When to DIY, and when to call a handyman: a straight guide
Not every job needs a handyman. Not every job is safe to DIY. A working-tradesman guide to when the call is worth making for a Wingham village-house owner.
Most of the small jobs I get called out for in Wingham are jobs the customer could have done. Sometimes that means it was not worth my callout - and I'll say so. Sometimes the DIY route is the wrong route because of a hidden risk. Here is the working list, applied to CT3 village houses.
Do it yourself
- Filling nail holes and small plaster cracks. Multi-purpose filler, sand back, touch-in with matched paint. £15 of materials, one Saturday morning.
- Bleeding radiators. Standard bleed key, quarter turn, listen for water. If you get more air than water, you have a system-pressure issue - stop and get a boiler engineer.
- Draught-strip on doors and sash windows. Adhesive-backed EPDM foam strip. Trims to length with scissors. Half an hour per door.
- Silicone re-seal around a bath. Cut out the old, clean, apply new sanitary-grade silicone with a smoother-tool. Watch a five-minute video first.
- Squeaky floorboard from underneath (crawlspace). Screw the board down into the joist from below. Silent immediately.
Call the handyman
- Sticking door that used to open fine. Almost always frame movement, not the door. Requires planing and re-hanging, not just a plane on the door edge.
- Gutter clear on anything over 3m off ground. Ladder work at height without a foot-stand or roof-anchor is where accidents happen. Not worth £180 for a broken wrist.
- Rotten timber fascia or soffit. If you have to cut old timber out and splice new in, that is a shopping-list, joinery-and-paint job. Half-day, £180 including materials on a standard bay.
- Toilet fill valve that keeps running. Cheap parts, awkward tank access, tank refit under the seat is easy to get wrong. £120 fixed to swap the valve, done same visit.
- Fence panel down after a gale. Panels sit in slotted concrete posts. Getting one back in on your own with a wet fence is a two-person job with a lift risk.
Call a specialist, not a handyman
- Any notifiable electrical work (new circuit, kitchen re-wire, consumer unit change). Part P registered electrician.
- Any gas-side work on the boiler, cooker, or gas fire. Gas Safe registered engineer.
- Any structural change (removing a wall, altering a lintel bearing). Structural engineer sign-off then a builder.
- Anything on a listed elevation that changes what you can see from the pavement. Dover DC conservation team, then Listed Building Consent, then a heritage-specialist joiner.
The point of a village handyman is the small jobs that do not fit the specialists' book but do need a tradesman. If your job is on the DIY list, save the callout. If it is on the specialist list, do not economise - get the right person.
Not sure whether this applies to your job?
Send your postcode and a photo of the job to WhatsApp 07763 100 477 or email hello@winghamhandyman.co.uk. I'll tell you whether it is handyman scope, listed-frontage flagged, or specialist-referral before we quote.