Minimum wage has increased: what it now means for FM, cleaning contracts and service delivery
The UK minimum wage has increased, and for facilities management and cleaning services, the impact is immediate.
From April 2026, the National Living Wage has risen to £12.71 per hour, with increases across all age groups.
This is not just a payroll change. It directly affects how FM services are priced, delivered and managed.
What has happened?
The government has implemented new minimum wage rates following recommendations from the Low Pay Commission.
The headline change is a 50p increase for workers aged 21 and over, alongside rises for younger workers and apprentices.
Millions of workers benefit from higher pay, but for employers, especially those with large frontline teams, costs increase immediately.
Why this matters for FM and cleaning
Facilities management is a labour-driven service.
Contract cleaning, waste handling, front-of-house, security and support services all rely heavily on people. That means wage increases flow directly into contract costs.
This creates three immediate pressures:
- rising service delivery costs
- tighter contract margins
- increased scrutiny on productivity and performance
For many organisations, the question is no longer just “Who is the cheapest supplier?” but “Who can deliver reliably under rising cost pressure?”
What this means for small businesses
For smaller businesses, the impact is often direct and immediate.
Higher wages mean:
- increased payroll costs
- pressure on pricing
- the need to review staffing levels and schedules
However, it also creates an opportunity. Businesses that can deliver consistent, high-quality service can justify value more clearly in a changing market.
What this means for medium and large organisations
For larger organisations, the challenge is scale.
Across multiple sites and contracts, even small wage increases create significant cost increases.
Key questions include:
- Are contracts still commercially viable?
- Are service levels aligned with budgets?
- Are suppliers able to maintain standards under pressure?
This is where contract structure, KPIs and supplier management become critical.
What this means for public sector buyers
Public sector organisations face a balancing act.
They must:
- ensure fair pay and compliance
- maintain service quality
- manage budget constraints
This puts greater focus on:
- value-based procurement
- realistic pricing models
- strong contract management
Lowest cost alone is becoming harder to sustain without risk to service delivery.
What this means for contractors
For contractors, this is about control and transparency.
You need to understand:
- true cost of delivery
- staffing models
- productivity levels
- contract risk
It is also a time to review mobilisation plans and ensure new contracts are built on realistic assumptions.
What to check now
If you buy or deliver FM services, review these five areas:
- Contracts – are current rates still viable?
- Staffing – are rotas and structures efficient?
- Productivity – are you getting the right output?
- Compliance – are all workers correctly paid?
- Service quality – is performance being maintained?
Where TPMG FM fits in
This is where structured FM delivery becomes essential.
At TPMG FM, services are built around:
- clear mobilisation
- realistic staffing models
- consistent supervision
- measurable performance
In a rising cost environment, the focus is not just on delivering services, but delivering them in a controlled, sustainable way.
If your organisation is reviewing cleaning or FM contracts following wage increases, TPMG FM can help you build a service model that balances cost, quality and long-term reliability.