than a stopgap. Build your professional reputation deliberately. Keep your licence current, log every site you work at, take any CPD training your employer offers, and stay in touch with supervisors you worked well with — most senior roles in this industry come through recommendation rather than open advert. The officer who treats their first eighteen months as an apprenticeship usually ends up earning twenty to thirty per cent more than the one who treats it as just shifts.
One last framing point before you start applying. The UK security industry is built around contracts that change hands every two to three years. That means the company you sign with today might not hold the contract you work on tomorrow. When sites transfer between contractors, TUPE rules usually protect your pay and continuity of employment, but the new firm's culture, supervision standards, and progression paths can be completely different.
Many experienced officers think of their career as a sequence of sites rather than a sequence of employers. Build relationships with site managers, clients, and clients' security leads — those people will follow you across employers as contracts move, and they are where most word-of-mouth promotions and lateral moves originate.
Learn more in our guide on SIA Security Guard Licence Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026). Learn more in our guide on SIA Licence: What It Is and How to Get It. Learn more in our guide on SIA Account: Register, Verify & Manage Your UK Licence.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.